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January 3, 2006

SlingBox to Work on Mobile Devices

mobilevideo.jpgPlace-shifting pioneer SlingBox is slated to announce at CES this week a new software client that allows any Windows Media-capable device to serve as a viewing platform for a customers’ multichannel video or PVR service. This is a phenomenal development given that SlingBox is cutting across the top-line business priorities of motion picture studios, TV program producers, cable operators, wireless phone providers and even Apple Computer, which hopes to build a business on mobile video.

Sling Media co-founder and head of business development Jason Krikorian is quoted by the Hollywood Reporter as saying:

“There are solutions for live and recorded TV on mobile phones, but now for the first time you can have full access to every single channel you’ve got at your house,” he said. “It’s not just a TV experience on your phone, it’s your TV experience, like you have at home when you’re on your couch.”

In other words, no need for cable operators to form a consortium with Sprint to do mobile broadband, no need for Apple to lure content providers to iTunes and iPOD. All you need is this new SlingBox client. Sling even goes as far as to take a clear swipe at Apple’s business.

“You can watch ‘Lost’ the day after it airs without paying two bucks,” added Sling Media PR director Brian Jaquet.

If the new portable clients works as well as the original SlingBox, which manages to deliver sharp, clear and highly controllable video over even poor broadband connections, it’s impossible to see how the media powers-that-be won’t rear up and try to kill SlingMedia in its crib. Way back in May, when I first viewed video shipped over a SlingBox, I wondered how cable operators, Hollywood and everybody else would react to what SlingMedia is doing.

So far, not a peep from the litigious studios, or even a threatened lawsuit from cable or satellite operators. I suspect that it’s difficult to come up with a legal rationale against what Sling is doing — this is not unauthorized copying or transmission of content. It’s merely controlling the set-top box from a distance; in some cases thousands of miles. Secondly, Sling hasn’t caught on yet and so doesn’t pose a tangible threat to the media power structure.

But still…the SlingBox is one of the coolest technologies to come around in a long time, and now it’s portable. There’s bound to be fireworks sooner or later.

Posted by Cynthia Brumfield at 2:48 PM | Print | Comments (0)

January 3, 2006

Starz Ticket Moves from the PC to Handhelds, TVs

tvovertheweb.gifFasten your seat belts — CES is getting underway and the crush of announcements will yield a treasure trove of new IP media and communications advancements. Right off the bat, cable network company Starz Entertainment tried to beat the rush by giving a few key pubs advance word of new capabilities for its online service, Starz Ticket.

Starz is unveiling today a $9.95 month service called Vongo that allows subscribers to download and unlimited number of movies from the Internet and watch them on the PC, hand-held devices such as portable video players or TVs, a departure from Starz Ticket’s limitation that allows downloading and viewing only on PCs. Another departure: Starz Ticket is powered by RealNetworks’ technology, but Vongo will use Microsoft’s security and media player technologies.

Starz will also offer Vongo on Sony’s previously audio-only service Connect Download.

Posted by Cynthia Brumfield at 10:10 AM | Print | Comments (0)