Comcast looking for in-vehicle video

This is just a PR for now… but certainly an interesting announcement from Comcast and Delphi at CES. If in-demand or direct broadcast to car takes off with Sirius or XM I wonder how it will compete with something like this. You’ll need a new device regardless and will have to make a choice based on what programming is attractive to you and your family. There’s no mention of content in this deal, it’s really more of getting from home to car. I’d venture a guess that your Comcast DVR (only, not a regular set top) will be able to send video content to the car waiting in your garage.

LAS VEGAS, Jan. 5 /PRNewswire/ — At the 2005 Consumer Electronics Show, Delphi Corp. (NYSE: DPH) and Comcast Corporation (Nasdaq: CMCSA, CMCSK) plan to announce an agreement today under which the two companies will work together to develop ways to allow users to select video content, transfer it to an in-vehicle entertainment system, and take it with them on the go.

Under the agreement, Delphi will work to develop an electronic consumer device for use in vehicles that enables the transfer and user selected playback of video, and Comcast will examine ways to allow users to access
video content.

“The Comcast and Delphi joint development project will seek to explore ways to empower users with a new mechanism to deliver video programming to the vehicle,” said Dave Wohleen, Delphi vice president and president of Delphi’s
Electronics & Safety sector. [PR Newswire]

Time Warner OnDemand

Time Warner Cable in NYC has just updated their OnDemand system and now includes a pretty serious array of new programming — AOL Music ComedyCentral, A&E, BBC America, CourtTV, GOLF, CNN G4TechTV, Food Network, HGTV, and Kids on Demand.

I checked the Kids and was disappointed to only see cartoons for older kids and no PBS stuff… Comedy Central does have the Chappelle Rick James Episode, so no complaints there.

Strabucks’ Cab Toppers

MIT Advertising Lab reports on a very cool campaign Starbucks recently ran in Boston. Apparently there were large Starbucks cups were mounted on the roofs of cabs as though someone had left it there getting into the cab. People noticed enough to try and flag the drivers down at times… Talk about getting involved with the brand!

Portable Sirius

Orbitcast (nice!) is reporting on a handheld Sirius receiver which is capable of recording programs as well as storing your own MP3 tunes. You’ll apparently be able to edit recordings on your computer, though no word just yet on pictures or whether this will be Windows only.

Sirius Annnounces Video

As predicted, Sirius is launching a video capability … clearly targeting young families with two children’s channels. We’ll probably see some nice auto units to support this, but I can’t imagine using it much in-home with the variety typically available through cable or satellite.

Sirius Satellite Radio today announced at CES that it has selected Windows Media Video 9 for use in Sirius’ mobile video platform (which was briefly mentioned during their NAVTEQ partnership announcement), and has reached an agreement with Microsoft to collaborate in the further development of video applications.

Sirius plans to offer a video service in the second half of 2006, and expects to devote 2-3 channels of premium video content designed primarily for children. With the explosive growth of DVD sales, video capabilities in automobiles are quickly becoming a prime feature for families and travelers. The automobile industry is increasingly interested in offering entertainment features to their new car buyers. According to Sirius, its automotive partners are eager proponents of the service, given the strong demand for rear seat video entertainment. [Orbitcast]

HP launching a Linux Media Hub

Just in from the NYT… This is a bold slap to Microsoft considering HP is the marquee brand used in all Media Center marketing. This makes a pretty clear statement on the ease of use … or lack thereof of the Media Center platform.

Hewlett-Packard will introduce a new device this fall meant to record and play back television as well as organize digital media, including photos, music and video, the company said yesterday.

Hewlett already offers similar devices based on Microsoft’s Windows Media Center Edition. The device, called the HP Media Hub, will be based on the Linux operating system.

Carleton S. Fiorina, the chief executive, said that by using Linux, rather than Windows, Hewlett can reduce the cost of the device, which has not been set, she said.

“The real motive is not the cost,” she added, but “the ease of use and simplicity. [NYT]

Getting Sirius with Ford

Sirius announced a major deal with Ford today which will have Sirius factory installed in the Ford F-150 (the best selling truck), the Ford Explorer (the best selling SUV), the Lincoln Mark LT and the Mercury Mountaineer. New installs will include at least a 6 month complimentary subscription to the service…

Having a major manufacturer like this offer the service in such popular cars is a sure boost to Satellite radio in general.

TivoToGo

Sean Alexander at Addicted to Digital Media reports on Tivo’s launch of the TivoToGo service which has been highly anticipated by many.

It seems that aside form being a windows only deal – come on Tivo! – there are some significant restrictions, like not being able to take flagged content like the Sopranos with you, not working with DirecTV units, not working with many DVD burners (software purchased separately… and it’s not even out yet) and having to constantly enter your password.

Restricting what content works with a strong-DRM system is an incredibly bad move in my mind. Why even bother? Other than possibly being easy to use – and that’s questionable with all the password authentication and lack of support initially for DVD Burners – you’d be better off losing a degree of quality and sticking to the analog to digital conversion path most people have been using to archive or transport content.

There’s a chance it will work on the Mac eventually, but I fear Tivo might be missing a serious opportunity to keep this simple. When you read about the service on their site, there’s quite a bit off techno-jargon including codecs which is certain to scare off a good many people. At least it seems to be a free addition to your existing service.

The Broadband Phone Company

I just caught the tail end of a Vonage TV ad, the first I’ve seen. If you’ve got broadband, you’re ready to go. Nice, quick and simple. Strong use of the 800# and URL. No confusing techo-speak.

Spammers starting the new year off strong!

I’ve received hundreds more comment spam attempts and actually about 200 hundred new spam comments this morning. The new ones are deleted, added to my blacklist and getting blasted. When my mail checks every 5 minutes I get anywhere from 30 to 50 new notifications of deletes. Pretty intense…

I checked the domain of the new guy – a pictures url – and it was registered yesterday, in obvious preparation for today.

UPDATE — I originally posted this at about 20 minutes to 1 p.m. It’s now 4 p.m. and I’ve received 1463 notifications on comment spam attempts. This is out of control! Fortunately, the Spaminator has an option to set the notifications to false which I’ve just done. With that many Spam notices, I can’t possibly utilize my Treo for email as it will simply choke on that number of new messages. At least Mail.app manages them as threads so they are listed as a single message until I open the thread and then… whoa.

Some Changes…

I’ve made a few small changes around the blog… A new header graphic and some links in the sidebar. I think for the time being, I’ll be using del.icio.us for links and smaller items rather than simply blogging a full post with basically just a link. I’m sure exceptions will follow, but we’ll see how this goes.

If you read this via newsreader and would like to update your subscription, now would be a great time! I’ve been using Feedburner for some time and would certainly love to know more about the people reading. As you might notice this is a non-commercial adventure so I am not looking to track you to serve contextual ads… though GoogleAd words may make a return this year at some point.

My Main Feed

My Links Feed … though I have the ability to include the links directly in the main feed thanks to Feedburner’s splicing. If that’s easier and people would prefer a single source for everything that eventually gets posted here, it’s easy enough to merge. Please let me know.

Happy New Year!

Welcome to 2005!

2004 was a great year for me, though it marked the first time in my professional life I was not employed by someone else in a full-time manner. I consulted and did some contract work, but mainly spent a great deal of time with my family and really enjoyed being a dad for my daughter Hannah’s first year.

I am looking forward to what another year will bring.

Spaminator Strikes ’em down

I’ve received several hundred comment spam attempts here in the past 12 hours and my Spaminator plugin has smacked them all down which rocks. If you use WordPress, I can’t recommend this enough!

Actually they just keep on coming… there have been at least another hundred since I initially deleted the notes in my email. Pretty amazing… mainly Poker BS. So far none have successfully posted to my blog, which is great.

Bing! Bye-bye, BlackBerry

Stanley Bing writes a regular humor column in Fortune but this one’s a keeper! Driving while replying… please! I only check messages on my Treo while cruising at highway speeds. Well, OK, I guess I’ve replied to a few including IM. ahem…

Ah, sweet and capable instrument! The things you have shown me in our time! Information about new business prospects that pop up like truffles overnight in your digital field. Amusing messages from friends speaking through their implements to mine, one BlackBerry to another. Important data that shaped my thinking when my mind was occupied with nothing but which wine to select, which exit to take on the Interstate …

Ah, dangerous love! How many times have I fired off messages, thumbs blazing, while driving down the highway at 70 miles per hour! Was I mad? Yes. I was insane with the potential of our relationship. It was you and I, and when we were in a zone where we could not communicate, when your bars went down to zero, how often did I lean out the window, drive to high ground, weasel my way to another location to see whether I could bring you to life?

Ah! How often did you and I wait together in a restaurant for a tardy companion, only to look around and see everyone else peering into his electronic pal and thumbing madly like a raccoon washing its food in a frosty river? Oh, my plastic fantastic love! My heart is breaking! Hear it breaking? Or at least buzzing with an unhealthy rattle that signifies catastrophic systemic failure?

Because I don’t love you anymore.

It started when I got a new incarnation of you. This one is blue. The screen is odd. The font is skinny and sans serif and tough to read. The backlight, too, is feeble and intermittent. You’re now ultrasleek and a little bit plump and so up-to-the-minute. Like everything else in this technologically intensive society, you’ve been improved to the point of being slightly less satisfying in some way. I don’t know why that is, but it’s true. [Fortune]

Comcast’s near future plays

There’s a great feature piece on Comcast running on this week’s cover at Barrons. They present the current financials of the company and talk about the 98% upgraded network which is running quite an array of enhanced services. Most recently the dual-tuner HD DVR has been rolling out but the enhanced VOD service, something that has been touted in advance for some time sounds really killer.

Comcast’s brass is particularly excited about its aggressive rollout of video on demand. The company has begun to make thousands of hours of programming available for download, most of it at no extra charge to its digital-cable subscribers. Comcast customers already can choose from 4,000 hours of programs, including movies, television episodes, advertorials and original content. While there are pay movies — and Comcast officials note that pay-per-view’s popularity has jumped with the introduction of VOD — the real story here is the ability to go a step beyond the DVR and give viewers more flexibility about what they want to watch and when they can watch it.

“The idea is that a subscription to cable is no longer just a subscription to basic cable, plus premium and digital channels,” says Moffett. “It means access to a nearly unlimited library of movies and educational programming and episodes of television shows. This is not pay per view. This is a complete rethinking of the way customers buy video service.”

The company’s video-on-demand ambitions were a key factor in its $60 billion bid for Disney, which the leaders of Mousedom spurned as too low. If it had succeeded, Comcast could have had a stranglehold on family-oriented programming. (The company already owns a small group of cable channels, including E!, the Golf Channel, G4TechTV, the Style Network, the International Channel and Outdoor Life Network.) While Roberts contends that Comcast isn’t likely to attempt anything else on the scale of the Disney foray again, the company has been working diligently to generate a pool of differentiated programs. It recently gained access to the film libraries at MGM and Sony, which include 45,000 TV episodes and 7,500 feature films — according to Roberts, almost half the color movies ever made. The deal is part of the pending $2.9 billion acquisition of MGM by a group of investors led by Sony. Comcast invested $300 million in the transaction.

The company early next year will start offering a rotating roster of about 200 free films from the Sony and MGM libraries to video-on-demand customers each month. Also planned: VOD access to old TV favorites, such as The Three Stooges, The Partridge Family and Starsky & Hutch. The companies have also agreed to roll out three new cable channels, to capitalize on the rich library of films and television programs.

The other key piece from the article that I took away is that Comcast, like the recent Time Warner quadruple-play development, is considering a serious move into wireless. The real difference though is that they are thinking a combination of mobile on the road with a WiFi VOIP phone at home will come through in a single piece of hardware. Sounds excellent! It’s actually great to see large companies — not just the outlaws in VOIP going for it with public thinking like this. It’s this sort of product that will make the tech seemless — assuming the hardware allows it of course — for consumers which should stimulate demand. VOIP makes it pretty easy to move about with your number already, but having it across devices in an easy manner is just great.

Comcast continues to bet well on the future…

Streamlined Cable TV in a Card

David Pogue tells all on Cable Cards in his latest Circuits column. It’s clearly a version 1 product which might be right for certain customers… for most however, a cable box is in the cards (pun intended) for years to come. Aside from the fact that today’s TVs won’t work with the 2-way cards coming next, your cable company won’t be able to sell you enhanced services… like on-demand, enhanced guides and PPV.