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 ]

Eminem on SNL

Call me crazy, but I think Eminem was reading from a teleprompter during his performance of Mosh to keep up with his lipsynching… There were definitely a few out of sync moments.

I like the song, the video and the message, but it was still a surprising reveal.

1001 for Flickr

Very cool new desktop client for Flickr… You can upload from your desktop or iPhoto as well as view updated photos from contacts and friends.

1001 is a desktop client to be used in conjunction with Flickr, the online photo-sharing website. 1001 not only uploads photos to your Flickr account, it notifies you anytime new photos from either your contacts, everyone, or your favorite tags are uploaded. 1001 allows you to step into the stream of photos passing through Flickr and to quickly see what’s new at the moment. Just run the app in the background and if triggered, 1001 pops up a small unobtrusive window to notify you of new photos. [Kula]

No 411 on CallVantage?

I just discovered that there is no 411 service on AT&T’s CallVantage service. You can only do lookups via their Anywho.com service or obviously any other online directory of your choosing. Kind of a strange piece to leave out if you ask me. I don’t call 411 too often, but just tried and found out it does not work. After a call into customer support, I discovered it’s not offered at all.

HD will kill the paid DVR market

I was reading Jim Louderback’s review of the Hughes DirecTV DVR on Extremetech and got to thinking…

You’ve got to be crazy to spend upwards of $1000 for a DVR. I know the Scientific Atlanta Explorer 8000HD system I have is far from perfect, but

  • It’s integrated with my cable service and
  • the box is free!

I know I’ve ranted previously about the marketing mistakes made my TiVO, but now it’s really coming to a rapid end. TiVO2Go is coming sure and will let you watch via key system on your PC, but the damn things are limited in what they can really do for all that cash. Even if you have a DVD based system, it seems you can only playback on the same system – ouch. Soon enough TiVO will automatically upgrade your box so that you can only save an on-demand program for a limited time. This is actually better than the cable system which completely prevents recording of this same programming, but the effect is the same in the end. You have no control over your video content from TV, and with HD just like DVD it gets even tougher to move around.

It won’t matter that you’ve paid for the box, or that I did not. Neither of us will be able to digitally archive in full resolution without a crack and some legal scrapes. It’s unfortunate that for now the way it works on the Sat side is that you have to buy a bunch of stuff – seems the best deal and most channels for HD are on Voom. On my cable system I get quite a few HD channels (HBO, SHO, CBS, TNTHD, NBC, FOX, ABC, PBS and DiscoveryHD Theater). HBO, SHO, TNTHD, PBS and Discovery are all HD all the time. The networks play an interesting shell game with what programs are actually HD vs simply an enhanced SD signal.

As Jim noted in his review of the Hughes box, it’s been crippled on a few fronts. The video outs are limited to a single source at a time and the HDMI connect blocks access to component connections when active. This last bit is not surprising given that my SA box does not support simultaneous use of the video outs either… I won’t be able to test when the DVI gets activated as I don’t have a capable HD set. The closest anyone will get to sharing on a home network will be with the Explorer 8300 series and these will allow (in theory as they are being tested now in some markets) watching and continuing in a another room. Your video content will continue to be locked down as it is now and only capable of being extracted by first passing through an A-D and back again process.

You see we are all apparently thieves…

There’s no way to archive on a network today to clear space on a DVR drive for more current programming. While the box is on the network, it’s not accessible to any of us. The new HD DVR box no longer even has the FireWire port which would have had to have been turned on per the FCC mandate as of April 1, 2004. Removing the FW port was a not so subtle move around compliance and stunts consumer access because without it, there’s no reason for people to call to gain access to their content.

Back to the main reason I started writing this… Why the hell would I pay money to knowingly get blocked? Once the broadcast flag gets activated, we will lose what limited access to video material we have today outside of public airwave material, though if it’s in HD there won’t be any easy way to store it for any great length of time (I have no way or desire to use a terrestrial antenna). The HD TiVOs will all comply as they have already begun to do. This will make promoting TiVO as a premium service even more difficult as these changes come into effect. Scientific Atlanta’s business is booming right now thanks to the marketing efforts of cable companies like Comcast and Time Warner. The more aware consumers become of the opportunity for advanced (yes though limited even if they don’t care or know) TiVO will struggle.

Don’t get me wrong, I actually like TiVO. Seriously… I do. I purchased a Series 1 box a few years back but left it to gather dust for integrated 2 tuner cable guide service and now HD. It’s just way to difficult to justify the cost and potential service on a box when I just swap out the one I have now if and when something better comes along or if something goes wrong.

Why there’s no video iPod

Michael Gartenberg at Jupiter Research posts on what he views as the real reason for the lack of a video iPod and it’s actually quite simple – legal.

While there are plenty of ways to convert or simply play video content from a DVD on your home network none are actually legal even though you can do the same thing with music. Ah lobbies…

I saw some interesting theories why three’s no video iPod. I won’t get into the argument about whether consumers want mobile video. There’s clearly a segment that does and I won’t debate that side of the argument. The argument I read today goes since Steve Jobs owns Pixar he doesn’t want illegal movies ripped. Perhaps. But that’s not the reason. It’s because unlike music, it’s illegal to rip a DVD to your hard drive, Pixar or otherwise. Simple. No same company wants to get into that legal issue with the studios and provide those tools. Not Apple. Not Microsoft. In fact, the reason MediaCenter Extenders won’t stream DVDs from your MCE to the device is that in order to do so they need to be decrypted to send the stream. That’s illegal too. Should it be? Of course not, but at the moment, it is. The only other source of legal video content is recorded TV and Apple at the moment has no interest in playing in that market. Should they? Perhaps, but that’s another story. Now there’s always personal created video but the market for that is tiny… really, really tiny. Call me and I’ll show you how small those numbers are. There’s a reason we call them consumers, as they consume content and not create it. There’s no market for the video iPod for Apple’s customers at the moment. No evil schemes. No Machiavellian thoughts behind it. It’s just not a good move for Apple without the sources of content they need. They will be there and we will get a video iPod one day. Just not this one. [Michael Gartenberg: ]

DIY MMS

MMSLIB is a PHP library for decoding and encoding MMS (Multimedia Message Service) messages. Use it to create your own MMS Proxy-Relay, as the library author has done for his own Peffisaur (nee MMS Diary) app [MobileWhack]

There are many uses for this – like not paying for each message, not having your messages tracked and saved by your carrier or perhaps creating a service for anyone to use… 😉

Jumsoft | Process

Jumsoft Process is a very nice outliner for OS X. It can handle projects as separate files but from the same interface, which is nice and enables easy tracking of workflow. You can easily manage due dates and priorities and link files relevant to your tasks. In my brief test the only real issue I have is that there is no direct link to iCal for Datebook and ToDo management and notification via Treo. I’d love to see that added as it would make like much simpler than having to rely purely on the computer… You can export to iPod among other locations and file types, which is helpful – just not to my usual workflow.

It’s only $25 and there’s a 7 day unlimited trial period.

Sprint Treo 650 will soon be capable via Bluetooth

According to this note on Mobilewhack, Sprint will eventually release the locked bluetooth profiles to allow the Treo 650 to be used as as modem. Score one for consumer protest.

Due to some development deadlines, the phone has been launched as described, without the DUN [dial-up networking] capability. However, as part of a scheduled maintenance release of software (timing pending some testing), the DUN capabilities will be supported. … In no way is Sprint suppressing the functionality as you describe or with the motivations you assert. [MobileWhack]

TiVo thoughts

Just ran across this statement on TiVo… certainly hits the nail on the head — especially now that DVR penetration is pushing ahead right from the Cable and Satellite guys…

How do you convince consumers that paying a premium for first class is a good idea when the folks sitting in coach either don’t know first class exists or worse, THINK they already are sitting in first class? [Michael Gartenberg]

SmartCast

Great news for anyone trying to deal but not able to generate an enclosure based feed…

As the enthusiasm about Podcasting has grown in recent weeks, so has our enthusiasm for more generally managing RSS enclosures (we don’t get out much). In the past couple weeks, we have received numerous emails asking if we could begin to provide services that would enable Podcasting for folks that can’t currently cast, pod or otherwise. Problem solved. SmartCast%u2122 enables any feed publisher to create Podcasts, whether you generate Atom feeds or RSS 1.0 feeds. Maybe you’ve got an RSS 2.0 feed but no ability to create hooks into enclosure elements? No problem. [The Official FeedBurner Weblog]

HAVAS Scores Vonage

Havas certainly needed this win…

Should be interesting to see how this money gets spent as it’s going to be very tough to keep up with the market setting spend of ATT CallVantage.

Internet phone service pioneer Vonage, in a tough battle to maintain market share in the emerging market, said it has awarded its estimated $50 million to $75 million advertising account to Havas-owned agencies, including MPG and Arnold One.

Arnold Worldwide, including its interactive unit, Arnold One, will handle creative, while MPG picks up the media buying and planning portion. [Ad Age]