Apple reportedly manufacturing test batch of first smart TVs

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  • Reply 61 of 101
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by drblank View Post


    Smart TV is more of having internet access and other features other than just displaying images on a screen.    The TV is basically becoming like a BIG iPad, if you will.  Lots of people and businesses buy TVs and bringing in easy to use computing makes sense.  View these new gen TVs as a BIG iPad.  People buy and rent content, which is part of Apple's business, plus whatever other features that can be implemented that makes sense for those that use TVs.  Industry analysts are projecting 92 Million Smart TVs being sold in 2012, and going up rapidly, so it is a big enough market for Apple to get into.  They just needed to do more research on that market and figure out how to address certain limitations surrounding the TV market.


     


    Yeah, OS X has future upgrades, Apple already mentioned that they have this year's update and next year pretty much in the can.  So, from what it looks like, Apple is updating their OSs on a yearly basis, rather than 18 to 24 months like they used to, or every 5 years like Microsoft.



    It could just be another bubble. I don't know how long it would hold out. TVs tend to be long term purchases. You have somewhat of a misconception on OSX vs. Windows. Windows does release service packs with major updates. They do significantly more within a release like Windows 7 than you would see in changes going from one .x release to another under OSX. As an example, Snow Leopard and Mountain Lion are in many ways cleanup revisions. I actually dislike annual update cycles here, as it takes quite a bit of time for Apple to get out proper bug fixes. It also takes time for software developers to release updates for full compliance under a new OS revision. I do hope that this doesn't lead to a lack of a stable current OS. 


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by TimmyDax View Post


     


    Unfortunately, it seems that iTunes is The Way. What it actually needs, given that, is the media monkeys to pull their heads out of their collective asses and start selling TV Shows for what, 10c / ep (20p to me) or some other measure so that one is discouraged to "pirate" them.


     


     



    Right now you pay more than that for a song on itunes. Why would they set the price so low, then hand over 30% of that tiny profit to Apple? You would be subsidizing the living hell out of it with advertising, likely to the point where it would become obnoxious. 


     


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Rogifan View Post





    And if any company knows how to make a profit where you wouldn't think they could it's Apple. Apple's brand value is huge. They come out with a TV that's a work of art and has an integrated, simplified UI people will buy it.


    This would test if people really will buy anything with an Apple sticker unless they're able to add something more than that to it. Some of this stuff is just unimaginative. There are many TVs with nice unobtrusive designs. Smaller ones can easily be wall mounted. As for the display panel engineering, this hasn't been Apple's strong point in the past. 

  • Reply 62 of 101
    macbook promacbook pro Posts: 1,605member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    If I had one complaint it would be the fact that even if the prices were more reasonable, you can't actually buy content through the AppleTV at all currently.  



     


    ???

  • Reply 63 of 101
    rogifanrogifan Posts: 10,669member
    hmm wrote: »
    This would test if people really will buy anything with an Apple sticker unless they're able to add something more than that to it. Some of this stuff is just unimaginative. There are many TVs with nice unobtrusive designs. Smaller ones can easily be wall mounted. As for the display panel engineering, this hasn't been Apple's strong point in the past. 
    hasn't apple's motto always been if they can't improve on something they won't do it? I'm excited to see what they do in the TV space. Whenever I think they can't surprise or wow me they do.
  • Reply 64 of 101
    charlitunacharlituna Posts: 7,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rain View Post


    AppleTV is so crippled that retail has to explain it can be jail-broken to function. 



     


    Any DRM is because the content creators demand it and Apple doesn't yet have leverage to say no. 


     


    As for the Apple TV comment I don't know you expected it to do but it works just fine at the tasks it was created for without jail breaking. 


     


    And we may find that you are wrong about how it must be 'free from iTunes' to be successful. Well so long as 'successful' doesn't mean that it does what you want it to, how you want it to. Then it will be a failure. 

  • Reply 65 of 101
    charlitunacharlituna Posts: 7,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by TimmyDax View Post


     


    Unfortunately, it seems that iTunes is The Way. What it actually needs, given that, is the media monkeys to pull their heads out of their collective asses and start selling TV Shows for what, 10c / ep (20p to me) or some other measure so that one is discouraged to "pirate" them.



     


    That's a tad low but yes they could probably knock a $1 off each range of ep prices and still do just fine. Other things they could do that would help sales are get things out in all markets after first OTA and none of this making us wait until 60 days after the DVDs are out that HBO etc loves to do. And they wonder why their shows are the top tormented. Also, get all shows at least in 720p if not 1080p. Get subtitles and languages added at all and certainly sooner. Especially CC and Visual impairment audio.


     


    More features adding during the season wouldn't be bad either. Some of us buy off iTunes because we don't want the clutter of disks but we still want to see the behind the scenes etc. The Avatar re-release was a nice one for features. More movies and even TV shows need to follow that kind of idea. And either make iTunes Extras work on the Apple TV and iPad, make some system where if you bought the movie or got a digital copy those in app things like Warner Bros has done show the title as bought, or both. And make those apps work on the Apple TV. 

  • Reply 66 of 101
    charlitunacharlituna Posts: 7,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Tallest Skil View Post


     


    Fine. 

     


    You can't take your $2,000 panel to your friend's house when you want to show him stuff on your iDevices. 



     


    But that's why you have an iPad. The new ones will allow you to just swipe things back and forth. Very sci-fi awesome. You'll just swipe what you want off your panel to your iPad, go to your friends and swipe it up to his panel

  • Reply 67 of 101
    tallest skiltallest skil Posts: 43,388member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by charlituna View Post

    But that's why you have an iPad. The new ones will allow you to just swipe things back and forth. Very sci-fi awesome. You'll just swipe what you want off your panel to your iPad, go to your friends and swipe it up to his panel


     


    And if he doesn't HAVE the panel… you can't carry yours to his place. You can carry a 0.6 lb. box and power cable.

  • Reply 68 of 101
    mdriftmeyermdriftmeyer Posts: 7,503member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Inkling View Post


    Smart TV? That sounds as much like an oxymoron as an Athletic Couch. And yes, I know the "smart" is a reference to the clever design of the TV, rather than its long-lasting effects on viewers.


     


    Apple is definitely on to something here. Almost all current TV/entertainment systems can be compared in the ease of use, not to Window 95,  but to the command line miseries of DOS. To do something, you must decipher the cryptic meaning of all the obscure symbols on one of several remotes. Hit the wrong button, and your DVD ejects, condemning you to a tedious five-minute process to get back to where you were in that movie.


     


    Unfortunately for Apple's bean counters, they won't find me a customer. I deliberately keep my TV small, outdated and clumsy so I use it as little as possible. And personally, I wish Apple would spend a bit more time making their products more efficient for work activities. In the 1990s, Apple had so little foothold in the business market, it had to target users at play. That's no longer true, but Apple still thinks their typical customer is someone in their mid-twenties on their day off. Text handling hasn't been improved in years. Huge sums get spent for new audio and video compression schemes that may make file size or quality a tiny bit better. Nothing is spent to create an innovative, efficient way to move documents from app to app or from print to digital. Years into the age of mobile digital devices, OS X still knows nothing about epub.


     


    One telling example: OS X's built-in, open-source Hunspell spell checking is so dreadful, it fails to give me the right spelling about a third the time. I'm forced to use a fake Google search, whose "Did you mean:" is right about 95% of the time. Apple's spell-checking suggestions should be at least as good as Google's.



     


    Complain and contribute to the Hunspell project. The project could use all the help and make sure the pathways aren't failing anywhere.


     


    If it's a dictionary issue you can update dictionaries yourself: http://www.oxygenxml.com/doc/ug-editor/tasks/add-Hunspell-dictionary.html

  • Reply 69 of 101
    orlandoorlando Posts: 601member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


     


    Ah, but there is also nothing that a $99 box can do that a $2,000 panel with the same circuitry cannot do either though.  :)



     


    Then who is going to spend $2000 when they can simply just $99 instead and get the same stuff?

  • Reply 70 of 101
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Tallest Skil View Post


     


    Fine. 

     


    You can't take your $2,000 panel to your friend's house when you want to show him stuff on your iDevices. The $2,000 panel doesn't let me choose display quality. The $2,000 panel creates physical waste with which you have to deal, and waste with which technology reclamation centers have to deal. You say the box is for people that don't want to change their televisions out, but selling both is selling a full solution and a solution and a half. It's like Tesla selling the cars and then becoming a power provider to sell you the electricity. It's unnecessary.



     


    1) I think you need a vacation.  :)


     


    To go this far, and spout all this nonsense, doubling back on your own statements, making up weird scenarios, etc. just to be "right"  is ... well, more than a little weird.  I see you on here every day posting twice as much as anyone else, and also on two or three other sites, posting, posting, posting, ... all freaking day long.  


     


    I mean seriously.  Re-cycling fees and odd scenarios about taking your AppleTV to a friends house is all you got?  Why bother?  


     


    "... selling both is selling a full solution and a solution and a half." WTF????


    That doesn't even make sense. 


     


    As I've already said, obviously the integrated one is a "full solution" and the box alone would be something less than that because you have to buy a TV or monitor to make it work.  Even if I agree that the box is a "full solution" there is no such thing as a "(full) solution and a half."  


     


    In any case, you aren't defining what a "solution" is.  Solution to what? For whom? If it's the obvious, which is a "solution for someone's entertainment needs, then obviously both are full solutions for different individuals as I originally said. 


     


    This is all meaningless garbage and you used to post some intelligent, insightful stuff.  


     


    2) GOTO 1

  • Reply 71 of 101
    island hermitisland hermit Posts: 6,217member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Tallest Skil View Post


     


    A $99 box can be bought by me and tens of millions of others. A $2,000 panel won't be.



     


    I picture you saying that with that little Ballmer sneer and laugh...

  • Reply 72 of 101
    wovelwovel Posts: 956member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rain View Post




    Wanna place bets on crippling and stifling DRM?


    Don't get me wrong, i'm sure it will be be a fantastic product otherwise. But it's the 'otherwise' that will make it a fringe product.


     


    Apple still doesn't let the Airport Express work with anything outside of iTunes. Result - [fringe]


    AppleTV is so crippled that retail has to explain it can be jail-broken to function. Result - [fringe]


    We will see if Apple comes out with the next 'best in class' product - or another Apple Hi-Fi (remember that game changer).


     


    It needs to be free of iTunes to succeed. That's my point.



    Of course Apple  TV is already doing far better than Google TV , Boxee, etc...

  • Reply 73 of 101
    antkm1antkm1 Posts: 1,441member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by MMTM1983 View Post


    iScreen


    iPanel


    iView


    iEye


    iSee


    iMax


    iTV


    Apple TV


    iWindow


     


    place your bets now on what it be called????



    Even though it's been rumored that SJ never liked the "i" next to every new device they sell (i thought i heard that someplace)...I think if this new "thing" is going to communicate with all other iOS and/or OS X devices, I think the "i" has to be there.  I think the reason why the Apple TV didn't have the "i" in it was two-fold...one was that it is just a "hobby", more like a beta iTV.  Second, is because of the British network (iTV) that currently owns the TM on the name.  But i digress...i'm thinking iPanel, but even that doesn't fully describe what (IMO) is will do.  My hopes are that it's like a the digital hub to your home.  iHub doesn't really jive to me.  It could be even an new nomenclature entirely, but I'm thinking the "i" has to be there to tell the lay-people subconsciously that it's part of the iDevices they all know and love.


     


    iHome would been just OK if another company didn't already have the TM


    iLife would have been great if Apple didn't already have that as a software Suite name.  However, I think they actually almost have dropped that since all new Macs now come with the full iLife suite now.


     


    Or, it could be something totally new and different.  by the sounds of the rumors, it could be something that could define a whole new type of computing device, thus changing to a whole new naming strategy altogether.


     


    For me, now that I have one of everything Apple (MB, iPhone, iPad, iPod Classic, Apple TV, Airport Extreme) I find that I use my iDevices about 90% of the time and my MB about 10% of the time.  For me, really the only need for the laptop is the digital hub that stores all my data that gets synced to my iDevices...And that's simply because the iDevices have no way of possibly storing everything I own digitally.  Wireless speeds and cost to store Data in iCloud and iTunes Match are just two things that prevents me to from that option. So my hope is that this iPanel (or whatever) is that last bit to convince me that I probably don't need a full computer for my home needs.  I only use my computer to store my itunes, download new stuff, very light word processing and Numbers work that I could do on my iPad, and organize/edit photos.


     


    I'm almost thinking that if/when this new thing comes out, it might start the ball rolling for Apple to actually shift the company/consumers almost completely away from computers in general and into a new terrain of the digital home.  I've been waiting for something like a storage hub that talks to every iDevice I own for a while now.  This new device could be it.  But I'm about 50/50 on if that's really what this new thing is.


     


    What I'd like it to be is something that replaces both my computer and my TV Entertainment center into a single device that talks to all my other iDevices.  So if my significant other wants to watch TV but I want to do the bills, I can transfer that data to my iPad (as an instant save/sync like in Mountain Lion), pick up the iPad and continue.  Then when the show is over, I can continue working on the TV screen if I so desire.  If i'm watching a show but need to get on the plane in 2 hours, I can instantly transfer the show to my iDevice and watch the rest on the plane.  Of course for it to fit most users, it's going to have to have external jacks for things like a surround sound system and a Blu-Ray and whatever Cable TV you may choose, that has to happen.  I mean, they could start their own service to bypass that, but the rumor mill hasn't shown any sign of that so I'd say it won't have the capability (if ever) for some time.  But, this is all just dreaming now.

  • Reply 74 of 101

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Inkling View Post


     I deliberately keep my TV small, outdated and clumsy so I use it as little as possible. And personally, I wish Apple would spend a bit more time making their products more efficient for work activities.



    Wow, I do the same thing with my TV. Most content is utter crap anyway. I agree with your second point too.

  • Reply 75 of 101
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Rogifan View Post



    hasn't apple's motto always been if they can't improve on something they won't do it? I'm excited to see what they do in the TV space. Whenever I think they can't surprise or wow me they do.


    That isn't a bad point, but I wouldn't assume they're actually doing this. This string of rumors started with the Steve Jobs biography, and there isn't anything credible to suggest it will really happen.


    Quote:

    Originally Posted by antkm1 View Post


    Even though it's been rumored that SJ never liked the "i" next to every new device they sell (i thought i heard that someplace)...I think if this new "thing" is going to communicate with all other iOS and/or OS X devices, I think the "i" has to be there.  I think the reason why the Apple TV didn't have the "i" in it was two-fold...one was that it is just a "hobby", more like a beta iTV.  Second, is because of the British network (iTV) that currently owns the TM on the name.  But i digress...i'm thinking iPanel, but even that doesn't fully describe what (IMO) is will do.  My hopes are that it's like a the digital hub to your home.  iHub doesn't really jive to me.  It could be even an new nomenclature entirely, but I'm thinking the "i" has to be there to tell the lay-people subconsciously that it's part of the iDevices they all know and love.


     



    Nice try, but this has come up before. iTV already exists. They own the trademark worldwide, and they're big enough to resist Apple. There are several old articles on this. They didn't use the name, because it was not available or for sale.

  • Reply 76 of 101
    antkm1antkm1 Posts: 1,441member

     Quote:

    Originally Posted by rain View Post




    Wanna place bets on crippling and stifling DRM?


    Don't get me wrong, i'm sure it will be be a fantastic product otherwise. But it's the 'otherwise' that will make it a fringe product.


     


    Apple still doesn't let the Airport Express work with anything outside of iTunes. Result - [fringe]


    AppleTV is so crippled that retail has to explain it can be jail-broken to function. Result - [fringe]


    We will see if Apple comes out with the next 'best in class' product - or another Apple Hi-Fi (remember that game changer).


     


    It needs to be free of iTunes to succeed. That's my point.



    Are you saying that Apple should have designed these devices to do something OTHER than what they already do extremely well?  Sure, we'd all like that but they weren't designed for that.  Patience young Jedi.


    Aiport Express: a portable router that can be used for transmitting iTunes to external speakers and wireless printing...works exactly as described...brilliantly.


    Apple TV: watch TV, movies, podcasts, Radio and others from your TV and watch stuff you already own.  Netflix, Photos, YouTube, etc....works Great!  Wish it had more apps but it's coming; i'd bet on that one;)


    So, no fringe for me, unless you're talking about the TV show on Fox, then yes.


     


    iTunes could be your service provider if you do the math.  For most cable subscribers, they typically have basic and some digital channels.  Some have HD as well and some premium (I don't).  If you were look at what it costs you annually, then figure out how many shows you watch...then add up how much it would cost you just by using iTunes (then over the Air free broadcast for sports and news programs), I'd almost bet that it would come out pretty close to a wash.  Personally, my Cable bill is about $100/mo.  you do the math.


     


    If you want these devices to do something they weren't designed to do, or have different ideas of how they should function, there are plenty of alternative for you to choose from.  Or you could just wait for Apple to do is RIGHT.


     


    I think that's the problem these days (meaning over the last 10 years) with consumers...expectations are way too high.  Annual MAJOR updates are getting out of hand.  Even if this iPanel comes out this year, I will probably NOT buy it because I know the 2nd or 3rd editions are going to have way more bang for the buck.

  • Reply 77 of 101
    antkm1antkm1 Posts: 1,441member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by hmm View Post


    That isn't a bad point, but I wouldn't assume they're actually doing this. This string of rumors started with the Steve Jobs biography, and there isn't anything credible to suggest it will really happen.


    Nice try, but this has come up before. iTV already exists. They own the trademark worldwide, and they're big enough to resist Apple. There are several old articles on this. They didn't use the name, because it was not available or for sale.



    Obviously, you forget to read the next phrase after that in my post?


    Try skimming less and reading more, unless you like to quote people out of context?

  • Reply 78 of 101
    dasanman69dasanman69 Posts: 13,002member
    A $99 box can be bought by me and tens of millions of others. A $2,000 panel won't be.

    And at $99 one can buy multiple units and make every TV in the household a "Apple TV "
  • Reply 79 of 101
    rogifanrogifan Posts: 10,669member
    Here's what Tim Cook said earlier this year about ATV: "always thought there was something there, and that if we kept following our intuition and kept pulling that string, we might find something larger." He also said, that Apple needs "something that could go more main market for [the Apple TV] to be a serious category."

    Not sure exactly how to read that but when he was asked about tablet/laptop convergence he was quite clear that Apple isn't going down that path. So sometimes we do get a clear answer from Cook on where they're not going, I would think if they had no plans to build a tv (like they have no plans to build a laptop/tablet hybrid) we'd get an indication of that from Cook. These rumors wouldn't persist if Cook was leading us down another path.
  • Reply 80 of 101
    antkm1antkm1 Posts: 1,441member
    Your implication is that no one on Earth has a TV and that it isn't the third most saturated electronics market on the planet.

    Apple has never entered an established market. They've either created the market entirely or jumped in early.


    Unless you want to get picky and say 'headphones', in which case… 

    Smartphones?

    Tablets?

    Mp3 players?

    All established markets before Apple. Albeit they were small and some (tablet) were kind of non-existent, but there was a market of them all before Apple.
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