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  • Mobile Miscellany: week of August 19th, 2013

    by 
    Zachary Lutz
    Zachary Lutz
    08.24.2013

    If you didn't get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we've opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This week brought a free TV streaming service for Bell subscribers, the arrival of NFL Mobile to BlackBerry 10 and little bit of Windows Phone love from General Motors. These stories and more await. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore all that's happening in the mobile world for this week of August 19th, 2013.

  • International HD news roundup

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    12.27.2009

    Here at Engadget HD, we'd prefer not to just focus on high-def happenings in the US of A. Thus, we round up the best of the best from the international front each week and present it here, bundled together in a single, easy to digest list. If something went down in your corner of the globe over the past seven days, let the rest of the world know it in comments. 'Til next week, Auf Wiedersehen! Read - MGM breaks new ground in the UK with BSkyB Read - E4 goes high-definition on Sky Read - Sun Direct, Samsung tie up to launch HD TV services (India) Read - Most of the UK missing out on high-definition Read - Entertain IPTV service to expand HD programming content (Germany) Read - SES Astra takes HD channels over 100 Read - Cox adds 13 HD channels in N. Virginia Read - Fox and Nat Geo go HD for Spain Read - ABC 7 Goes High Def on MCV (Guam) Read - Exposed: TV cheats high-definition jinks (Hong Kong)

  • Bell TV turns 6141 HD STB into HD PVR with firmware update

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    01.15.2009

    No, the latest firmware update for Bell TV's 6141 HD STB doesn't magically add a hard drive within, but it does open up the ability for said box to record content if one is attached via USB. The new software (v.165) enables a single USB 2.0 HDD up to 1TB in size to be attached, and once it's recognized, recording can begin immediately. For obvious reasons, we're told that the material can only be played back on the set-top-box on which it was recorded, but hey, at least you can push aside that impending HD DVR purchase indefinitely.

  • OpenTV brings movie portal application to Canada's Bell TV

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    12.25.2008

    For Bell TV subscribers looking for hints of anything new, we've finally something to share with you. OpenTV, an interactive TV middleware provider, has just launched a "movie portal application" that will deliver content from programming partner Super Channel. As expected, it provides viewers with a "themed search option, as well as a scheduling option that lets viewers set up recordings and reminders several weeks in advance of a movie's broadcast." Underneath, this seems to be just another attempt to highlight certain programs and get non-subscribers to subscribe, but when new material is this hard to come by, it's tough to complain.

  • Bell TV launches HBO Canada (yes, in HD)

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    09.27.2008

    Time to party down, Bell TV customers. Your television provider just announced that it will add HBO Canada in SD and HD to its lineup on October 30th. Also of note, the channel will be offered on secondary SD and HD slots which will deliver the same programming with a two-hour time difference (okay?). HBO Canada will be included with all Bell TV subscriptions to The Movie Network or Movie Central at no extra cost, and hey -- just in time for Halloween, too!

  • TSN2 HD arrives on Canada's Bell TV

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    09.17.2008

    Canadians clamoring for more sporting action in HD can finally find some on Bell TV, as TSN2 has just arrived in glorious high-definition. The 24-hour sports network can be found by anyone subscribed to TSN on slots 403 (SD) and (848) HD, and while we wish we had more good news where this came from, you'll have to be satisfied with an addition of one for the time being.

  • TiVo having tough time in Canada, looking for options

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    09.15.2008

    TiVo waltzed into Canada all Maverick like last November, with no carrier support, no partnerships and (for all intents and purposes) no hope of success. The Canadian television market is a bizarre one, and given that the Series2 that's available there now can't record HD, TiVo is (obviously) having a hard time gaining traction. Analysts in the country assert that it is "impossible for a third-party PVR maker to gain any traction in Canada without having a major television provider as a partner," and while that may not sound precisely "fair," it isn't far from the truth. Joshua Danovitz, general manager of international business for TiVo, has proclaimed that a deal with Canadian providers could be an option, and that it was also looking at "regulated access to high-definition signals." Even though Canada doesn't have a superabundance of high-def stations just yet, we'd say TiVo better find a way to record the ones already out there. And fast.