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AMD declares the death of television

by Sylvie Barak on 9 November 2009, 16:00

Tags: AMD (NYSE:AMD)

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According to AMD, your television is about to become obsolete. Jonathan Seckler, AMD's senior manager for product marketing, reckons visual experiences on a PC will soon surpass those of the living-room television as people become increasingly mobile.

"TV is a fad," declared Seckler controversially, adding "the end of television can be seen."  [Er, yes, tune in this time next week to watch the final episode, folks]

"Entertainment has become much more mobile," said Seckler, adding that the institution of television "as a passive medium where we all sit around like couch potatoes is coming towards the end."

Seckler said AMD's new Vision branding would pave the way to making mobile entertainment more tenable, especially on mainstream platforms like Tigris. AMD also has technologies such as AMD Theatre, which lets users tune into local stations from their laptops.

 

 

"We have platforms that are actually tailored to usage models," he declared, referring to how much time Americans spend watching television shows online on services like the currently free, but not for long, Hulu.

AMD's vision of the end of TV times may be a little premature, however. Back at Intel's developer forum in September, the bigger chipper declared it would actually be pushing its hugely popular Atom chips into set-top boxes and televisions, to bring a little more interactivity to what it described as "the hub of the home."

Likewise, in a recent chat with Intel's anthropologist Genevieve Bell, HEXUS was also told that Intel was adamant that any attempts to add Internet functionality to TVs needed to be simple and not interfere with the experiences and behaviour patterns viewers enjoy, because people still held a very strong bond to the big box in the living room. 



HEXUS Forums :: 11 Comments

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Is that perhaps because the 58xx drivers are broken with BBC HD FreeSAT (plus other countries like New Zealand), with no sign of a solution in sight - no acknowledgement a problem exists from ATI and the refusal of the ATI forum moderators to comment on a thread they were doing up until a couple of months ago?

PK
I don't think television will ever really die, change yes, become more interactive and responsive to our growing demands as consumers most definitely.

I do believe that PC's will remain PC's in and of themselves in some form, but that TV's will go on to gain more multimedia capabilities and be better at working with other devices like mobile phones, cameras and even as the center of a media hub where video's and images can be streamed across a home network much like the HTPC.
Deleted
Is that perhaps because the 58xx drivers are broken with BBC HD FreeSAT (plus other countries like New Zealand), with no sign of a solution in sight - no acknowledgement a problem exists from ATI and the refusal of the ATI forum moderators to comment on a thread they were doing up until a couple of months ago?

PK

Can't believe that is still not fixed. That problem's a few months old now isn't it?
Deleted
I do believe that PC's will remain PC's in and of themselves in some form, but that TV's will go on to gain more multimedia capabilities and be better at working with other devices like mobile phones, cameras and even as the center of a media hub where video's and images can be streamed across a home network much like the HTPC.

Or TVCards will become more common. In fact I think this is likely to happen. All you need to do is a build a laptop with a dual DVB-T card built into it with built in arial (an optional external ariel), market it for about £500 - £600, and you'll get a lot of kids rooms with this in them.

The problem is not the technology, that has been around for yonks, it is ease of use. Until Windows 7, I didn't think HTPCs were any good…
Well I think it will be many years before TV is “dead” but he's definitely right that its on the way.

I've personally been watching all my TV legally through my PC the past 2 weeks - either via catchup on tvguide.co.uk (has free catchup for almost every single freeview show), the usual iPlayer/stvplayer/4od, or live via a program such as Zattoo.

The quality is good (ok so its no where near as good as SkyHD like we have downstairs) can you can pause/rewind etc..and the main benefit is that I can sit here at the PC working or pokering or whatever and still watch my show. So I can be productive at the same time, without having to move everything I am doing over to my laptop and then go and sit downstairs.

I've only really watched that TV now for shows on SkyHD that I can't get legally upstairs, or when i've got someone else round (TV on your PC doesn't work so well with more than 1 person!). My housemate should be back today so my viewing habits could again change…but anyway point is that TV over the internet is becoming more and more widespread all the time, I didn't realise until the past few weeks..so give it a few more years..

TV Tuner cards? They are not the answer imo - streaming makes a lot more sense, and imo tuner cards are likely to vanish before TVs do. They may however be replaced by dedicated decoder cards for future HD codecs and technologies..or simple CAM modules for subscriptions.