Posts Tagged ‘Web’

A New Way To Surf – LP

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Gotta love it!

Everyone’s talking about IP TV and how it’s going to revolutionize things. We’ll be able to get our TV anywhere, any way, but the reality has fallen short of the promise. Your ISP may be beaming Digital channels down to you over IP, but the experience is largely unique to your ISP. Your cable box is not a TV Content browser, no matter how much it tries to be. Heck, you can’t even take your Time Warner Cable box and easily connect it to a Comcast user’s home. The spirit of the IP in IPTV is sorely missing.

That’s why I’m working on a better way–and I need your help.

There are several standards regarding IPTV (and they are used), but while they focus on delivering the content, they do not focus on the programming. If you’re looking at the web to solve your problem, don’t look there either. Every single news or content producer has their own site with their own way of accessing it. You need accounts, you need a pretty hefty browser, and you need to wade through a different interface each and every time.

There is no way to channel surf on the web.

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Pogo Web Browser

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

I was going to wait for something more significant to post about, but I just don’t get this. AT&T is entering the browser market. No, they aren’t making compasses or providing tours in Venezuela. They’re making a Web Browser.

Yeah. That’s how I feel.

Why in the hell are they making a web browser? Notice that I’m not providing any criticism on the web browser (it actually implements some pretty neat concepts). I’m asking a simple question, why? What does AT&T want in the browser market? They aren’t working on a browser they can port to handsets. This is a bloated browser, with tons of snazzy 3-D functionality (Check out the Ars Pogo Review). AT&T is going well out of its comfort zone to create a product for a market that is saturated–if you have trouble believing that, try asking Steve Jobs how Safari on Windows is doing. Oh, did I mention? It’s Windows only.

Do we really need another Windows browser?

Why isn’t AT&T focusing their efforts on more worthwhile causes, like I don’t know, unlimited Voice and Data plans for reasonable prices or SMS for something a bit less that highway robbery (The True Price of SMS)?

What do you think? Let loose some confusion in the comments.