VOIP Going Mass

Andy at VoIP Watch states VOIP is going Mass Market, a position I totally agree with based on my experience and understanding of what’s been going on. AT&T is never a small player in any of the markets they play within and CallVantage is clearly replacing all previous marketing efforts in Local, Long Distance and even Wireless for them.

Vonage and others have their work cut out for them as they try and keep up with smaller marketing budgets as well as smaller Brands. The games have already begun – glad to have been early on the ticket line!

24 Mobisodes coming to cell phones

As a fan of the show, it’s too bad we won’t be getting this in the US… Have to just wait to hear about how it all works once things launch.

In what appeared to be the first arrangement of its kind, Twentieth Century Fox said Wednesday it would create a unique series of one-minute dramas based on its hit show “24” exclusively for a new high-speed wireless service being offered by Vodafone PLC, the world’s biggest cell phone company.

Vodafone will begin offering the one-minute epidosdes in January in the United Kingdom, coinciding with the start of the fourth season of the show on a satellite TV service. [MSNBC]

Heading out

about to take on on my first Song flight…

seems pretty good here from 24C. I’ve got Sat TV from Dish, PPV movies (I’ll pass on Cinderella Story), some tunes and music trivia in addition to my iPod, magazines and book to keep my always-on life occupied for the next few hours…

onward!

Media Adapter market just wrong?

According to the Park Associates study eHomeupgrade points to, the Media Adapter market is slow to grow based on just a sheer lack of understanding of things. You have to have a network of some kind (or be willing to create one) if you want to use a Media Adapter and apparently the people who claim they might be interested just have yet to develop a clue. I’m not sure if this is cart before horse, or just a response to some product marketing that seemed interesting, but was misinterpreted. Pretty painful if these number are accurate…

Parks Associates, in its latest “Digital Media Adapters and Receivers: Analysis and Forecasts” report, has found that 71% of households willing to purchase a DMA do not have a home network. Huh? In addition, most DMA products are designed with wireless home networks in mind, but only 14% of likely buyers have a wireless setup in their home. [eHomeUpgrade]

Delicious Library

It’s finally here! I’ve just downloaded it and am looking forward to giving this a shot – could be the ultimate catalogue app ever!

Run your very own library from your home or office using our impossibly simple interface. Delicious Library’s digital shelves act as a visual card-catalog of your books, movies, music and video games. A scan of a barcode is all Delicious Library needs to add an item to your digital shelves, downloading tons of info from the internet like the author, release date, current value, description, and even a high-resolution picture of the cover. Import your entire library using our exclusive full-speed iSight video barcode scanner, our Flic® Wireless Laser Bar Code Scanner, or (the slow way) entering the titles by hand. Once you have all of your items in your Mac, you can browse though your digital shelves, check stuff out to friends using Apple’s built-in Address Book and calendar, and find new items to read, watch, and play using Library’s recommendations. [Delicious Monster]

Digital Joy?

If you were watching ABC tonight and caught Extreme Makeover Home Edition you might have caught a 60 sec spot following the program for Digital Joy, The Microsoft, Intel and HP vision of what your home entertainment could all be routed through a new HP powered Media Center PC.

While I don’t doubt the power of the PC, or the marketing, I think the product itself actually falls short on a few ends…

First of all. A new computer? Do we really need to believe a new computer is required to enable this experience? Why can’t this stuff just work on my (or your) existing machine? Oh that’s right, you can’t really buy the Media Center application (more in a sec) without the box, even if you just bought a new PC with XP on it. I know times were tough and the industry is always pushing to find a new reason to get us to believe we need a new computer, but is this it? And if we do need a new computer, does it have to be the one we sacrifice to the living room? $1000, is the starting point for this stuff, and only gets you access in one place. You can spend much more (you can always spend more right?) on the computer itself, before factoring in any of the additional costs required for an extender set-up to allow the sharing promoted in the marketing messages.

I was at Circuit City last week cruising for goodies and actually wanted to play with some of the newer Media Center stuff as well as potentially play with any other Media Adapter they might have in stock and connected (none). I was surprised that Media Center 2004 was the latest product out on the shelves this close to the holidays (and given the big push at Digital Life). I was also very surprised that there were no Media Centers or adapters (or TiVos for that matter) actually connected to any of the TVs. There was certainly a huge array of TVs (and you’ve probably seen the big push from Circuit City these days as well) but only the usual video loop… There was nothing interactive to see which was a real letdown.

I found a few Media Center PCs on the shelves, 2 of the 3 were rendered helpless – powered off or without online connections which left them unconfigured and not very good samples to sell me on the concept. The one Media Center PC I found that not only worked, but that actually had an internet connection, gave me a taste for how things might work, though frankly going back to me previous point about not connecting to the TV, it fell pretty short. The remote was missing, I presume hidden or stolen, so I was left to my own devices and with mouse in hand I explored the way things worked.

I think the Media Center concept is very interesting… I just don’t get why it works the way it does. It’s really just an application – or perhaps a suite of applications. You can launch it with a double-click from the desktop and voila, you are in the media center UI. When I think about this, it makes me just shake my head. In my home we have two computer literate adults and an baby… The last think my wife wants to do when she sits down on the couch is launch an application! She wants to cruise easily with the remote, not worry about blue screens of death and just watch what’s on, or what has been recorded. If there’s other stuff we’ve collected (OK, what I’ve ripped to the machine, or downloaded) it’s my job currently to manage the remote since our home theater, while not too crazy … can get a bit complex. While the Media Center would all work on a single video input on our set (a real bonus) it would drive her batty .. and me as a result as well.

Beyond batty, if I spent over $1000 (you pay extra for 2 tuners as well by the way), just to replace a DVR we already have for one not capable of HD, I’d be questioning myself very seriously. That’s what’s been leading me to the next big thing… why do Media Centers even have DVRs? Tomorrow we will probably learn of Microsoft’s joint development with Comcast, though it will be some time (as usual) until this rolls out on a mass level if ever. I would think that a Media Center would want to better integrate with an existing system, rather than overlap in function for something you might already be using well. Imagine viewing material recorded through your TiVo or Cable provider DVR over your home network… What happens when the Microsoft capable cable boxes come and people are already running their Media Center PCs? Does one cancel the other out? Will the box enable itself as an extender? Is it actually going to even work without a great deal of labor from the consumer — of course taking into effect that you already run the most current home networking tech.

Taking all this in, it hit me that while there are many products in this Media Center / Adapter category, they’ve all been niche players for various reasons… complexity, cost, geekery, software issues or poor marketing — you know like over promising and under-delivering. No one has nailed the simple – and that’s a relative term given the basic installation requirements for any of this stuff. To me simple is basically plug and play. My Eyehome comes closest – though short on some software UI and some multitasking capabilities, but close. It cost me under $200. There’s no DVR (already have that anyway), but it handles pictures, music and video content across my home network. An equivalent capability in Microsoft, Intel and HP terms would cost over 5 times as much.

More and More HD

If you live in NYC and use Time Warner Cable with an HD box, you might want to check out the newly added channels… They’ve added INHD, INHD2, HDNet Movies, HDNet and ESPN HD. Free for now, but I think this will be sold as a package for an additional $9.95/mo.

TWC now has a pretty nice list of HD channels… 13 in fact including the previous line up of NBC, ABC, Fox, CBS, HBO, SHO, PBS, and TNT.

TiVo is listening

PVRBlog drew my attention to a letter to TiVo from George Hotelling asking that they enable web links ala ITMS so you could remotely program your device…

A day later… TiVo has added this as a feature! Congratulations TiVo! Apparently they were already working on this when George wrote the letter, but regardless the timing makes you look great! I hope you can take the advice of other advocates for your product to continue to improve things — especially now that we know some changes will be downloaded and most likely will cause a pretty negative stir when they arrive.

Bit Torrent to the rescue

Last night my DVR crapped out(second time, second box), froze and decided to delete everything it had done since 7 am that day. We lost a few primetime programs which we had yet to watch or complete and I was at a loss for what to do (in order to prevent the wrath of my wife really) until I remember my friend Bit Torrent.

It’s amazing and wonderful that you can find such an abundance of programming, both from the past — and more importantly in this case totally current! I even found one of the shows we wanted to catch which had been captured in HD. It’s pretty cool people are contributing their work for others in this way… commercials even get edited out, so you don’t have to even consider fast forwarding… nice! Watching this back on the Home Theater via Eyehome even nicer!

With faster broadband, it would totally be possible to share in almost realtime. I believe in fact that via some form of P2P this is already happening in Korea where over 80% of the population has a broadband over 6MB. It took me all night and a bit of this morning to get both the shows I wanted (The Apprentice and C.S.I. in HD) since they are both an hour long, but this am, I was able to quickly snag the past two night The Daily Shows as well. With the popular stuff, there are quite a few people to connect to which really gets the transfer rates going…

Don’t forget to keep on seeding after you get what you need to keep it good for others.

Good riddance… officially.

I never got into this guy …I just found him to be incredibly annoying.

Facing declining sales and robust competition, and widespread criticism over the campaign featuring the hapless burger evangelist, Wendy’s today said the chain would end its Mr. Wendy campaign at the end of the month. [AdAge]

DVR Download Service Trialed In Japan

I caught this on Paid Content today… Of course Japan only for the moment, but still very cool and goes well beyond what we can do in the states, both with bandwidth and with the content.

“Hikari de DVD” is the first video content distribution system to combine the capabilities of a high speed Fiber to the Home (FTTH) broadband network, with the versatility of a DVD recorder able to support downloads of movies and music to a DVD-RAM disc.

The service adopts DVD-VR (video recording), the standard format for DVD recorders, allowing it to achieve a high level of usability. The service uses Content Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM), a standard content protection technology for DVD recorders, in a digital rights management (DRM) system that supports a high level security for content distribution.

The system supports both rental and sales of content. Rented content can be viewed for a certain period, while purchased content can be viewed repeatedly. [DVD Recordable]

Get your vote on!

We voted before lunch today and I was pleased to see a good crowd all doing their part. Nothing too major to report on the line, it was not a big deal and only took a few minutes… be sure to do your part today!

CallVantage sounds better than Vonage

In my very unscientific tests here in the home lab, I have noticed a significant difference in call quality between Vonage and CallVantage.

I’ve made calls at similar times with similar loads on both my internal network as well as traffic flowing in and out via iPodder and Bit Torrent. MIleage may vary for you, but I have yet to hear or experience any crackling, skipping or stuttering with CallVantage and have heard my share of issues including unusable connections on Vonage.

Price is one issue and Vonage is certainly leading there, but CallVantage delivers the better voice experience (and still saves you mucho dinero) which is the real issue with phone service. It needs to just work.

Is EDGE an edge?

Does the fact that ATT/Cingular already has an active EDGE network give it a true edge for hungry Treo user itching to get their hands on the latest?

As a T-Mobile customer I know I am certainly weighing my options… I’ll have to wait and see what kind of data plans are available once the unit gets closer to its predicted December 1 launch but knowing that TMO was last to get the Treo 600 and that they do not have any formal EDGE announcements for the US just yet does not make me that comfortable.

My Treo 600 works great on TMO’s GPRS. They have a great unlimited data plan and no issues with how you use your phone and computer together… but the future is here now and like all good gadget geeks I want to be riding the crest of that first wave. I can’t be the only one thinking about ATT right now… thank goodness portability kicked in last year so we can easily make decisions based on the best place for your changing needs.

But will it do WiFi?

Engadget notes the News.com story that PalmOne may actually be looking into developing a Windows Mobile Treo in addition to a Palm based unit. This would seriously hurt the PalmSource group and OS devices in general to have such an inside defection… I hope it’s just a rumor, though at least there are solutions to sync to Mac in case this does go down.

PalmSource’s biggest customer and maker of the Treo 650) appears it really might be planning to use Microsoft’s Windows Mobile OS in its Treo line of smartphones (they’d keep making Palm-powered Treos). No comment from Microsoft on this yet, when it’ll be out, carrier, specs or even which flavor of Windows Mobile it will be, but we’re guessing Pocket PC Phone Edition if it’s going to be in a Treo form factor. [ Engadget ]