IptvHd

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  • Cisco announces Videoscape IPTV platform and products

    by 
    Nilay Patel
    Nilay Patel
    01.05.2011

    As expected, Cisco held a quick CES presser today to launch its connected TV initiative, which it's calling Videoscape. It's pretty ambitious stuff -- Cisco's goal isn't to kick out a single consumer-focused set-top box, but rather to build out an entire video network architecture in conjunction with service providers that allows customers to view any authorized content on any device on any network. That means that in addition to the actual Videoscape set-top box for your TV, there will also be apps for everything from Android and iOS to game consoles and Macs and PCs -- in the end, Cisco thinks your standard premium cable subscription will serve content everywhere, negating the need for supplemental services like Hulu and Netflix. There's also a Videoscape Media Gateway that can serve up local content across all your devices -- the company demoed sharing a quick Flip video with family members just by plugging the camera into the Gateway. Obviously rebuilding entire cable systems around pervasive content delivery won't be easy -- Cisco says "video is the new voice" when it comes to disruptive industry shifts -- and the only partner announced today is Telstra. To really gain momentum the company will have to sell its vision to huge companies like Comcast and Time Warner, who are already working on their own projects. We'll see what happens -- it makes sense for a networking provider like Cisco to take this sort of end-to-end approach, but there's a lot of action in this space right now, and we don't think anyone has the luxury of time. %Gallery-112784% %Gallery-112750%

  • Analyst asks how much would it take for you to switch TV providers

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    02.04.2010

    Ready to jump ship from your current TV provider? The latest research from Strategy Analytics indicates you wouldn't be alone if that's the case, with 68% of U.S. TV customers saying they're willing to switch for a 20% price discount. However, users getting TV from their phone company like FiOS or U-Verse had the highest satisfaction levels, well above those of cable and satellite. We're not surprised cutting costs by 1/5 for comparable service would at least give users cause to think about jumping ship, we're more interested in hearing from the 32% that wouldn't, and why. Love FiOS that much? Can't live without Xfinity? Let us know.

  • NeuLion iPTV HD Box streams Internet videos to the TV

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    01.10.2009

    NeuLion, the people behind the NFL's GamePass HD and Game Rewind online streaming video services, is launching a standalone IPTV receiver capable of decoding 720p or 1080i video. The iPTV HD TV Box not intended to be sold directly to consumers, but their partners may offer it so viewers can take their Silverlight, Flash or Move Networks encoded streams to the HDTV. No word whether any tuners are included but it can access a 7-day channel guide, output Dolby Digital 5.1 audio and serve as a DVR. A bit simpler than an HTPC and probably cheaper than a whole new HDTV, keep an eye out for the first boxes shipping in March.

  • Visionmill cranks out HD IPTV channel, more to come?

    by 
    Darren Murph
    Darren Murph
    01.03.2007

    While the mega-corporations are making this whole HD IPTV thing look easy, it's hard out here for an entrepreneur trying to launch his own gig. Rob Draper, an internationally acclaimed cinematographer, envisions IPTV as the future of television delivery, primarily because advertisers can focus their marketing to select channels / websites rather than just blasting ads out to everyone as they do now, theoretically wasting resources on folks who will shun their offerings anyway. After a failed attempt to make Visionmill, his own IPTV service, "a source of programming for TV food channels" and to turn Camden, Maine a "TV production hotspot," he branched out on his own and created SingleMalt.tv, which is dubbed the "world's first internet TV channel devoted to single malt Scotch whiskey." More important, however, is the fact that everything on the site is shot and delivered in crisp 720p, and while it may be hard to convince Mr. Draper to venture somewhere other than the beautiful hillsides of Scotland to set up shop, there could be more channels in the future as his startup blossoms -- but for now, we can all raise our glasses to 720p over the 'net, eh?