Why TiVo's Founders Crashed and Burned With Qplay
Velcroman1 (1667895) writes "Michael Ramsay and Jim Barton created a revolution with TiVo, a device that challenged the notion that we had to watch TV shows when they aired. And they hoped to do it again with Qplay, a device that challenged the notion that short-form videos had to be consumed one at a time, like snacks instead of meals. Qplay streamed curated queues of short-form Internet video to your TV using a small, simple box controlled by an iPad app. So what went wrong? Unlike TiVo, the Qplay box was difficult to justify owning, and thevalue of the service itself is questionable. And as of last week, Qplay is closed."
I love my Tivo, but - I also owned a VCR for the twenty years prior to my first Tivo. Time shifting has been around for 40+ years now.
#DeleteChrome
It's hard to buy something when you don't know it exists.
Perhaps they should have tried advertising.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
Even as a free app it doesn't seem that useful to me. Youtube already has queue. It even has publicly browsable queues.
If I really wanted to watch 2 hours of cute kittens then I'm sure there is probably a queue that I could hit play on and sit back
and watch. It's fairly simple to queue up a bunch of videos and tell them to play in sequence without interruption.
What exactly did Qplay do that ANYONE would fine useful? It seems like a solution looking for a problem.