Video: SlingPlayer Mobile for iPad Gets Teased

On November 17, 2010, in Industry News, by J.R. Bookwalter

(Image & video courtesy of Engadget)It’s hard not to love Slingbox, the home theatre hardware capable of throwing any video plugged into it to whatever compatible device you might have. The iPhone has had SlingPlayer Mobile for some time now, but…

BulletTrain Express Unites Your Keyboard and Magic Trackpad

On October 28, 2010, in Industry News, by J.R. Bookwalter

If you prefer the laptop experience on your desktop or perhaps you use a Mac mini as your home theatre computer, then BulletTrain has a new release just for you — it’s unibody aluminum platform to combine your wireless keyboard and Magic Trackpad.9t…

BulletTrain Express Unites Your Keyboard and Magic Trackpad

On October 28, 2010, in Industry News, by J.R. Bookwalter

If you prefer the laptop experience on your desktop or perhaps you use a Mac mini as your home theatre computer, then BulletTrain has a new release just for you — it’s unibody aluminum platform to combine your wireless keyboard and Magic Trackpad.9t…

Apple TV Gets Tiny, Fits in the Palm of Your Hand

On September 1, 2010, in Industry News, by J.R. Bookwalter

Acknowledging that the Apple TV has “never been a big hit,” CEO Steve Jobs has introduced the latest and greatest version of the living room device, bringing more of Hollywood movies and TV shows in HD to your home theatre.Claiming that people who …

Google TV Brings Android & Chrome to the Living Room

On May 20, 2010, in Industry News, by J.R. Bookwalter

Google TV

Google’s open-source Android and Chrome is taking the leap from the small screen to your home theatre in a big way.

The Official Google Blog today announced that Google TV is indeed a reality, and will be coming to a wide range of devices this fall (hopefully in time for the new TV season!). The search behemoth describes the service as “TV meets web, web meets TV” and has enlisted a host of hardware partners to make its television ambitions a reality.

“Google TV is a new experience for television that combines the TV that you already know with the freedom and power of the Internet,” the Google blog reveals. “With Google Chrome built in, you can access all of your favorite websites and easily move between television and the web. This opens up your TV from a few hundred channels to millions of channels of entertainment across TV and the web. Your television is also no longer confined to showing just video. With the entire Internet in your living room, your TV becomes more than a TV — it can be a photo slideshow viewer, a gaming console, a music player and much more.”

If this sounds familiar, it’s because a wide range of companies have been trying to make this dream come true, including our beloved Apple, Inc. with their often-neglected Apple TV device. Google TV is built on the company’s existing Android and Google Chrome technology, and a Google TV SDK and accompanying web APIs will be released to developers shortly after the product launches; in the meantime, developers are encouraged to start optimizing their websites for the service today.

Google partners Sony and Logitech are on board to help bring Google TV to televisions everywhere, in addition to Blu-ray players and companion boxes. Google TV-enabled hardware devices will go on sale this fall at Best Buy stores nationwide, and at least one satellite provider, Dish Network, is already on board to provide the technology to its customers as well. In the meantime, you can sign up online to get more updates as they become available.

The real question now is, how will Apple respond to yet another new threat from Google to one of their business models, even if the Apple TV is still considered just “a hobby”? Your move, Cupertino…

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