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    LG. Table above show features and main CPU specs for Europe 2013 line.
    As you can see - it is below cheapest (I mean $50-60 here) tablets specs (2012 TVs had super slow single core CPU).
    Works on Linux and proprietary StupidTV interface.

    Btw, below is video codecs supported by 2013 Samsung TVs (only top lines)

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  • 35 Replies sorted by
  • LG is gearing up to debut a TV running its interpretation of the defunct smartphone OS. Speaking at a semiconductor event in Seoul, Korea, LG researcher Hong Sung-pyo revealed the company's first webOS product will be a new TV set for a CES reveal next month. The webOS-powered TV will apparently run a 2.2GHz dual-core processor with 1.5GB of RAM, which will allow for multi-tasking features.

    OMG.

    LG and Samsung recently resemble Sony and Toshiba years ago.

  • Samsung’s voice interaction service, which understands natural languages, is currently available in 11 countries. In 2014, the service will expand into 12 new markets, making the service available in a total of 23 countries worldwide. Samsung has also made the service more convenient by focusing on the most frequently-used functions and taking into consideration user’s usage patterns.

    Samsung’s 2014 Smart TV models deliver significantly improved voice interaction and motion control features so that our consumers will be able to enjoy our Smart TV more intuitively,” said Kyungshik Lee, Senior Vice President of the Service Strategy Team of Visual Display Business, Samsung Electronics. “We will continue to develop content that integrates voice and motion recognition for added convenience.”

    With the 2014 Smart TV, finding content is easier than ever. Users can change the channel in one step – by simply saying the channel number. They can even open a website or app using shortcuts. For reference, 2013 models require two steps to change TV channels: ‘Channel Change’ and ‘Channel Number’

    OMG.

    http://global.samsungtomorrow.com/?p=31581#sthash.zT3885Vq.dpuf

  • Thanks to the messaging capabilities of HomeChat, new LG smart appliance owners will be able to receive real time status updates from their refrigerators no matter where they are. Family members can upload photos to the fridge from their smartphones using LINE and displayed on the refrigerator’s display panel.

    What’s more, Smart Manager transforms the refrigerator into a complete food management system.

    It is even worse than I thought.

  • Google TV, which was first launched in 2010, will no longer see any subsequent product release in the future as Google has already merged its Google TV team with the Android team, and the company will also turn to push TV products adopting Android operating system in the future with the Chromecast being one of the star products.

    Surprise, surprise. Especially to Samsung and LG with their vastly outdated SmartTV approached.

    Chinese manufacturers instead supply full fledged Android 4.2 with their TV sets.

  • I still run an old Panasonic CRT tv, for smart features I have an old desktop running Ubuntu with s-video out.

    Perfectly good for the kids to watch cartoons and pbs nature videos.

  • I still run an old Panasonic CRT tv, for smart features I have an old desktop running Ubuntu with s-video out.

    And?

    I slightly doubt that CRT + Ubuntu desktop is suitable for anyone but old geek :-)

  • I heard Chromecast uses ChromeOS without any Android stuff. That is no JAVA api. Isn't Google ready to ditch Android?

  • Chromecast is just hardware plug using modification of widely known protocol presented as something new. It does not run on ChromeOS. And ChromeOS is just simple Linux that runs Chrome browser.

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    This is how "progress" looks.

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  • Here goes Panasonic

    Panasonic and Mozilla to Collaborate on New Firefox OS Open Platform for Next Generation Smart TVs

    Osaka, Japan / Mountain View, USA - Panasonic Corporation and Mozilla today announced that the two companies have agreed to form a partnership to develop and promote the new Firefox OS, an open platform based on HTML5 and other Web technologies, for next generation smart TVs.

    The development of the new Firefox OS platform aims to deliver more expansive access into smart TVs by leveraging the HTML5 and Web technologies already prevalent on PCs, smartphones and tablets, to offer consumers more personalized and optimized access to Web and broadcasting content and services through the Internet.

    With the launch of this new open platform, next generation smart TVs will gain full compatibility with Web technologies and HTML5 standards used for cloud services and various future networked devices, enabling data from Web services and devices to be easily mashed up on a single application. This ensures flexibility for developers to create new applications and services by using cross-leveraged content from the Internet and broadcasting. By using new Mozilla-pioneered WebAPIs for hardware control and operation, next generation smart TVs will also be capable of monitoring and operating devices inside and outside of the home, such as the emerging smart home appliances.

    In next generation smart TVs, basic functions, such as menus and EPGs (Electronic Program Guide) which are currently written as embedded programs, will be written in HTML5, making it possible for developers to easily create applications for smartphones or tablets to remotely access and operate the TV. In addition, through the Web services, next generation smart TVs can display personalized user interfaces, featuring the user’s favorites and even add new functions for multiple users sharing the same screen after devices are purchased.

    “Panasonic had been expanding content and services dedicated for Panasonic TVs on our own portal site and our collaboration with Mozilla on Firefox OS will further accelerate various innovations and encourage many new services,” said Mr. Yuki Kusumi, Director of the TV Business Division of the AVC Networks Company of Panasonic. “Through Panasonic’s partnership with Mozilla, we will create further innovation in smart TV technologies and features, which will take consumers to a whole new level of interaction and connectivity inside and outside of the home.”

    “We are very excited to partner with Panasonic to bring Firefox OS to more people on more platforms. As we see more partners supporting Firefox OS and the open Web, Firefox OS helps solidify open Web standards for smart screen solutions,” said Dr. Li Gong, Senior Vice President of Mobile Devices and President of Asia Operations at Mozilla. “This new platform enables developers and service providers to create a wide range of applications and services to deliver a new user experience. We see a strong alignment between the visions of Mozilla and Panasonic, and by combing our collective expertise and know-how, we will create amazing products together.”

    Panasonic will release next generation smart TVs powered by Firefox OS, and Mozilla and Panasonic will work together to promote this Firefox OS and its open ecosystem.

  • At least it is now fully clear that Panasonic TV division is going the way of dodo.

  • In the end, it’s about patience and compromise. The chances of seeing the TV industry ruled by a single operating system (like Android on phones) is growing lower with each passing year. Google tried and failed with Google TV, and with the company still licking its wounds, we don’t expect to see another attempt any time soon.

    Quite fun article from guys who do not know that they are writing about and lack any knowledge on Chinese market. Btw all this young dumb asses journalists are one of the main reasons why we have such StupidTV state.

    http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/10/5284828/iq-test-the-state-of-smart-tvs-ces-2014

  • The company's new 55-inch 8809 series set mates the extra-high resolution with Android, giving you both Google Play apps as well as access to your Dropbox content. It's also a capable set whether or not you like the mobile OS, with a 1GHz refresh rate and Ambilight illumination that plays nicely with both games and Hue lights. There are also 48- and 55-inch 1080p sets running Android .

    As expected Chinese market trends go worldwide. Android works ok if implemented properly on TVs.

  • According to documents obtained exclusively by The Verge, Google is about to launch a renewed assault on your television set called Android TV. Major video app providers are building for the platform right now. Android TV may sound like a semantic difference — after all, Google TV was based on Android — but it’s something very different. Android TV is no longer a crazy attempt to turn your TV into a bigger, more powerful smartphone. "Android TV is an entertainment interface, not a computing platform," writes Google. "It’s all about finding and enjoying content with the least amount of friction." It will be "cinematic, fun, fluid, and fast."

    http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/5/5584604/this-is-android-tv

    NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!

    Main thing here is that it cost from $0 to $50 to add good and normal Android. I have no idea why you need "Android for ones with dementia" thing.

  • LOL, this thread is really fun to read :D
    Especially VK's comments :p
    Does it really upset you so much, VK?
    It is possibly just a desperate search for any kind of innovation-like features. Maybe less stupidity than orders of the bosses. What do you think?

  • Does it really upset you so much, VK?

    It upsets me, yep. All this shit. It seems like big companies just want to find that to do for all their big developers hordes.

    Just install pure latest Android, you can modify launcher if you want, but all this "youtube", "hulu" etc for hamsters upset me.

    Where the fuck is all government agencies, how it all correlate with "preinstalled IE in Windows is evil"? Or all of them are just too afraid that they can't even piss thinking that corporations can do to them?

  • New Android TV

  • It's depressing how they hype all those irrelevant gimmick features, while at the same time, the displays are not glare-free anymore, have bad static contrast due to "edge-lighting" and lack color brilliance due to white-LED-only lighting.

    I'm waiting for a non-glare 4k OLED without(!) stupid "curving", I want a flat surface that looks good from more than one spot.

  • the displays are not glare-free anymore,

    Search shops better :-)

    have bad static contrast due to "edge-lighting"

    Edge lighting really has little to do with contrast. Good edge lighting with proper light guides make very good TV. With full backlight you can get better local contrast by switching them off completely, but in mass products it is no way to go.

    and lack color brilliance due to white-LED-only lighting.

    LED backlight TVs can have quite accurate colors, be it standard gamut or wide one. All depend on manufacturer. As primary colors are defined by filters (and also by leds used, of course). If you open spectrum of any more or less decent led you'll see that it is not of any issue to cut proper spectrum portions.

  • Things were looking up in early 2013 for the team behind webOS, a pioneering but star-crossed mobile operating system. After surviving the implosion of Palm and a rocky acquisition by HP, LG stepped in to buy the team. The consumer electronics giant seemed like a white knight with a plan: To make webOS the core of LG’s next-generation smart TV platform, and use the brains behind webOS to create a much-needed engine of innovation at LG. To create a unit that was meant to help the company to beat competitors like Samsung with Silicon Valley smarts. A disruptive force.

    Eighteen months later, the acquisition looks a lot like a failure. About a third of the webOS team has left LG since the acquisition, including some recent high-profile departures. Others are close to making the jump, as early euphoria has been displaced by disillusionment and frustration. The LG Silicon Valley Lab, as the webOS unit is now officially called, introduced LG’s first webOS-based smart TV at CES in January, but the road to Vegas was rocky, and the device unveiled at the show almost didn’t happen, save for a few lucky accidents.

    I’ve talked to a number of current and former webOS team members as well as people with knowledge about the decision making process within LG over the last couple of weeks, and the picture emerging from those interviews is an ugly one, full of fights and corporate politics. It’s a story about about a failed acquisition, but also about the changing realities of consumer electronics, which are transforming from simple appliances to smart devices at a speed that often leaves big, slow-moving companies at a loss.

    WebOS team also struggled with a culture clash of sorts that pitted company politics against its attempt to simplify the company’s smart TV platform. Sources told me that LG had a policy in place to reward managers with bonuses or even promotions if their features were part of the final product. The result was a constant feature bloat, as everyone tried to add on one more thing.

    http://gigaom.com/2014/08/28/a-failed-experiment-how-lg-screwed-up-its-webos-acquisition/

  • LG Electronics' 55-inch curved OLED TV (55EC9300) will be sold for 3.99 million won (US$3,775) per unit through major retail channels and department stores in Korea, according to a statement from LG that was reported in Korea-based ET News.

    The new price tag is more than a 70% drop since its original price of 15 million won back in April 2013. The move is in order to push LG OLED TVs further into the market, as the company believes OLED is the "future of TVs," the report said.

    Good news.

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    The gesture recognition market is expected to reach $479.88 Million in 2018 from the year 2012 at a CAGR of 131.26% from 2012 to 2018.

    Sounds dangerous.

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  • Strategy Analytics estimates the price premium relative to a dumb TV to be between $30 and $75, depending on the model — without any of the inherent advantages of external devices.

    It is complicated, all "dumb" TVs actually run on Linux, almost all of current modern TV LSI can be made into SmartTVs, you can only add small amount of RAM compared to "dumb" ones and add Wi-Fi antennas and, sometimes, adapter chip.

    TV makers have chosen to build the smartphone right into the TV. The most literal example of this (and current state of the smart TV art) is LG’s webOS-powered Smart+ TV.

    Nope, most literal example is Chinese brands who just install normal Android.

    The only way to overcome the asynchronicity of some internal components becoming outdated faster than the overall TV is to take those components out. That’s exactly what Samsung does with its $249 Smart Evolution Kit, which adds a quad-core processor and the 2014 version of the company’s Smart Hub software to select 2012 HDTV models.

    Looking to first comment you can understand why this is ILLOGICAL way for TVs. As their mail LSI are very very similar to chips used in smartphones (modern ones have good GPU and 4 ARM cores).

    The smart TV is an abortive attempt at technological convergence that generates more compromise than convenience. There’s

    It is not, really. It is just attempt to make all software by themselves and get big money. If, instead, korean brands financed proper chips development and used common OS (Windows or Android) it'll be all different thing.

    http://www.theverge.com/2014/11/13/7213611/bring-back-the-dumb-tv

  • "In developed regions 30% of homes will own a smart TV by the end of 2014, rising to 70% by 2018," said Jack Wetherill, senior market analyst at Futuresource Consulting.

    My god.

    "There is little opportunity for TV vendors to monetize apps or content, with consumer interest concentrated on free or subscription video, and far lower interest in other genres or general web use - a radically different profile to the mobile market,"

    Surprize.

    This smart TV juggernaut may mean more TV vendors gravitate towards Android TV, as Google would share the load of future development and support

    And this is good news.

    http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20141118PR201.html