Saturday, 11. February 2006, 16:17:49
Opera, Television, video, BitTorrent
...
Most readers think of the Opera browser in terms of being a desktop browser and on your cellphone. Perhaps what fewer people know is that Opera has a growing line of business as a browser for television sets connected to cable TV systems and for home entertainment centers.
Two developments this week could advance Opera as a mediator of television and video services in the workplace and the home.
Set Top TV Controls
This week Opera inked a
deal with
Amino IPTV a manufacturer of set top TV control
boxes for the home, hotels, education, and corporate video services. With offices in the Cambridge, UK, Atlanta, GA, US; and, Hong Kong the
firm offers Opera a global reach for integrating the browser into video and multimedia entertainment equipment.
Even better the deal includes the Opera browser with Amino's software development kit, Video device manufacturers now have the ability to integrate Opera its web browsing capabilities into the on-screen interface. The next time you surf the Internet from your hotel TV set you may find yourself using the Opera browser.
Video Download on Demand
Equally interesting this week is the
announcement that BitTorrent, the peer-to-peer file sharing software that will be included in Opera 9, has announced a deal to license video downloads to your desktop or PC-connected home entertainment center. The deal, which will be available in the UK this Spring, offers users with high speed connections the ability to purchase video downloads for home viewing. Assuming Opera 9 is released later this year, its users in the UK may be able to access the capabilities of BitTorrent for downloading video on demand to their desktops.
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Opera press release
here
Saturday, 7. January 2006, 01:51:29
video on demand, Television, Opera
Opera released new
software to control set top boxes for cable televisiona and related video devices for the home. The
news was timed to coincide with the giant Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
My view is that Opera is positioning itself to partner via joint marketing and licensing with video on demand services which are now emerging from giants like Yahoo. Google announced this week an offering of video on demand for home users.John Blau, IDG News Service Thu Jan 5, 1:00 PM ET
Norwegian Web browser company Opera Software hopes to plug into the home entertainment market with the launch of a new browser designed for TVs, set-top boxes, and other consumer electronic devices.
Opera 8.5 for Devices, based on the company's core Web browser technology for desktop computers and mobile phones, uses Extensible Rendering Architecture to reformat Internet pages to suit any screen size, from 2-inch LCDs to large 16:9-ratio flat-panel TVs. The new version also has what the company calls a "spatial navigation system," which will let users easily navigate pages with any input device.
Industria, an Icelandic provider of broadband systems and integration services, will use the browser technology in its new IPTV (Internet Protocol television) software offering called Zignal, Opera says.
Sigma Designs, which specializes in system-on-chip technology, also plans to pre-port the new browser software in its SMP8630 family of chip sets, Opera said in a separate announcement Thursday.
Sunday, 18. September 2005, 22:00:57
Television, mobile phones, Narrowstep
Narrowstep is offering television on mobile phones! People in the New York/New Jersey area may be the first to see it.
Scheduled TV Channels on Mobile PhonesNarrowstep Inc., the TV on the Internet Company, has today launched the first platform that enables scheduled, 24 x 7 TV channels and video-on-demand services to be distributed to mobile phones and mobile devices.
Based on Narrowstep's Television Operating System, the system can enable multiple channels with searchable video archives, video-on-demand, scheduled content and live events.
The first dynamically available mobile channel is extreme sports channel, "high.tv," featuring a mix of adventure content such as snowboarding, surfing, windsurfing and mountain biking. Other channels will be rolled out in due course covering subjects such as urban music, cycling and city profiles.
Other potential applications already supported include retail, education, government information, and company and employee TV channels.