Intel And TiVo To Offer TV On Laptops
[pvrspot.com] Intel and TiVo are set to introduce a TiVo To Go program that lets consumers download television programming and wirelessly transfer it to IBM Centrino notebook computers. Users of TiVos personal video recorders will be able to transfer recorded television content to Centrino notebooks using pre-installed software. Notebook users will then to take the programming with them while traveling, he said. Launch is said to be in two weeks...
Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.
[Emergic.org] EMERGIC . org: March 13, 2003 Archives: You don't get any more pleasure, per se, from reading an article in the Times than our anonymous blog; it's just that there is a higher probability of you liking the Times's article. This advantage causes quality writers to want to publish in the Times, which further strengthens the Times's brand name. If, however, some search engine found the articles you would like regardless of publication place, it would no longer matter to reader or writer where an article appeared.
[Blogs.guardian.co.uk] Guardian Unlimited: Onlineblog: The new mini PCs will generally use the Penium M range of low-power processors, originally designed as part of Intel's Centrino "think and light" chip set. The M chip, formerly code-named Banias, is highly regarded, of course, but it has a major drawback: it's damned expensive.
[Gizmodo.com] Gizmodo: BargainPDA has details about the upcoming Tatung V620, a Microsoft Portable Media Center-compatible device that will be released in the US (unlike most other Tatung products). The V620 is smaller than most other PMCs (except the Samsung YH-999 it seems to me), but is most interesting as a second-generation PMC device, which means it will play other video formats beyond WMV, like DivX. The reason the PMC platform has failed (by my reckoning, at least) is that it’s dumb to buy video players that only play one format, especially when non-Microsoft-branded models play almost anything you can throw at them. The Windows Media Center integration, however, is a nice feature, so if the 2nd gen PMCs can do all that and more, they’ll be worth considering again.
[Technology360.typepad.com] Technology360: Steve Gillmor brings back the Gillmor Gang podcast, available now at podshow.com along with his not-quite-daily Gillmor Daily podcast. Regulars Dana Gardner (Yankee Group), Doc Searles (Linux Journal), Jon Udell (InfoWorld Test Center) and Mike Vizard (CRN magazine) are joined by Adam Curry (podshow.com) and Doug Kaye (ITConversations). The conversation centers around the role of RSS in media. If you don't know the players it's a bit strenuous to follow, but it's an important topic and worth the effort.
[Scastile.blogspot.com] shane castile: February 13, 2005: As you well know, one of Intel's biggest achievements in the past few years has been the Centrino platform for mobile computers. The new generation of the Centrino, the Sonoma, has been announced several weeks ago but this week Intel Israel has displayed two working systems based on the next generation Centrino platform codenamed "Napa", which is due to replace the Sonoma in 2006. This is a first public display in Israel (and second in the world) of a working system based on the next Centrino generation, which is still under development. However, unlike the first announcement of the Napa during IDF 2004, this time we bring you photos of the actual platform as well as a demonstration of its dual-core operation.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Tivo, DVD Recorder Info
Posted at June 04, 2005 11:31 AM