|
AOL anywhere includes your TV set
Internet
colossus AOL entered the fray last fall in several cities
with AOLTV, which lets AOL users chat, send instant messages,
and look at e-mail while watching television. AOLTV eventually
plans to introduce TV-themed Web content and chat rooms, and
a program guide that groups TV channels under headings such
as movies, news, and sports.
To use AOLTV, consumers must purchase a $250 box and pay a
monthly service fee ($15 for America Online members, $25 for
non-members). One of AOLTVs most powerful selling points
is that it works with any cable service. At launch, however,
AOLTVs box has no digital video recorder, so the video
looks more like a WebTV rerun.
AOLTV intends to offer a box that includes TiVo digital recording
capability early next year, and its working on a DirecTV
box. A merged AOL and Time Warner would gradually upgrade
Time Warner Cable set-top boxes with a version of AOLTV, thereby
eliminating the need to obtain a special AOLTV box.
Hard drive to the TV top
Starting this January, DirecTV competitor EchoStar will introduce
an UltimateTV competitor a new line of digital video
recorders based on the OpenTV operating system. EchoStars
new box will not offer e-mail or Web browsing. Instead, it
will rely on a proprietary interactive service called Wink,
which requires a modem hookup.
DVR pioneer TiVo has partnered with DirecTV to build a box
that records as many as 35 hours of satellite programming.
A new Wish List option allows you to search through two weeks
of upcoming television show listings by program genre, by
actor, or by director.
Meanwhile, TiVo archrival ReplayTV is adding a My ReplayTV
feature that will let customers program their DVR via any
Web-enabled device. Users will enter their requests on a MyReplayTV.com
Web page, and their modem-equipped ReplayTV box will retrieve
the desired shows by dialing up the Net several times a day.
ReplayTV has a deal with Charter Communications to roll out
set-top boxes with ReplayTV DVR features later this year.
Replays free basic service, however, recently started
serving up banner ads.
Digital TV rises
Although digital television (which promises broadcast quality
superior to that of old-fashioned analog cable) is most widely
available by satellite, the tiny percentage of U.S. households
that can obtain interactive digital cable services will enjoy
the greatest convenience.
Not only does digital cable dispense with the messy business
of installing a satellite dish and cablesa process thats
particularly unwieldy for apartment dwellersit also
permits such features as video on demand, e-mail, and Web
browsing, without the added hassle of a phone-line hookup.
Insight Communications customers can already spend $7 more
a month for access to 400 video-on-demand movies, 40 digital
music channels, an interactive program guide, and interactive
community information and entertainment guides. The $7 doesnt
yield free movies: You have to pay an additional $4 for a
recent title, $1 for an older film. The films are streamed
from Insights servers, but viewers can stop, start,
pause, and rewind them just as if they resided on a local
drive. Charter Communications, meanwhile, is one of several
cable companies that offer limited interactivity (but not
Internet access) via the Wink service. Moving Beyond Channel
Surfing Theres more to interactive TV than digital video
recorders, e-mail, and plain-vanilla Web browsing. Increasingly,
youll be able to access program-related content, hang
out in chat rooms, look up facts and figures, and play games.
But content will vary depending on the interactive service
you get. for example, has teamed with Microsofts WebTV
Networks to add interactive stock tickers and hyperlinks to
shows on its CNBC and MSNBC cable channels. WebTV (and soon,
UltimateTV) customers who watch NBCs Friday Night, a
rock-video show, can vote for their favorite videos, link
to artist biographies, and join t-clubs (t stands for television)
tht hold live chats during the program. Not to be left behind,
CBS plans to add 500 hours of interactive content to its network
this winter. Cable channels such as the Game Show Network
let viewers become contestants during shows like The Price
Is Right, Family Feud, and Wheel of Fortune. From your living
room, for example, you can guess the phrase on Wheel of Fortune
before Vanna flips the letters. You may not win a Jet Ski,
but you can take quiet pride in beating other online players
to the draw. Is Your TV Incompatible? AOLTV reduces the TV
picture to roughly one-fifth its original size, puts it in
the upper-right corner of the TV screen, and surrounds the
picture with chat rooms and TV-themed Web content. AOL is
already working with merger partner Time Warner to embed video
triggers that invite you to take a trivia quiz, participate
in a live poll, or buy the dress Jennifer Aniston is wearing
on Friends. Unfortunately, WebTV and UltimateTV subscribers
wont be able to access AOLs content, or vice versa.
Thats because the content formats differa situation
that shows no sign of changing despite calls for an open standard.
But AOL and WebTV arent the only content games in town.
Wink, a service that several cable systems offer, superimposes
a stylized letter i on your TV screen to identify programs
with related content. Push a corresponding button on your
remote, and youll see overlays of text and graphics
you can click on to request information or order merchandise.
For example, if you heard a band you liked on The Tonight
Show, you could click on the remote to send a purchase order
for the groups CD over a modem hookup. Interactive content
isnt yet king. But within the next few years, it promises
to make TV more entertaining and educationalin short,
less of an idiot box. (See Thats (Digital) Entertainment!)
Whats the Big Picture for the Small Screen? Interactive
TV differs from earlier concepts that envisioned merging PCs
and TVs, as well as from more-recent Internet appliances designed
to compete for space on your kitchen counter or night table.
Interactive TV services are unequivocally TV-centric; they
use Internet and digital technology only to enhance the entertainment
that you expect to see when you plop yourself down in front
of the tube. Which of these choices is for you? If youre
interested only in searching for programs and recording them
for later viewing, consider buying a Replay or TiVo box and
signing up for the companys basic services. If youre
also interested in adding Internet services and you can get
DirecTV, youll want to investigate UltimateTV. AOL addicts
might find AOLTV appealing. Even if you dont seek out
these services, you can count on hearing from your existing
cable or satellite service about its interactive offerings
soon. Passive TV is going the way of rabbit ear.
Other
Stories...
Avid
ships Avid ePublisher
Blazing
a trail in home recording
Video
SpiceRack Pro and Organic FX
Canopus
introduces DVStorm
|