Woochifer
12-20-2010, 07:30 PM
No surprise here. Google TV is going back to the drawing board. Apparently, manufacturers were preparing to do a big rollout at CES next month, but Google is now asking them to delay making any product introductions until bugs in the software get ironed out.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/technology/20google.html?_r=2&hp
After the debut of Sony and Logitech's first-to-market Google TV device, and once the initial fawning by the Google fanboys (somethings written up without even using the UI first-hand) subsided, some more serious reviews Google TV began pointing out the many flaws and issues with the platform. Indeed, from what I've read, Google has got a lot of work to do to polish and tighten up the system software.
What's surprising to me is that companies like Toshiba, LG, Sharp, and Samsung were prepared to do huge Google TV promos and demos at CES, with the software still in a glorified beta stage. I suppose that's fine, given that pre-production units are often used in the CES product demos.
But, consumer electronics is not like web services in that things have to work right out of the box. Many of Google's services were launched as beta tests, and remained in that state for a long time while Google patched bugs and added features on the fly. Manufacturers cannot (or at least should not) take that kind of a piecemeal approach, so hopefully Google is doing the right thing here.
However, I think that the real reason why Google is trying to simmer down the hype around their TV product is that they frankly have very little content available. As mentioned in the article, all the major broadcast networks plus Hulu have blocked their content from Google TV.
IMO, Google blew it big time by releasing their TV product without talking to any of the content providers. They simply put it out there with promises of "free" streaming TV shows, only to have it promptly blocked by the content providers who for some reason want to get paid for helping to monetize and provide content to a third party platform.
I suspect that Google's now talking in earnest, and if they can get some content partners lined up, then we will see the big promotional push. In the meantime, a pause to get things better lined up is probably a good thing.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/20/technology/20google.html?_r=2&hp
After the debut of Sony and Logitech's first-to-market Google TV device, and once the initial fawning by the Google fanboys (somethings written up without even using the UI first-hand) subsided, some more serious reviews Google TV began pointing out the many flaws and issues with the platform. Indeed, from what I've read, Google has got a lot of work to do to polish and tighten up the system software.
What's surprising to me is that companies like Toshiba, LG, Sharp, and Samsung were prepared to do huge Google TV promos and demos at CES, with the software still in a glorified beta stage. I suppose that's fine, given that pre-production units are often used in the CES product demos.
But, consumer electronics is not like web services in that things have to work right out of the box. Many of Google's services were launched as beta tests, and remained in that state for a long time while Google patched bugs and added features on the fly. Manufacturers cannot (or at least should not) take that kind of a piecemeal approach, so hopefully Google is doing the right thing here.
However, I think that the real reason why Google is trying to simmer down the hype around their TV product is that they frankly have very little content available. As mentioned in the article, all the major broadcast networks plus Hulu have blocked their content from Google TV.
IMO, Google blew it big time by releasing their TV product without talking to any of the content providers. They simply put it out there with promises of "free" streaming TV shows, only to have it promptly blocked by the content providers who for some reason want to get paid for helping to monetize and provide content to a third party platform.
I suspect that Google's now talking in earnest, and if they can get some content partners lined up, then we will see the big promotional push. In the meantime, a pause to get things better lined up is probably a good thing.