UPI en Español  |   UPI Asia  |   About UPI  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Streaming video all about going with the flow

  |
 
Published: July 28, 2013 at 6:30 AM
By JIM ALGAR, United Press International

There's a war going on in your home, and as in most wars the goal is control -- in this case control of what you watch on your television, and more to the point, from where it comes.

This is the age of streaming video. No longer is a television just a dumb box connected to a cable service or a satellite provider; more and more television makers are offering "smart" sets that connect to a home wireless network to bring an entire universe of video choices courtesy of the Internet.

But until everyone has a smart TV, companies are at war to be the one providing a device to make that connection between the Internet and your existing television.

The choices seem almost limitless: Apple TV, Roku, WD TV, D-Link, Slingbox. Take your pick, connect some cables and start enjoying programming from Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon Instant Video and a host of others.

Game consoles are also getting into the act. Though still primarily used to play games, after dishing up level 14 of the latest first-person shooter, they're happy to stream video to the living room television.

The latest company to enter the streaming video arena is Google, the 500-pound gorilla of just about any area in which it gets interested.

Last Wednesday it announced Chromecast. Smaller than almost any other streaming device -- and cheaper to boot at $35 -- the 2-inch long device plugs into the HDMI port of a high-definition television to stream content over a home WiFi network.

Content can be streamed to the TV from either the Google Chrome web browser on a user's personal computer or from a supported app on a smartphone or tablet.

Companies are battling for a piece of the streaming video pie for one simple reason: It's where the viewers are. Recent industry figures show streaming video is watched by more people than cable network programming.

Looking at just one streaming service -- Netflix -- research firm BTIG said the average subscriber in the United States watches 87 minutes of content a day.

And the news just keeps getting worse for traditional TV. A recent survey by Nielsen found 5 million Americans have sworn off broadcast or cable television entirely, choosing streaming video as their sole source of content.

That's up from 2 million who had pulled the traditional plug in 2007.

Cost is a factor too. While a typical monthly cable or satellite bill is around $80, $7.99 a month brings a subscription to Netflix or Hulu Plus, and there's a significant amount of content available on the Web that doesn't cost anything more than your existing monthly WiFi connection.

And finally, streaming video can offer niche programming at a level never before seen. Interested in Alpine cheese-making techniques, building castles from matchsticks or improving your Sanskrit vocabulary? Be patient. Someone out there is probably considering the idea of starting a streaming channel for it.

Topics: Google
Recommended Stories
© 2013 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
New York Fashion Week 2013 U.S. Open 2013 50th anniversary of the March on Washington
Celebrity families of 2013 MTV VMAs 2013 Style Awards
Additional U.S. News Stories
Video
1 of 18
Obama visits Sandwich Shot in Washington, D.C.
View Caption
President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden order take-out lunch at Taylor Gourmet on Pennsylvania Avenue, in Washington, D.C. on October 4, 2013. The reason he gave was they are starving and the establishment is giving a 10 percent discount to furloughed government workers as an indication of how ordinary Americans are looking out for one another. UPI/Pete Marovich/Pool
fark
Shepherds guide 2,000 sheep through Madrid, Spain, and hope their attempt to save ancient herding...
Not news: being charged with weapons possession. Fark: the weapon was a puppy
I spied 'er across the crowded lawn. She had eight of the hairiest, most beautiful legs I've ever...
Since there's a popular caffeinated beverage/food fight trifecta in play, here's an article that...
Nine in ten travelers think reclining seats should be banned on airplanes. The tenth should be ejected...
Remember the guy who was caught on camera punching a female clerk over 41 cents? He has been captured...