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Earlier this week, Apple announced the much awaited iOS 4.2 update for the iPad. It brings tons of new features to iPad like Multitasking
Few days ago we reported about a new USB Modchip called PS Jailbreak for PlayStation 3 which enables you to dump games off original discs on the internal or any external drive connected to PS3
iOS 4.2 was released earlier today. Just like iOS 4.1 and iOS 4.0.2, the new iOS 4.2 at the moment is not jailbreakable.
TC has finally rolled out Android 2.2 Froyo for HTC EVO 4G on Sprint. The image is available as direct download from HTC’s website. Here is the official description from Sprint
Microsoft has finally taken the wraps off its shiny new web browser: Internet Explorer 9. The beta version of IE 9 is now available for download for users running both 32 and 64-bit versions of Windows 7 and Vista.
When we began our review of the BlackBerry Torch (aka the Bold 9800), our hearts were all aflutter. The leaked shots we'd been seeing of some kind of Palm Pre-esque RIM slider
Of the seemingly countless variants of the Galaxy S that Samsung's in the process of deploying around the globe, one stands out in a couple very unique (and important) ways: Sprint's Epic 4G
While you won’t be ever able to run a full-blown modern desktop OS like Windows or Linux on your iOS gadget anytime soon, but with virtual-machining software Parallels Desktop for Mac
Earlier today, Apple overhauled the entire iPod lineup for fall 2010, bringing iPhone 4
Its here folks! and its real!! Geohot is back big time with limera1n jailbreak for all iOS devices including: iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, iPad, iPod touch 4G / 3G / 2G, untethered running iOS 4.1.
The iPhone Dev Team has finally released PwnageTool 4.1 which is based on recently releasedLimera1n Geohot’s bootrom-based exploit.
After Apple relaxed its App Store restrictions, the first of apps that benefitted from this were Google Voice clients (like GV Connect and GV Mobile+)
Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he'll explore where our industry is and where it's going -- on both micro and macro levels -- with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.
GoogleTV will launch this fall on a new line of connected TVs and Blu-ray players from Sony, as well as a set top box from Logitech. This strategy has a familiar feel -- Sony's sold TVs with integrated TiVo functionailty in the past, and no one wanted them. Mixing TV content with a third-party set top box is also a challenge. In fact, vendors like Apple and Roku avoid doing this because it's a hassle. Unless you incorporate CableCARD into your box, users still need to rely on a separate cable box for content, and that's a problem -- in order to integrate command and control, Google is using an IR blaster. Yep -- an IR blaster. The same way I connected my first-gen TiVo in 1997. See, I told you this was familiar.
Strip out the "whole web" and apps, and you're pretty much left with an updated version of the first-gen TiVo, minus the DVR capabilities. |
Once you get connected Google says GoogleTV is different because it's the whole web on your TV, as well as the entire Android marketplace -- all your Android apps will work on GoogleTV. The problem is the TV is not just another connected screen -- the TV is the largest screen in the home, and it's optimized for passive viewing of content as a shared experience. Research has shown time and time again that consumers don't want the whole internet on their TVs. Consumers simply don't want Gmail or Twitter or the "whole" web on the TV. There's a fundamental difference between what Google is offering and what consumers want -- and, importantly, what they're willing pay for. Plus, it's hard to sell the consumer on having to buy a complex remote or using their phones as a remote. (Note to Google: remotes are shared household device, and are often left on the couch. Phones are personal, rarely shared, and aren't usually left on they couch unless by mistake.) Strip out the "whole web" and apps, and you're pretty much left with an updated version of the first-gen TiVo, minus the DVR capabilities.
I get why the TV is important to Google -- it's a great opportunity for even more ad revenue. But the TV is not a phone or a PC. Consumers are looking for a different type of connected experience in their living rooms, and it's one that so far has defied every attempt to merge the TV and PC. GoogleTV just feels like the latest in a long line of niche products more likely to appeal to the enthusiast than to the mass market. An old joke has a consumer lamenting for a phone or PC that's as easy to use as a TV. Google can't succeed making the TV as complex as your other devices.
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