<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, roku]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, roku]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/roku http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/roku <![CDATA[Netflix sells out of Roku set-top boxes, but could it have been intentional?]]> The $99 box from Roku that allows Netflix customers to watch videos on their televisions streamed over the Internet is all sold out, and there won't be any more shipped until at least July and possibly August. Which could be a deliberate strategy — underproduce the initial batch, sell them out, and look for the business press to bite on the hype. At least, that's what Scott Kirstner at Cinematech suggests. I just think that if Netflix has any shot at making this box ubiquitous, partnering with a company that can't sustain a supply line for six to eight weeks at a time isn't going to help. But then, such are the woes that have bedeviled all potential IPTV providers — thanks to the mysterious curse of the set-top box.

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<![CDATA[Netflix DVD-rental business to peak in 2013]]> The trade in DVDs by mail that Netflix pioneered will be a business in decline within five to ten years according to CEO Reed Hastings. But he's bullish about online delivery, not surprising considering the recent release of the Roku set-top box. "Our key challenge is growing earnings per share and subscribers while funding streaming (online video) which should give us years of subscriber and earnings expansion." [Reuters] (Photo by AP/Paul Sakuma)

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<![CDATA[Netflix and Roku hope to avoid the curse of the set-top box]]> What makes Netflix's new living-room box for Internet video downloads different from all the other set-top flops? Everything. The price is low: At $99, it's much cheaper than the $229 Apple TV. It connects to regular TVs as well as HDTVs, and can stream video in variable quality depending on your Internet connection speed. And you can eat all you want from the buffet of available titles on Netflix, with movies available online that happen to be in your Netflix queue already lined up and ready to go. Hardware partner Roku has introduced it with a chipset that other manufacturers can license, and Netflix has a huge domestic subscriber base as potential customers. So what three things could doom this product to the same fate as every other Internet-video set-top?

  • Internet service providers: Comcast is a cable provider and AT&T has its U-Verse and HomeZone IPTV offerings, and both companies have their own set-top boxes and on-demand movie and television offerings. Plus the two generally compete only against each other in many markets. Which means neither has much of an incentive to increase speeds to those that could provide the Roku box with the HDTV signal it reportedly supports. Comcast has shown that it will throttle bandwidth for specific applications, and then lie about it to the FCC.
  • Movie studios: I've used the Netflix feature to watch movies online and the selection isn't particularly impressive. Reports peg available titles at 10,000, with a handful of television shows thrown in. Netflix will have to go over the heads of the DVD distributors it has relationships with directly to the studios if it wants current content.
  • Surly adopters: Fool me once with Akimbo, the Apple TV, or Unbox over TiVo, shame on you. Fool me twice with the Roku? Shame on you. The gadgetophile market is probably wary of cluttering their home theaters with yet another clunker. The key will be to get the chipset Roku has developed for the box built into new TVs. Only then can Netflix count on the kind of mainstream audience that will convince the studios and the ISPs that the project can't be ignored.
So while various gadgeteers remark how inexpensive and easy to use the new product is, remember that more than a few movies-over-the-Net pioneers have gotten arrows in their back trying to explore the living-room frontier.]]>
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