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June 12, 2009 12:16 PM PDT

Why connected HDTVs are the future

by Don Reisinger

LG launched two broadband-equipped HDTVs this week--the 47-inch 47LH50 and the 50-inch 50PS80. Both televisions boast NetCast Entertainment Access, which provides consumers with the entire Netflix streaming library of more than 12,000 movies and TV episodes.

Netflix

This LG HDTV streams Netflix content. Are you ready for more?

(Credit: LG)

The LG HDTVs released this week require a broadband connection to work with the NetCast Entertainment Access service. To choose a film, users need only to surf through the items and make selections on the right of the screen. They can read movie synopses and rate films.

LG isn't the only company bringing connected HDTVs to store shelves. Toshiba is well on its way to bringing its Regza line of HDTVs into the streaming realm. When the connected HDTVs launch later this year, Toshiba plans to give consumers access to a variety of content, including local weather, top news stores, sports scores, videos, and more. The HDTVs will also be able to access multimedia content stored on a connected PC's hard drive.

Surprised by the sudden uptick in connected HDTVs coming to store shelves? Don't be--it's the future.

It's no coincidence that two prominent companies in the HDTV business are moving to the Web with their products. According to a recent study by market research firm Parks Associates, "2.5 million U.S. and Canadian households are ready to buy an Internet-connected TV." There's just one caveat: demand is that strong only if those connected HDTVs are priced no more than $100 higher than other sets on the market.

That shouldn't be a problem. The two Web-connected LG HDTVs released this week are priced between $1,599 and $1,999 online. That's certainly no more expensive than other comparable HDTVs on the market. It almost ensures that there will be demand for those products.

But 2.5 million households might not seem like the kind of demand companies would require to continue producing Web-enabled HDTVs. It's a strong number, but not one that probably won't drastically change the business anytime soon. But most companies believe consumer demand will increase dramatically over the next few years. And in that time, more connected HDTVs will hit store shelves.

Market analyst The Yankee Group said it expects 50 million connected HDTVs to be purchased by 2013. Ironically, the analysts predict that just 30 million connected Blu-ray players will be in the wild. It expects 11 million digital-media adapters to be in homes.

It's an interesting study that deserves some attention. In essence, a technology that is just in its infancy is expected to beat out two technologies that have a footing in the space. That's no small feat. And it speaks to the allure of connecting to the Web on your HDTV.

The technology is far from perfect. The LG and Toshiba HDTVs won't provide a "true" Web experience. You won't be able to do much more than watch Netflix movies, see YouTube videos, and check your stocks. It's not like hooking a Mac Mini up to your HDTV and enjoying a full online experience.

We also can't forget that your current HDTV isn't obsolete just because it can't connect to the Web. If you want to stream Web content to your HDTV, there are a variety of tools to help you do it. In fact, your Xbox 360, Roku Digital Video Player, TiVo, and PlayStation 3 will do just that. Plus, it's cheaper to simply buy one of those products than to junk your current HDTV for a built-in Web connection.

But in the end, LG and Toshiba are responding to demand. Web-enabled HDTVs are the future because they're convenient, useful, and offered at fair prices. And based on the aforementioned studies, I'm not alone in getting excited to buy one.

Check out Don's Digital Home podcast, Twitter stream, and FriendFeed.

The following products mentioned are available.

On Sale Now: $1,299.00 - $1,599.00
View the latest prices for LG 47LH50

On Sale Now: $1,122.97 - $1,699.99
View the latest prices for LG 50PS80

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (21 Comments)
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by debobrata June 12, 2009 1:05 PM PDT
HDTV STINKS!
Reply to this comment
by surferstevo June 12, 2009 2:31 PM PDT
Just get it over with and give us (the public) what we want.

A TV with.
1. A browser(ie,firefox,opera whatever) so we can surf the internet and watch videos and movies on any website we want.

2. Put a qwerty keyboard on the remote so its easy to type.

3. Make it easy to PIP between TV and browser.
by Inconnux June 13, 2009 12:15 AM PDT
I couldn't think of anything else I would want less than to use my TV as a browser.
by timber2005 June 13, 2009 10:23 AM PDT
Surfersteveo, I think you should look into the HP All in Ones... which have exactly what you describe.
by vikinzer June 12, 2009 1:13 PM PDT
I honestly don't think these televisions are every going to be that big a deal. I could be totally wrong, but the technology that will really make the difference is the simple VGA/HDMI input on your television. I currently have my desktop hooked into my television. We watch Hulu on our big screen TV, we play World of Warcraft on our big screen TV. When we want to show someone something from youtube, boom automatic viewing, and we're starting to get youtube content that look good on the big LCD display. Nothing stellar, but rivaling or beating normal digital cable, and quickly moving to rivaling HD digital cable. We can surf the web, use netflix, you name it.

Not that many people are willing to make this leap just yet, but with products like http://www.linux.com/news/hardware/desktops/18899-fit-pc2-ubuntu-desktop-in-a-tiny-box hitting the market, it's going to become much more common. While most lower end products won't do the gaming stuff I do with my machine, a lot of people don't require that functionality necessarily. Throw in a standard SMB server (also known as windows with a shared directory) and suddenly all your media is available to anyone who jumps on your wireless network. If you want a computer in your bedroom or your kitchen, or anywhere else everything is centralized, and at the center is a delightfully normal HDTV. Why would I want a stripped down TV manufacturer experience when all the software to do everything I just described is free (ok, so I have to pay for the WoW, yay). There just isn't a lot of value proposition there.
Reply to this comment
by wmclover June 12, 2009 1:57 PM PDT
If the sound card on your computer has a DVI output, you can buy a cheap DVI to HDMI cable online from Monoprice to connect to your HDTV to get better video than your describe.
by dcnet23 June 12, 2009 1:19 PM PDT
Interesting, in 1996 I was in 12th grade. I thought back then it would only take 10 or so years before your TV, Stereo, Phone, and Computer were all one device. Guess I underestimated how slow technology and adoption take. But I guess I was ahead in my thinking then most.
Reply to this comment
by Deejay1001 June 12, 2009 1:40 PM PDT
It is about freakin' time! The studies quoted are irrelavent though. Issues not mentioned are: someone creating adaptors for current HDTVs, the response by the cable providers (Verizon, RCN, Comcrap, etc.) possibly offering a la carte options. If I can access the web, can't the cable providers? Can't they stream this content too? Don't forget about another big player - GOOGLE!

HDTV or not, bringing the web to your digital tv is the way of the future.
Reply to this comment
by wmclover June 12, 2009 1:43 PM PDT
If your desktop or notebook computer has a HDMI output, what is so difficult about connecting a $15 HDMI cable to your HDTV, and controlling the cloned HDTV screen output with a wireless mouse??? Mine do not, so for the last several years, I have connected my computer to my 50" HDTV, with a cheap DVI to HDMI cable for video, and an optical cable to my AVR for dolby digital sound. Since my computer video and sound is cloned, I have full use any and all computer output on my HDTV and AVR controlled by my Gyration wireless mouse. I stream any and all video from Netflix, Hulu, Winamp, my computer DVD drive, etc. in high definition to my HDTV with its accompanied optical connection to my AVR in high quality sound. I can listen to Pandora , my computer music, Sirus music from Dish, etc on the large speakers connected to my AVR, at the same time I am displaying a slideshow of my photos or playing a home movie. I am just an old fart with no computer expertise, but it sounds like it will take the industry another 5 years to do what I have been doing for the last 5-10 years for less than $50.
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by stephenpace June 12, 2009 1:44 PM PDT
I think this is a bad idea unless these televisions are significantly upgradeable. My televisions have tended to last me a long time, and I don't have a problem changing out a cheap external box to handle streaming features as technology changes. Maybe today you want to stream content from Netflix and Hulu, and tomorrow you want to do it from somewhere else. I just don't think the television manufactures are going to be able to keep up in this space.
Reply to this comment
by alegr June 12, 2009 2:04 PM PDT
What it needs is an ability to play video content from USB-connected flash, HDD and DVD drives.
Reply to this comment
by Lakebook June 12, 2009 2:17 PM PDT
They should make up their minds and come up with a standard. The best would be a module/box that hooks in the TV case somewhere in the back. The module should be the same size and have same connectors. This way if the technology changes or want something else you can just change the module.
Reply to this comment
by ddanckaert June 12, 2009 2:33 PM PDT
No, widely used platforms like Tivo HD and game consoles are the future of connected entertainment.
Reply to this comment
by ndthai June 12, 2009 2:48 PM PDT
bad links... click on ... 'READ MORE" then POP UP .POP UP ..POP UP .and i am unable to read "READ MORE" ........... c'mon CNET .... is spy ware next ??????????????
Reply to this comment
by timber2005 June 13, 2009 10:26 AM PDT
Maybe you have spyware which takes over links (something jacking)... haven't seen/heard of anyone else with issues.
by C0mmanderB0nd June 12, 2009 2:53 PM PDT
These are going to be as big as built in DVD players, or maybe not even that great.

As long as you can do it better with a device that plugs into the monitor/HDTV this will be a fad or throw in.

Xbox 360/PS3 or just a PC already offer much greater flexibility for all this web content.

Really all "net" tv offers is another reason to hold a higher price point.
Reply to this comment
by dlptvlamps June 12, 2009 3:24 PM PDT
Sorry to say, but this article is incorrect for a couple of reasons:

a) everyone doesn't have and won't be able to get an internet connected HDTV for it to make sense to be the "future" - most people don't want to pay more than $600 for a HDTV, so while the day may come where these television drop down in price, they are currently $2000+ and will take at least 5 years for them to come down.

b) connected HDTVs only sound great in theory. Do you remember WebTV? It was a service where for for $9.99 you could see, check, and respond to your email through your television. They were made by companies like Philips, with service from MSN and were sold in electronics stores all around the country. Ultimately they failed because most people who were already paying $25+ for the internet wouldn't want to pay $10 for another service and for people who could pay didn't understand or see the service as useful. The same is true here. Less than 50% of the US has HDTV, even less actually watch HD content through their television. HDTVs will get better and more feature full but the innovation will come through the screen - the color gamut it produces, and the technology used to power them. They've come close to making them as thing as people will care about.

c) cable companies won't allow it. what is to stop cable companies from providing all of the services and widget that samsung, and other companies are providing today. they have millions of people by the balls tied up in triple-play combo packages with rate plans with contracts they can't break out of without paying a fee. if the business gets too big, look for the HDTVs to remain dumb, while the cable companies get smart, and charge an extra fee for access to these applications and the marketplace which under pin them.

d) every manufacturer does it differently. going back to my previous point, when you want to access the internet through a Samsung HDTV, it's a different experience than how you do it through a Sony HDTV, and I'd imagine that every company will implement it differently. There's no reason to expect them to do it all the same when they sell their televisions in different countries, with different standards and there's little money in trying to tweak software for this purpose.

these points are just true. it'll sell a few more televisions, but it won't last. there's a better chance for Comcast, Time Warner, or Cablevision to do that for you.

The real innovation coming to televions and HDTVs which is real is 3D. That's a story I can get behind.
Reply to this comment
by zedosucks June 12, 2009 3:38 PM PDT
you know whats interesting i am currently running

broadbandhdtvs.com and broadbandhdtv.com and hoping that this tvs take off.

That will be the sweetest thing that can happen. :)

3 cheers for lg for making this happen.

Nick
Http://www.broadbandhdtvs.com
Reply to this comment
by hyghwayman June 12, 2009 4:47 PM PDT
yeah!
Reply to this comment
by zipityzap June 13, 2009 5:19 AM PDT
Don - I'm going to have to disagree. The PC, not a "connected TV," will bring the Internet into your living room. The PC will be the brains of the connected home, the TV just a dumb peripheral viewing device. Why spend lots of money for a "connected TV" that limits were you can go and what you can do? Use the expensive device you already have - your PC. It's easy and affordable! [CNET Editors' note: Prohibited spam deleted]
Reply to this comment
by ydoineedausername June 18, 2009 10:41 AM PDT
Do these things support DLNA? Kind of pointless if you're limited to strictly web content when Windows 7 will be available soon with the ability to stream over this protocol.
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About The Digital Home

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has covered everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Besides his work with CNET, Don's work has been featured in a variety of other publications including PC World and a host of Ziff-Davis publications.

Don writes product reviews for InformationWeek and is a regular contributor to Processor Magazine. You can visit his personal site at DonReisinger.com or if you would like to email Don with questions or comments, drop him a line at CNETDigitalHome@gmail.com. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

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