Comcast Offers Trial Of Microsoft TV Software
Anonymous Howard writes "Designtechnica has a news article about Comcast and Microsoft announcing an agreement to test digital TV services using the "Microsoft TV Interactive Program Guide (IPG)". The trial is scheduled to start this fall using Motorola DCT2000 set-top boxes. The software is designed to help network operators get more value from on-demand and other digital TV services." There are some more details in an article over at CNET News.
Will it mean that instead of having only the current half-hour's programming shown in the interactive guide alongside ads, there will no longer be ads, leaving room for an hour and a half's worth of programming information? If not, it's no better than the worthless crap they're serving us in the DCT boxes now. Everyone I know that has digital cable from Comcast doesn't want to see ads, they want to see an interactive version of the TV Guide Channel.
If anyone out there really thinks there will be no ads then they are in complete denial. As long as humans inherit this earth and view tv in all it's various forms then there will be advertising. It might be passed off as programming but it's still an ad.
You aren't free to do anything, until you've lost everything.
The software is designed to help network operators get more value from on-demand and other digital TV services.
Is there any benefit to cable customers? Is this basic program guide any different from the basic program guide that's built in to all digital cable boxes?
Like in 2000?
For Microsoft, It's "Inactive TV" (businessweek)
And 2002?
Microsoft likely to miss key test on interactive TV(and they did)(zdnet)
SCO employee? Check out the bounty
The cable set-top box I have (AT&T digital cable) is really awful.
Although I'm not generally a big fan of Microsoft software, in this case I'd put my bets on Microsoft's software being better.
Amit
Anyone who has Comcast knows that channel switching and doing stuff on that box is damn slow.
You'd think that for as much as one pays for digital cable, they could have ad-free channel browsing -- but no.