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Wed, 26 Dec 2007Its great to finally see some higher resolutions in the plasma market at affordable prices. It also appears that all of my complaints about plasma dot pitch (aka, the gap between the pixels) have gone away with some of these new sets. It no longer looks like peering through a screen door! Now if only they weighed less and did not buzz so much. :p Price drops are also getting silly in the LCD market. If you look around, and do not care much about the nameplate on the front, you can pick up a high quality 1080p 42" set for under $1000. Most of these are OEM from well known brands. How great do things look on a 1080p set? Couldn't tell you. I'll wait for this Blu-Ray/HD-DVD thing to finish and let you know later. I am not putting my money on either format just yet. Sat, 07 Jul 2007
I cancelled satellite service thursday in favor of a mix of AppleTV and potentially "over-the-air" HDTV receiption. Not in a rush for local channels just yet, I guess we'll see. Mon, 18 Jun 2007Thinking about turning in your cable box and signing onto AppleTV? Some have already. But before screaming at the $34.99 season pass for each primetime television show, lets do a little cost analysis. I admit, I do not watch much TV. I looked through the ITunes store and compared it to a list of what is "pretty hot" right now in television. I then compare this to my current Dish Network service. And then finally to a third alternative of using a component such as "EyeTV", which is a high definition over-the-air receiver with recording capabilities. Its about a hundred bucks. Dish Network Satellite Service
AppleTV + iTunes
AppleTV + EyeTV
Even when you take in account the initial one time hardware costs of purchasing an AppleTV ($299), our total still comes short of what I budgeted for satellite television each year. Ultimately, the less TV you watch, the more you will save from not paying for unwanted content. At what point does the AppleTV cost more to own? If you avidly watch more than 21 prime time television series simultaneously or you are just buying broadband internet for the sake of an AppleTV. I think I might buy 2 or 3 television series this year. Mon, 28 May 2007
The hack didn't work at first because I copied the plist file directly off my laptop. I don't have SSH enabled, so thats probably why it didn't work. I used another xml file i
found on a
AppleTV
Because of the sshd binary i used, I can only do ssh v1 (ssh -1 [host]). You login as "frontrow" and "frontrow". There is a silly challenge/response at first, just ignore that and enter the password. At this point, I could sudo and do whatever I wanted on the box. Note that the OS partition is mounted as read only by default. mount -uw / and mount -ur / are your friends here to mount writable and read-only, respectively.
I really don't like spending lots of time h4x0ring the
AppleTV
My most favorite plugin so far is the "Series of Tubes" plugin. This lets you watch YouTube in all its overcompressed 320x240 glory on your HDTV. The plugin does some smart things in the background, including prefetching and caching of YouTube videos as you browse "Featured" and various "Most Viewed/Discussed/etc" top rankings before you even get a chance to start watching. The only unfortunate thing is that there is no way to login as yourself and watch subscribed content or browse much further beyond the preset filters. But I am certain its only a matter of time before this is resolved. Its only on version 1.0.1. "A Series of Tubes" is also remarkably stable for the second release. "Series of Tubes" requires the Perian codec pack (you might need to copy these right into the quicktime directory using SCP). Other plugins include Omelette, which is sort of a shiney egg bejewelled 3-in-a-row game. "Streamer", a very basic streaming audio application, mplayer wrappers so you can play your DVDs, a perl engine for FrontRow, etc. They all seamlessly work with FrontRow, just adding yet another cute menu item on the spinny display. Lastly, I am really enjoying all of that 720p "HD Podcast" content available. There is some pretty good stuff available that I have found. The video quality is great...which was a real shocker. Offline content delivered to your HDTV is definately a killer app in its self, assuming the content is rich enough for anyone to want to view it. Its tough finding non-techie shows though....even if its some bouncy hottie rambling on about RSS feeds.
Sun, 27 May 2007
Is the AppleTV the Beginning of the End of Broadcast Television?
I bought an Apple
TV Some of its faults really show almost immedately. Is it a $299 TV video adapter, or a self-contained set top box? Its flip-floppy dependence on iTunes extremely complicates that determination. Content is either streamed from the computer or stored locally on the box, depending on if iTunes bothered to synchronize the content yet. I can see how this can be useful (most people have most of their content initally on a PC or Mac of some sort), but I really wish once I tell it the podcasts I want to subscribe to, it would check and download it directly on the box itself.
Besides, if you really wanted to change the way this worked, there is great news. The
AppleTV
Also, Apple didn't include any DVIX/etc codecs (gee...i wonder why? Could it be that 99% of folks would use this to play their pirated content off bittorrent?), but you can put these on yourself. But this is all software and design concept. The hardware is there, and it works, so lets just forget about the iTunes dependency for the moment.
After a several hour synchornization (I only have about 1.5GB of MP3s, and 5GB of images), my
AppleTV
So far, I am quite impressed. I am able to watch all sorts off offline content (podcasts) to my hearts content. Every hour, the newsbrief videos and audio update. When I idle, a bunch of my digital pictures fly around the screen. I can watch iPhoto slideshows based on roll with effects and the ken burns effect, listen to pre-created iTunes playlists, view movies -- both premium content purchased and views of my own, movie previews, etc.
Can it replace my satellite service? Potentially. Most of the media we view at home is on-demand content via internet. I have looked down on Podcasts in the past, but with the
introduction of
AppleTV
The video display, although very basic, is quite a performer. 720p HD is as smooth as you would expect. I have the display mode in 1920x1080i, so it has to work extra hard upscaling everything. The ken burns effect combined with transition effects works at full frame rate in 1080i mode. I just love photo slideshows on my HDTV....and since the resolution is high, you can actually see intricate details of the imagery (1920x1080 is double what my little MacBook will do too).
I think with a few hacks (or plug-ins), this
AppleTV
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