Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Now With Roku(TM): VOPED Online Video Platform

VOPED, the online video platform company, announced today the release of its newest feature, delivery of video content, including Pay Per View and 24-hour live streaming, over the Roku streaming player, the market leader in streaming web video content to TV.

Flag-map of VirginiaImage via Wikipedia"With the explosive growth of streaming web video content to TV, our new Roku capability offer clients yet another way for their viewers to access free and premium video content through our platform," said Mark Serrano, President and Founder of VOPED. "When you consider our latest features: live-streaming to the iPhone(TM) and Android(TM), video content delivery over multiple platforms -- VOPED is proving to have the most turnkey, affordable and feature-rich online video platform available today. Our online video solution, with integrated payment gateway technology, enables our clients to provide live, including a 24-hour live stream, Video-on-Demand, free and premium video content to their customers through publish-once multiple platform delivery that now includes Roku, and that's great news for our clients."

The Roku streaming player primarily offers movies, TV shows, live sports, music, photos, and other entertainment content. VOPED clients can now offer their free and premium video content to Roku's one million users. Roku predicts that its rapid growth will reach more than three million customers by the end of 2011.

About VOPED

VOPED is a privately funded company founded in 2007 and based in the Dulles Technology Corridor region of northern Virginia. The company specializes in delivering dynamic, state-of-the-art, online video technology, custom systems and services. VOPED continues to develop and release the most affordable and functional online video applications, delivering to a growing base of clients seeking high performing and profitable online tools and services. Learn more at www.VOPED.com . Follow VOPED on Twitter.com/VOPED or Facebook.com/VOPED.
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Sunday, September 11, 2011

Changing channels: television's insurgents

Over the next few weeks, television executives will take part in a time-honored ritual of the fall season: crossing their fingers and praying that the millions they've gambled on shows like Pan Am and Prime Suspect turn out to be dollars well spent.
But while the industry keeps a nervous eye on prime time, other players are looking beyond ratings and time slots. They want to break down traditional viewing habits, expand the definition of a hit to include Web-original programs and remake the cable television business model, which relies on charging viewers for hundreds of channels they never watch.
These would-be disruptors might eventually do to television what iTunes did to music and Amazon to books. Cracks are already appearing in the foundations. Cable and satellite TV distributors recorded their biggest subscriber decline ever in the second quarter, and Nielsen has discovered a cohort of younger viewers who are watching traditional TV less and streaming video more.
Among the disruptors are the fast-growing video-streaming services Netflix and Hulu, and tech companies Roku and Boxee, which have developed set-top devices to bring the Web onto television sets with no monthly charge.
HuluImage via WikipediaPerhaps most significant, the group includes Apple, which currently markets an Apple TV set-top device and is rumored to be working on a television set that will appear within the next two years.
The system won't be dismantled overnight. Big guns Comcast, DirecTV and Time Warner Cable are all doing well, and programmers such as Fox and Turner are keeping new content from anyone who doesn't have a multichannel video subscription. And for all the talk about people cutting the cable cord, viewers who watch TV only on the Web remain a tiny fraction of television households.
Evolution before revolution
But as book publishers and music labels can attest, digital transitions can take years to build before they happen all at once. Media observers note growing dissatisfaction with the high price of cable TV packages and the number of alternatives as signs that the market is ripe for change.
“There are a lot of forces putting pressure on the living room,” said Gene Munster, an Internet analyst at Piper Jaffray. “The genie's already out of the bottle from a consumer experience point of view.”
Mr. Munster expects to see big changes starting in the next couple of years. These would include Apple's finally getting serious about the television business and coming out with its own Internet-connected TV set.
From what Mr. Munster and other observers have pieced together, this Apple product would have a built-in DVR, connect to the App and iTunes stores, and allow viewers to store their digital purchases in the iCloud. Like the company's current set-top device, it would interact with other Apple devices in the household.
The Apple TV could provide much of what consumers want from television: à la carte pricing, control over when they watch programs, and a hub for their own media—from photos to home videos.
Roku and Boxee already do many of those things. The Roku player, which sells for between $60 and $100, brings streaming video and music from some 300 Web channels directly to a TV set. There are games, subscription services like Hulu Plus and Netflix, international news and endless Web-original programming.
The Boxee Box, priced at $200, offers more than 200 apps, or channels, including MLB.TV, Netflix and Vudu. It will soon carry Hulu Plus. The service also includes a Web browser and can connect to the user's own media. Neither Roku nor Boxee provides live local sports or much local news. And forget about watching live programming like the Academy Awards.
But as current Web TV devices improve, Mr. Munster says, programmers and television system operators will be forced to respond. “They have to make changes because people are going to continue to cut their cable cord,” he said.
The television industry has faced threats before, most notably when TiVo arrived a decade ago. Viewers began skipping commercials, giving rise to fears that advertisers would flee. Since then, the DVR has become a mainstream device, but marketers still see broadcast and cable programming as the best place to spend their money.
Some observers argue that the current dangers are also being overstated and that the traditional pay-TV model won't be changing anytime soon.
“There are alternatives,” acknowledged Bruce Leichtman, a cable industry analyst. “But the average home is still watching five and a half hours of TV a day.” He blames declines in cable and satellite subscriptions on the economy.
The cable operators are planning ahead, however. While generally dismissing the cable-cutting phenomenon, they've introduced lower-priced packages and new products. Both Time Warner Cable and Cablevision have launched highly popular streaming video iPad apps, and Cablevision has a new DVR service that can record four shows at once.
There has also been progress on rolling out TV Everywhere, a long-discussed system for authenticating multichannel subscribers to provide them exclusive access to content online. The problem that creates for the disruptors is that premium content becomes harder to get.
In addition, networks and studios are increasingly leery of making deals with Netflix, whom they see as a competitor, and Hulu has been put up for sale by its owners: ABC, NBC and Fox. The networks have always worried that the video hub would undermine their core business.
Despite the obstacles, the budding Web TV remains confident.
“The trend is pointing very clearly toward more premium content online rather than less,” said Avner Ronen, CEO of Manhattan-based Boxee. Netflix, Microsoft, Amazon and others “are all investing more than ever in licensing content, and new players are expected to come in as well.”
Boxee is certainly planning for growth. The 4-year-old company recently moved into new quarters in the Flatiron district. With the help of $16.5 million from its latest funding round, it will almost double its workforce to 50 by the end of the year.
The company's aim is to improve its service and to grow its base of 1.7 million users. Mr. Ronen declines to say how many Boxee Box units have been sold since the device went on sale last November. Before that, users downloaded the software and connected to televisions through their computers.
YouTube as cable competitor
The online entertainment universe is also growing rapidly, led by YouTube, which Google has reconfigured into a cable TV competitor that gets more than 90 billion video views a month—up 50% from a year ago, according to the company. (Google is reportedly one of the bidders for Hulu. The company has Google TV devices similar to the Boxee service, but they have failed with consumers.)
Blip.tv, a top aggregator of original Web series, is also booming. It has tripled its video views in the past year, to 330 million a month, according to CEO Mike Hudack.
Producers are getting more ambitious. Digital Broadcasting Group, maker of the successful Web series The Confession, starring Kiefer Sutherland, will double its slate to 40 shows this year. Episodes of one of the new series will run 22 minutes—standard for television—rather than the five to 10 minutes that are the norm for the Web, according to CEO Chris Young.
And then there are niche Web channels like Revision3, whose Tekzilla and Diggnation are hits with the digerati.
“We used to have four television channels; now we have 300 [on cable], and with the Web, it's maybe 3,000 or more that are relevant,” said Mr. Ronen. “We're getting to the point where there's a critical mass of content [online].”
Analysts say that new televisions and Blu-ray players will have the same access to the Web—making set-top devices redundant—but both Roku and Boxee see continued demand for their services. They both filter the endless quantities of Web content through a user-friendly interface, and they can innovate faster than people get televisions.
“It costs much more to replace a television than to add or replace a $79 box,” a Roku spokeswoman said.
Boxee is primarily a software developer whose service could run on a variety of devices, including televisions and Blu-ray players.
“The work we're doing now is laying the foundation,” Mr. Ronen said. “The next three to five years are going to see huge growth in our space, and, hopefully, that will translate into a real business.”


Read more: http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20110911/FREE/309119973#ixzz1XgT7vIHe
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Saturday, September 3, 2011

Roku 2 delivers cheap, easy video streaming

"Leopard" Icons in BlackImage via Wikipedia
The last update to Roku’s line of portable streaming video players came in 2010, right as Apple was announcing the all-new Apple TV (). Roku’s tiny devices were overshadowed by Apple’s even tinier (though heavier) black box. This year Roku has updated its players yet again, adding features while outdoing the Apple TV with boxes that are smaller and lighter than Apple’s $99 player.
It’s clear that the Roku 2 players—there are three models, ranging in price from $60 to $100—are inspired by the new Apple TV design. They’re slightly taller than the Apple TV, but smaller in the other two dimensions, and lighter.
Like the Apple TV, the Roku 2 players are tiny devices without any hard drives, designed specifically to play back streaming video on your TV set. All models support playback of a growing collection of multimedia “channels,” including Amazon Instant Video, Netflix, MLB.TV, Pandora, Hulu Plus, and more.
All Roku 2 models offer standard-definition video output via an included adapter cable, as well as high-definition video output via an HDMI port. All have a microSD card slot as well. They all support 802.11b/g/n networking (though not the 5GHz flavor of 802.11n). The $60 base-model Roku 2 HD supports 720p video (just like the Apple TV). The $80 Roku 2 XD adds support for 1080p video. The $100 Roku 2 XS offers all that, plus a snazzy Bluetooth remote-control that doubles as a game controller called the Roku Game Remote, a free copy of Angry Birds so you’ve got something to use that snazzy remote with, an ethernet port, and a USB port.

The Roku 2 on top of an Apple TV on top of the previous-generation Roku player.
Roku offers the Roku Game Remote as an add-on for the new HD and XD models as well, as part of a $30 bundle that also includes a 2GB MicroSD card.
(And yes, you can copy videos onto a USB hard drive or keychain drive and attach them to the USB port on the Roku 2 XS to watch once you've added the USB-video channel via the Channel Store. You can watch videos stored on a MicroSD card as well. Bad news for fans of esoteric video formats, though: the Roku 2 XS only supports DRM-free H.264 MPEG-4 video.)
On the software side, the Roku 2 is very similar to older Roku video players: the company keeps evolving its interface, but it’s not that different from what’s currently on older Roku players. Roku’s Netflix interface is my favorite of any I’ve tried. The Amazon and MLB interfaces aren’t quite as good, but they’re still easy to use.
What gives Roku a leg up on Apple is its broad support for content sources: Right now Apple TV has access to iTunes, Netflix, MLB, NBA, and a few social-network sites. Roku’s got hundreds of different channels full of content, from video podcasts to live TV streams to Pandora. And Amazon’s library—to buy, rent, and stream for free if you’re an Amazon Prime member—is pretty impressive and getting more impressive by the day, and not available on Apple TV. If Apple opens up the Apple TV to third-party sources, things could get interesting, but right now Roku’s streaming sources outclass Apple’s.
However, Apple’s got Roku when it comes to the audio and video you’ve got in your home. The Apple TV will stream any compatible video from a Mac or PC in the vicinity running iTunes, and you can wirelessly send video from an iOS device to the Apple TV using Apple’s AirPlay technology; with Roku, you need to attach a device to the USB port found only on the high-end, XS model. Roku devices can only stream networked video from within your home through the use of third-party channels. These channels must be added manually, are not supported by Roku, and are hard to use. As long as Roku refuses to build in official home-network streaming support, it’s hard to recommend these devices for that purpose. (And of course, if you’ve got a library of videos you’ve purchased on iTunes, you can’t play them back on any non-Apple device, including these.)

The Bluetooth gaming-controller remote.
One of the interesting quirks of the Roku 2 XS is its gaming-controller remote and included copy of Angry Birds. Roku has already made more games available for purchase in the Roku store, and it’s clear the company thinks these boxes have a future as a casual gaming platform. It remains to be seen what kind of games appear for the platform, but I admit I’m kind of intrigued. (Keep in mind that if you plan to download and play games, you'll almost certainly need to add a microSD card.)
I found Angry Birds to be playable, though tilting the remote to shoot was a lot less precise than using my finger on an iPad screen. I’m bored by Angry Birds at this point, but it’s not a bad proof of concept. The game looked great, and there’s an opportunity for video players like the Roku 2 (and the Apple TV) to appeal to people who wouldn’t buy a dedicated game console. It’s something worth watching, but until there are more games available, it’s hard to say whether this will be a good feature or just a distraction.

Macworld’s buying advice

If you don’t have a large investment in iTunes video content, you’ll find the Roku 2 models to be quite comparable to Apple TV, and at lower prices. At $100, the Roku 2 XS is a good value given its Bluetooth remote and ethernet support; the $60 Roku 2 HD is an even better deal for anyone looking to get Internet video on a TV as simply and cheaply as possible.
If you’re a fan of a content streams not supported by Apple—Amazon Video and Hulu Plus come to mind—you’ll find that Roku’s broader selection of third-party content is a major advantage. Until Apple opens up the Apple TV to a broader range of third-party content, the Roku 2’s flexibility gives Roku a distinct advantage.

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