Thumbdrive-Sized Streaming Media Players Coming Soon
DeviceGuru writes "Roku is building its streaming media player technology into a thumbdrive-style device that will plug directly into a TV's HDMI port. The Roku Streaming Stick, to be priced in the $50-$100 range, will convert ordinary TVs into smart TVs, according to CEO Anthony Wood. One catch is that it will depend on the TV having at least one Mobile High-Definition Link (MHDL) compliant HDMI port. The new standard is not widely supported yet, with only Nokia, Samsung, Silicon Image, Sony, and Toshiba listed as members on the MHDL Consortium's web page."
Samsung, Sony, and Toshiba make most of the TVs available around here, certainly all of the ones of decent quality. How much more support do you need?
So you get this super-nifty thing which can only be attached to the most super-nifty of the HDMI ports, which will only be equipped to begin with on devices which were already super-nifty.
So, I guess the choices are as thus (since keeping an old TV and buying a new Roku isn't an option):
1. Keep old TV, buy old Roku.
2. Buy new TV, keep old Roku.
3. Buy new super-nifty TV, don't bother with super-nifty Roku because the super-nifty is already built into the TV.
(4. Oh, yeah: At no point is there any functional merit to a new super-nifty Roku. Neat!)
Kid-proof tablet..
I'm guessing this sort of port will only be found on a smart TV - so, really, where's the market for a device designed to "convert ordinary TVs into smart TVs" that requires that port?
Really, the fundamental issue is the market for devices like the Roku box or AppleTV is drying up as more and more televisions come with the same functionality built in. They're still iterating on what's rapidly becoming an obsolete product segment - sort of like how Palm kept releasing new takes on the PDA long after stand-alone PDAs became irrelevant.
#DeleteChrome
So.. rolling my own from a raspberry pi will still be the best option this year? That comes with a bog standard hdmi port.
http://www.raspberrypi.org/
Or (soon) buy a raspberry pi for 1/3 of the cost? /might be wrong, not got one yet
I understand it has hdmi output and sufficient power to do most of this?
Why do televisions still even exist? What can you do with a television that you can't do with a computer?
but what other connectors does it have? USB? Ethernet? WLAN? SD Card? If so, it's another Raspberry Pi, just a lot smaller. And if we are lucky it has an A8 and maybe more memory.
Root it and you have a nice little cheap home Linux server. I can dream, right?
Just provide me with a raspberry-pi kindof device with Linux/Mono on it so i don't have to get windows and that i can install/run the Netflix player myself and i'll gladly buy it.
The problem with most of these streaming devices is that they can't play all media formats. Yes, you can play Netflix etc., but you can't play all of the existing media you have somewhere on a network share. Most of these devices just decode via some chip, so if there's a new video format (like we have now with Hi10p files), you're out of luck. Also I so far had no luck finding one which could handle styled subtitles (karaoke etc.) well.
So for me the only solution is a home-built PC with a good graphics card which has HDMI. That way it is easy to upgrade codecs/media player software.
What's up with the MHDL compliant HDMI port specification? Is it good or is it whack?
can somebody explain why computer attached to tv is worse than smart tv, dumb tv with smart something TV-specialized?
Is this a price issue?
I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
Since when are ports like that found on "ordinary" television sets? An "ordinary" set is lucky to have even a composite RCA plug input, or maybe it has just been awhile since I purchased one?
....it's using the lame HDMI.
It's not like we have established a nice USB format that could be used, and could perhaps use a raspberry pi-like system to just allow people to copy movies, files, etc into the device for display on their tv?
Heavens, we need to be sure DRM is built in there somewhere. :(
-Styopa
Posting as AC because I modded here... This little device I'm sure comes with 'convenient' DRM. Mainly though, what's on TV that you must have a TV to watch? Nothing you can't get on the internet with the computer you already have. I literally can't remember the last time I watched television in my home. Literally. It's been at least a couple of years. Shelling out dough for a DRM-crippled device that has less functionality than what I already have? No thanks.
Radeon has been fairly good. In Linux, VDPAU is way ahead of XvBA in popular support and across the board there is more CUDA work than OpenCL, but other than those details Radeon is serviceable. For $220 you can get a whole new box (e.g. Zotac AD10) with an E-350. ION-equipped Atoms might be an alternative for a die-hard nVidia fan, but it seems to me Intel and nVidia aren't playing together as well and currently the platform is pretty well inferior to e-350. My main caution would be that you are *heavily* reliant in both cases on hardware decode, and things change in ways that may break hardware decode (hi10p being the current headache).
If you are interested in *encoding* content and you bring up CoreAVC implying Windows anyway, you'd probably be best off pining for a Sandy Bridge processor. It's 'quick sync video' stuff is very impressive though it is sadly windows only. By most every account it blows all the CUDA/OpenCL based alternatives out of the water.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
E-350 works great, *except* for:
-Netflix (surprised you didn't mention this), high-def streams under silverlight don't get decode accelerated (or did they fix this? I'm not following windows too closely but that was my recollection)
-New or 'obscure' hi-def codecs. The 10-bit profile of h264 is starting to see more and more use but there is no CUDA, OpenCL, DXVA, XvBA, or VA-API offload for it and E-350's CPU half lacks the horsepower to decode without dropping frames. Maybe this will change, but no one knowledgeable enough has provided any hint as to whether a hardware change is simply absolutely required before this can be supported.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/11/android-cotton-candy-fxi/
Sorry, but if I'm spending money on an expensive TV, then I really don't want a ~3 inch object (?) sticking at a right angle off the back of it.
(yes I know right angles with plugs are unavoidable, but my current Samsung TV has them all in a recessed enough area)
Keeping the "smart" separate from the "TV" is the right thing to do. If you think an '80s car with a clunky old tape deck is funny, wait until your TV has an 8-year-old HTPC permanently embedded in it...
BTW this sounds like that "popcorn hour" thing. I haven't paid much attention to it since it's a closed toy, but sounds like just a smaller version of the same thing.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
So most TVs that will support this dongle already offer the major features that it provides. So it certainly won't provide a big burst of sales for Roku at the outset. What Roku will need to do to make the product a success is to provide a better user interface to the streaming services that it supports, and do a better job of keeping their device updated than the TV manufacturers do. This might not be too hard. While modern TVs are updatable, TV manufacturers tend to be far more interested in selling new TVs than in enhancing old ones. For example, my Panasonic TV supports Amazon streaming, but there is only a time display when in fast forward or rewind, and only on-screen controls work (even though the TV remote has the buttons), and it doesn't keep track of where you left off if you return to a movie that you previously watched.
And you can already get adapters for it to connect to your non MHL TV. Many of the newer phones have micro usb connectors that dual function as MHL connectors. It is simply a HDMI connector that supplies power to the device. IE a POE injector for HDMI
So, I guess the choices are as thus (since keeping an old TV and buying a new Roku isn't an option):
1. Keep old TV, buy old Roku.
2. Buy new TV, keep old Roku.
3. Buy new super-nifty TV, don't bother with super-nifty Roku because the super-nifty is already built into the TV.
(4. Oh, yeah: At no point is there any functional merit to a new super-nifty Roku. Neat!)
Agreed, why limit the device to a port that was introduced only 6 months ago and still isn't finalized? My first thought was: "Why don't they use standard HDMI and draw power from a USB port?"
Many HDTVs have a USB port so that makes sense, but I thought maybe the Mobile High definition Link (MHL) port must put out more power than USB but it doesn't, MHL puts out 500mA @ 5V just like USB.
So again I wonder, why not use power from a unused USB port and go with standard HDMI and be compatible with millions more TVs already on the market?
my karma will be here long after I'm gone
I looked at their pages and cant seem to find out if it will stream from MY server, or just 'external' services.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
What alternative to Netflix VOD do you recommend for customers in the United States? Is Amazon Prime any better?
Roku has many many more features and Channels than the traditional or even newer Smart TV's.
But does it have the channels that the households in my survey sample want? One household is a staunch fan of ESPN and Versus. Can I get live streams of professional and collegiate sporting events (mostly NHL, NFL, and NCAA football) on Roku? Another is a staunch fan of MSNBC. Can I get audiovisually presented, progressive slanted commentary on United States politics on Roku?
People who just want to do nothing but sit and get fed with whatever is on at that time.
People will pay good money to sit down and get fed with progressive slanted, audiovisually presented commentary on United States politics. Otherwise, someone in one of the household wouldn't keep paying for cable just to get MSNBC.
Anyone else finds (via that on-demand services or just plain warez) what they want and watch it.
Except the major professional and collegiate sports leagues don't really tend to have these on-demand services. If a game is shown on conventional TV, it often ends up blacked out online. Likewise, the last time I checked a couple months ago, MSNBC ran its online stream only at inconvenient hours of the day.
can somebody explain why computer attached to tv is worse
Home theater PCs have proven to be for geeks only for several reasons:
We're talking about new TVs, the kind sold at Best Buy, ABC Warehouse, H.H. Gregg, Walmart, and the like. If you buy your TVs at Goodwill or the pawn shop, they'll be a decade behind the latest technology.
Yea, I'm using an old laptop as my TVs Internet access, as well as a BluRay player with limited Imternet apps and some media player capability. But I plan on upgrading the laptop to a PC with HDMI output. That will support a lot more than Roku, including PC gaming and pretty much anything on the web, not just a limited subset.
Building the Roku device into a smaller form factor may be good for Roku, but not so great for the consumer. The need for the atypical connector is a shame, likely just done to avoid providing a power supply. Even if you have the right type of HDMI port (and many will buy it and then find that they don't), it is likely on the back of the TV. So it will not be easily reached by an IR remote. Even if Roku provides some type of RF remote to work past the positioning problem that will not help many users of Harmony type universal remotes who want everything working from one IR remote.
I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
Can't wait to see the WiFi performance on that thing behind a big piece of cold roll steel (TV).
Might be flamebait, but everything I said in above comment is my honest opinion. The motherboard prices you can look up. The problems with drivers come only with experience. I've been having ATI driver-related problems with windows since the Mach32 and Windows 3.1. Some of you may have less experience. You should keep your modpoints to yourself.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"