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| WILL GOOGLE’S NEW NEXUS Q KILL GOOGLE TV? | Published: 28/06/12 |
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When Google unveiled the combination of the Nexus 7 tablet and the otherworldly Nexus Q streaming device at the Google I/O developers conference in San Francisco, observers couldn’t help but think, “But what about Google TV?”
The answer, I was told by several members of the Android and Google TV teams, involves Google thinking about the problem along a new axis: the social experience.
No, this isn’t the cloud-based “Google Entertainment System” some hoped for. And admittedly, the distinction still feels forced. But here’s the internal logic that drove Google’s decision.
Google TV Is About, Well, TV
As most people know by now, the first generation of the Google TV - as embodied by the Logitech Revue - maintained a rather Googlesque look and feel, emphasizing the Google browser, YouTube and shortcuts to the Web’s most popular video sites. Google employees didn’t use this exact term, but Google TV was itself a “second screen": Users could run the browser within a picture-in-picture (PIP) window, for example, seeking out an actor’s IMDB filmography while watching a movie in the main window. Later, Google TV-optimized apps like Rotten Tomatoes and Google’s own “TV and Movies” offered a more directed guide to the same information. Meanwhile, Equipment makers like LG and Sony began putting their own face or “skin” on the Google TV experience.
The Nexus Q, on the other hand, is not a standalone device; it can’t function without an Android tablet or phone instructing it what to do. Google employees told me that the Nexus Q uses the Android@Home framework that Google talked about at the last Google I/O, but uses a Wi-Fi connection, rather than the proprietary wireless standard Google previously discussed. Fortunately, that means that the 1-to-1 relationship between the Nexus 7 and Q will open up at about the time the Q is released, so as to allow “Gingerbread” (Android 2.3) devices to control the Q.
Nexus Q Can’t Do Much - Yet
But what can the Q actually do? So far, it serves as a shared version of Google’s existing services, Google Music and Google Play Movies. The Nexus Q connects to either an HDTV or speakers (or both) and can play back audio and video. That audio comes from either Google Music or Google Play, but with a twist - any user can add, subtract or adjust the playlist, and any user can play any song or video he or she has the rights to. That means, for example, that a friend can bring a digital version of the latest Rihanna track over to play at a party, or that a rented James Bond flick via Play can take movie night on the road. And those near the Q can launch a YouTube video any time they want with their tablet or phone.
No, there aren’t permissions, or priorities. “If your little sister comes in and wants to play her music, the way you deal with it is the same way you’ve always dealt with it - walk over and bop her on the head,” one Google employee jokingly told me. But this takes fighting over the remote to a whole new level. Groups of friends might never make it all the way through a single song. (Multiple users of Apple TV’s AirPlay feature already face similar issues.)
Simply put, Google TV supplements live TV. The Nexus 7 and Q, on the other hand, make listening to music and watching videos social and on-demand. (The Q does not support live TV.)
A New Approach
To date, Consumers have become used to a company providing a single solution for a single application (AppleTV), for example, or to a family of products scaling up and down over various feature sets and price points, like the Roku product line.
Google has tried a different approach. In a strange way, the distinction is reminiscent of the difference between a netbook and a laptop - one is cheap and optimized, the other pricier and more full-featured. But which is which? Google will charge $299 for the more focused Nexus Q, far more than the heavily discounted $99 Logitech Revue or the AppleTV. (That could be a problem: Netbooks haven’t done well lately even though they’re cheaper than laptops and many tablets.)
For now, the Nexus Q can play only movies rented via Google Play, plus YouTube; it lacks the Netflix app and other video services offered by Google TV and Apple TV. Yes, it’s reasonable to assume that Netflix will eventually appear for the Nexus Q (DRM issues may be the hold up, I’m told). Still, it’s difficult to see why someone would pay $299 per Nexus Q, especially if they want to add multiple Qs to various rooms of their house.
The Nexus Q hasn’t killed Google TV, not yet anyway. But as Google moves further down this social axis, either with updates or additional products, the social aspects may be combined with more traditional television experiences. And given that the Q bears the “Nexus” moniker that connotes Google’s flagship “experience” brand, that could eventually spell the end for Google TV.
| TOP 5 SPOTIFY APPS FOR MUSIC DISCOVERY | Published: 01/12/12 |
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Spotify wasn't built for discovery. The Swedish music streaming company realizes this and instead of trying to natively bake a zillion features into its service, itlaunched a platform for third party developers about a year ago.
Spotify's app directory now features almost 60 HTML5-based add-ons for the service's desktop client. These apps perform a lot of different functions - some are social, w...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| FACEBOOK LOOSENS ZYNGA'S LEASH - CAN CHANGING THE RULES SAVE ZYNGA? | Published: 30/11/12 |
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If this were a certain social network, Zynga and Facebook could probably agree that their relationship status is: It's complicated. Two new SEC filings on Thursday revealed that the social game-maker and the social network are putting a little distance between themselves, amending some rules of their multi-year agreement to give both companies a bit more autonomy.
What’s Changing In The SEC Amen...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| CHILL DIRECT: A FARM SYSTEM FOR VIDEO DISTRIBUTION | Published: 30/11/12 |
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What's the biggest hurdle to getting people to watch your film or video? Getting it in front of them in the first place. Unfortunately, your options are limited.
Chill Direct, a new service fromthe social-video siteChill, hopes to expand those options and act as a new farm system to get content to TV, theaters and film festivals.
If you're as well-known as rising comic Louis C.K., who has famous...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| TIME WARNER CEO THINKS YOUTUBE’S $100 MILLION CONTENT INVESTMENT IS "CUTE" | Published: 30/11/12 |
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Much has been made of Google’s foray into original content with its $100 million investments in its bid to compete with television. But as Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes pointed out at this week’s Business Insider’s IGNITION conference, Google’s content investments are essentially chump change - nowhere near enough to challenge Big Media's established players.
“To put it in perspective, we...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| ANOTHER GLOOMY SALES REPORT ADDS TO WINDOWS 8'S TOUGH WEEK | Published: 30/11/12 |
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Just how well is Windows 8 selling so far?
A month past the launch of Microsoft’s revolutionary operating system, data released this week seems to add credence to the idea that consumers just aren’t adopting Windows 8 as fast as the company may have hoped, with negative implications both for the Holiday shopping season and beyond.
In a report released Friday, StatCounter found that by November...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| GOOGLE BUYS BUFFERBOX TO MATCH AMAZON'S LOCKER FOR CONVENIENT SHIPPING | Published: 30/11/12 |
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Google has acquired Canadian parcel delivery start-up BufferBox Friday for an undisclosed sum. BufferBox is like a PIN-protected P.O. box for packages that solves the problem of missed deliveries. It's a service that mirrors the Locker serviceAmazon began offering earlier this month. Google's acquisition of BufferBox signals that it's serious about going head to head with Amazon on retail.
"We’...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| IDC: DEVELOPER DISINTEREST COULD KILL RIM & WINDOWS PHONE | Published: 30/11/12 |
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There is no doubt, 2013 is going to be a very interesting year for the mobile industry. Apple and Google will continue to strive for worldwide domination with iOS and Android - making it very difficult for other competitors to squeeze out profits. The day of reckoning may be at hand for old school mobile players like Research In Motion and Microsoft even as manufacturers like Nokia , HTC and even ...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| IT HAPPENED TO ME: MY SMALL BUSINESS WAS HACKED! | Published: 30/11/12 |
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Last September, shortly after the attacks on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, a company tweeted me that they were going to make our site, SmallBizDaily.com, their “small business resource of the day.” My joy was short-lived when the next morning they tweeted that my site had been hacked.
I quickly checked (it was still early morning on the West Coast, where we’re located) and sure e...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| WHY DO TECH COMPANIES DOMINATE "BEST PLACES TO WORK" LISTS? | Published: 30/11/12 |
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When the Great Place to Work Institute released its 2012 World's Best Multinational Workplaces list this month, ranking the world's 25 best employers - tech companies ruled. High-tech companies grabbed 9 of the 25 slots including 4 of the top 5.
It's a nice feather in the caps of Google, SAS, NetApp, Microsoft and the other winners, but beyond bragging rights, is there a point to this or any simil...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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| ORACLE HAS PROBLEMS TELLING THE TRUTH IN ITS ADVERTISING | Published: 30/11/12 |
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Oracle seems to have a problem with truth in advertising. Since April, the tech giant has had to pull three ads that claimed Oracle computers performed much better than IBM's.
Each time, Oracle offered no proof of its claims and the ads were dropped after IBM complained to the National Advertising Division (NAD) of the Better Business Bureau (BBB). This sleazy behavior, called "strategically stupi...
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Gadget Name:
ReadWriteWeb
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