Internet Persistence and Current TV Trends

Home Theater View grew out of business weblogs at JupiterResearch and AskAvi columns written over several years at a personal site, http://www.greengart.com.  Thanks to the persistence of the Internet — web pages never really die as long as they’re in Google’s index — one of those old AskAvi columns is now generating a lot of feedback. It seems someone queried Google to find advice choosing a TV, found Column 10, and posted it to a  newsgroup.  They did this without ever looking at the column’s date (which is on the page, though perhaps not as prominent as it could be). …

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New Online Retail/Marketing/Research Channel: Woot.com

At 1 AM EST every night? morning? something extraordinary is happening to online retail. Woot.com is an online outlet for tech overstocks and refurbs, but its unique business model is opening up some intriguing possibilities for building an installed base for a certain breed of product. The store offers one item per night at dramatically discounted prices – popular items sell out fast, and aren’t replenished.  A new item goes on sale the next night. The item descriptions are cheeky, the online forum is relatively uncensored, and the audience is extremely geeky (and proud of it.  Though the site definitely …

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Product Review: LG LST3510A HDTV tuner/DVD player

New connectivity options often drive product design, and DVI/HDMI is no exception.  DVI and HDMI are interfaces that allow you to keep the signal in the digital domain throughout their journey, making hookup simpler, and providing a noticeably sharper picture when viewing digital content (such as DVD or HDTV) on digital displays (like plasma, LCD, DLP, or LCOS), as the signal is never converted back and forth to analog at all. I’ve already written about how computer-like interfaces open up the A/V cable market to new entrants, but every product in the A/V chain may need to change as well.  …

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iPod Rips Through “Pretty Face Syndrome”

BusinessWeek has an article in this week’s issue titled, "The Crisp, Clear Sound of Rising Profits" [registration req’d] on B&O’s recent uptick in business. After years of stagnation, the company is rolling out dozens of new initiatives in high end audio systems for exclusive automobiles, yachts, and penthouse suites at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. That’s all well and good, but those are relatively small markets with high investment required to enter.  In other words, they’re brand-building activities, not core products. Bose and Harman are exceptions: they make real money in their auto divisions because they’ve built the business …

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Something There Is That Doesn’t Love a Format War

It seems like everybody’s writing stories about the upcoming HD disc format war between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray (BD).  The technical specs are reasonably locked down, but everything else is up in the air – perfect fodder for journalism/rampant speculation.  Gizmodo had prematurely called HD-DVD the winner based on studio support (I called them on it here).  More recently, DVDFile.com posted a follow up of sorts – also trying to predict a winner based on the various studios and where they’re currently lined up on the issue. This is pretty hard to do because the studios are about evenly split, and …

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This Disc Will Self Destruct. Interested?

Wired is reporting that Disney has given up on Flexplay’s EZ-D disposable DVD format.  The press had a field day getting environmental activists all riled up against the format, but that’s just a sidebar.  If consumers found disposable DVDs moderately convenient, then the used discs would end up in the landfill alongside the rest of our disposable society.  If the discs were a smash hit, then we’d end up with another color plastic recycling bin for media (which might not be a bad idea anyway.  I must throw away hundreds of discs a year, even after AOL stopped mailing them …

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Consolidation in the Display Business

The New York Times today reports (free reg. req’d) two separate deals: Fujitsu is selling its LCD display manufacturing to LCD leader Sharp, and Matushita (known in the US as "Panasonic") is hooking up with Hitachi to jointly manufacture plasma displays.  Bottom line here: prices are dropping too fast to go it alone if you aren’t dominating the field. -avi

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I Want My IP TV

The current issue of BusinessWeek has a nice overview of Microsoft’s efforts in IP TV (sending television feeds to a set top box over a broadband connection).  It’s a bit skeptical, and focuses on how Microsoft has bent over backwards to address the needs of partners.  For example, Microsoft’s brand does not appear on the set top box, and the boxes don’t even need to run a Microsoft operating system. I saw a demo of the system at CES, and BusinessWeek leaves out an important element of the story: it’s really, really cool.  I suppose cable operators adopting this system …

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Mobile PC-based Theater Speakers

This is such a good idea I wonder why nobody’s done it well before.  Altec Lansing sent over their XT1 Portable Audio System for notebooks. A DVD-ROM equipped notebook is essentially a giant portable DVD player combined with an iPod with a larger color screen, but most notebooks have terrible internal speakers.  Adding external speakers solves the problem at the cost of portability — even if you did shlep them with you, you’d be dragging along another power brick, too. The XT1 siphons power off your notebook’s USB port which greatly simplifies setup and enables easy portability. Both Windows and …

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Is technology moving too fast for consumer acceptance?

Former colleague Joe Wilcox notes that most computer brands are met with cognitive dissonance when they journey into consumer electronics. Joe is definitely on to something (though his observations are backed by admittedly anecdotal evidence — don’t you think that’s something you guys over at JupiterResearch should be testing empirically?) Another part of the problem, though, is that consumers are slow to fully understand the implications of digital technology – never mind convergence.  (OK, I’m working with entirely anecdotal evidence here as well, but bear with me). When I meet new people and invite them to watch a movie in …

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