TechCrunch Covers Movie Download Services

TechCrunch has a piece covering a variety of movie download services. They put together a decent chart showing percentage of top rentals offered and comparative pricing for CinemaNow, Movielink, GUBA, Amazon, and iTunes. Notably absent from their roundup is Vongo (by Starz!) — the one movie download option with favorable pricing: all-you-can-eat, $10/mo. An interesting … Read more

CNET TV Out Of Beta, Inks Deal With Verizon

CNET TV has finally returned… Originally composed of tech-related television shows, the latest incarnation is a web site just out of beta: www.cnettv.com. While CNET has sprinkled video clips throughout their site for some time, we now have a dedicated video destination. Bonus: Most clips are downloadable MPEG-4s, perfect for an iPod or other portable … Read more

DVR Multiroom Viewing: Current State of Affairs

Multichannel breaks down the current state of affairs for multiroom viewing (MRV), covering the various vendors, pricing schemes, and thoughts on consumer acceptance. They speculate Dish may have the largest distribution of MRV-capable products, though general home penetration is low and consumers show little interest. Given the topic I am somewhat surprised TiVo’s MRV didn’t … Read more

Interesting News Dave Hasn’t Covered

Never enough time… Cisco patents “triple play” of services. (Engadget) Comcast rolls out improved program guide. (Comcast) Gemstar/TV Guide sues Digeo/Moxi in patent case. (Reuters) Nokia to ship phones preloaded with Orb. (Engadget Mobile)

TiVo Meets With FCC, Talks CableCARD

While several TiVo representatives were (with me) at DigitalLife on Thursday, others were engaged with the FCC… What I found particularly interesting in the follow-up letter is “CableCARD deployment issues” — which has a decidedly negative connotation. I experienced a great deal of pain and frustration at Comcast’s hands in getting my S3 up and … Read more

Interesting News Dave Hasn’t Covered

Never enough time… Sony Ericsson PMP prototype? (Ubergizmo) Broadcast photos onto cable TV. (TechCrunch) Unimpressed with TiVo’s online services and KidZone. (Washington Post) Slingbox powers remote football scoreboard feed. (Broadcasting & Cable) DirecTV adds HD locals in 25 markets. (EngadgetHD)

DigitalLife Wrap-Up, Part 3

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So let’s review… T-Mobile’s rendition of the HTC Excalibur, branded “Dash”, hits the streets next week and kicks butt if you can put up with Windows Mobile and EDGE. Neither TiVo nor Sling put Apple fanboys first, but both will be offering support in the “near future” — if I were a gambling man, and sometimes I am, Sling’s will hit first. Both the Neuros OSD and ITVN devices caught my eye and I’m working on getting review boxes. Sony got my attention with their new LocationFree line (including receiver!) and electronic book Reader. Several of the savviest people I spoke to at the show had very positive things to say about Infrant‘s network-attached servers for media hosting. I’d like to get my hands on one, though Seagate’s rep offered me any product in their catalog. Hm! Pepper Pad still doesn’t do it for me, and neither do voice-powered remote controls.

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No show is complete without tons of schwag! Most of it is junk, but I did see (and collect) some notable items. Palm and TiVo had the best stuff. At their 680 press event, Palm gave away gift bags including a 1GB SD card, nice notebook and pen, and a non-slip dashboard pad — Treo not included. TiVo had goodies too, and I don’t think they were limited to VIPs (bonus!): TiVo bubbles, mints, stuffed dolls, KidZone lanyards, and sturdy nylon sackpacks. The Alienware bag had a throwaway t-shirt and mouse pad, but they kindly included a nice leather luggage tag which I will use. Over at ShowStoppers I ended up with a 256MB Kensington USB stick, Linksys/Cisco mini screwdriver thingy, and a glowing pen from TeleNav. I thought Movielink’s boxes of popcorn were clever (and a fine source of blogging sustenance).

After the jump, check out a few more pics from the show…

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DigitalLife Wrap-Up, Part 2

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HD DVD versus Blu-ray

As I mentioned earlier, I was mostly underwhelmed by the products I saw and was disappointed in what I didn’t see. For example, where the heck were the Zen Vision W and new Archos devices? Where was the new Akimbo+Movielink?

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The new PepperPad is out (v3) and I’m still left wondering if there is a market for this thing. While it’s a definite improvement over earlier models (feels solid, looks nice) at $700 I expect people to gravitate towards larger, more full-featured devices (laptop, UMPC) or portable devices (PDA, smartphone): both running as low as $400 these days. I assume I’d be more comfortable over time, but I found it awkward typing on the small keys and split keyboard.

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