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From 1996...Zenith Internet TV lol [Archive] - FreeConservatives

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BabyBeastie
11-13-2007, 11:37 AM
The man represents the Internet industry's most coveted market: the estimated 85% to 90% of American homes that aren't yet connected. For this Passive Majority, most of whom don't even own a computer, let alone a modem, "Net TV" would seem to make perfect sense. After all, nearly everybody in America has a TV and a telephone, and many are presumably curious to learn what the World Wide Web is all about. If they could use their existing sets to access the Infobahn from the comfort of their La-Z-Boys, the Web might finally become the mass medium its promoters have been promising all along.

To that end, some half a dozen companies plan to begin selling a Net TV of one sort or another between the end of summer and the beginning of next year. Rick Doherty, a director of the Envisioneering Group, estimates that 1 million Net TV devices will be sold in the first year, and that a third of American homes will have one by 2002.

These devices, in their simplest form, consist of a television with two ports in the back: one for cable, the other for an Internet connection (usually a phone line). Once their link to the Net is established, viewers will, in theory, be able to navigate Websites with their trusty remotes as easily as they now surf TV channels.

There are, however, as many variations on this latest get-rich-on-the-Internet scheme as there are firms that want to cash in on it. Companies like Zenith and Curtis Mathes are building new TVs that come out of the packing crate Net ready; others, like ViewCall America, are designing set-top boxes that plug into ordinary TVs and make them Web capable. Sony and Philips, for example, are licensing set-top technology from WebTV Networks, a company partly financed by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. Sega and Nintendo, meanwhile, are adding Internet capability to their video-game machines, and this fall Apple is expected to market its long-delayed Pippin computer as a $600 Web-browsing set-top box that also plays Macintosh CD-ROMs.

The TV-PC hybrid idea is attractive to computer makers, although most would prefer to add TV reception to their PC lines than get into the TV business. Direct-mail giant Gateway 2000 is already selling Destination, a $3,500-to-$4,500 hybrid TV-PC. NetTV, Inc. introduced its competing WorldVision in March, and Compaq and RCA are expected to follow suit early next year.

The Biggest Thing Since Color? (http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,984969-1,00.html)

DoctorDoom
11-13-2007, 01:55 PM
How times and prices have changed in 11 years. The idea still lives on with MSN TV (http://www.msntv.com/pc/) (formerly Web TV), although how big the user base is I have no idea.

jayson
11-13-2007, 01:55 PM
Here's another funny bit... especially for those of us with computer background in the 90s.

http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1788161

24: The Unaired Pilot from 1994

Sarah
11-13-2007, 01:59 PM
We used to have a WebTV about 10 years ago. It was actually pretty cool except you couldn't save anything off of the web, you could only just look at it.
Not sure why we had it since we had a computer.

DoctorDoom
11-13-2007, 02:26 PM
24: The Unaired Pilot from 1994Deja vu! Who remembers the Commodore BBS "network" on 300-baud modems?

gnome
11-13-2007, 07:51 PM
I used Web TV briefly in a hotel in 2004 to try to write email... it was the most horrible internet experience I've ever had, even worse than dialup. Worse than LYNX.

I swear the resolution was something like 320x200, so it was like holding a newspaper up to your face. Then the input couldn't keep up with the keyboard, so I was stuck typing at something like 10wpm. Bleah.

gnome
11-13-2007, 07:52 PM
Deja vu! Who remembers the Commodore BBS "network" on 300-baud modems?

That was a little early for me, I got into BBSing at 2400 baud which I thought was the most awesome thing ever...! Anyone here used to chat on FIDOnet forums?

UnkHiram
11-13-2007, 09:32 PM
Deja vu! Who remembers the Commodore BBS "network" on 300-baud modems?

Holding my hand up and shaking my head, I must be getting old

DoctorDoom
11-14-2007, 12:42 PM
Never got involved with FidoNet (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FidoNet). It still exists, BTW. (http://www.fidonet.org/)