Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Los Angeles Times

After initial flop, Google will try again to launch Android TV

Barbara Kraus, market research director at Parks Associates, said about a third of U.S. households with broadband Internet have smart TVs, a percentage expected to double by 2018.

But the top three smart-TV makers — Samsung Corp., Vizio Inc. and LG Electronics Inc. — all have their own operating systems, and analysts doubted that the companies would use Android TV.

Instead, Google said that it's Sony, Sharp Corp. and an overseas brand of Philips that plan to release displays that have Android TV and the slate of apps, such as Netflix, TuneIn and Showtime. According to Sony, using Android TV would let it focus on hardware development.

Asus Inc. and Carlsbad, Calif.-based gaming hardware maker Razer are making Android TV consoles that will compete with devices including Roku, Apple TV and Amazon Fire TV. Such devices sit in a fifth of U.S. households with broadband Internet, Kraus said.

Android TV boxes also will have to live alongside Google Chromecast, a stick plugged into HDMI ports that display some apps from Android and iOS on a television. Kraus said 6% of U.S. households with broadband own Chromecast. All told, almost two-thirds of U.S. households with broadband have at least one TV-related device hooked up to the Internet.

Razer said its box would rival others because of a focus on gaming. Game apps draw some of the highest revenues among mobile apps, but analysts said it's to be seen whether people want to play those games on a big screen. Kraus' firm said about 11% of Roku users play "Angry Birds," but wider data weren't available.

From the article, "After initial flop, Google will try again to launch Android TV" by Paresh Dave.

Previously In The News

Medical giant Medtronic to buy rival Covidien for $42.9 billion

Because both companies already are giants in the medical-devices market, the merger should allow for more robust research and development and more comprehensive health-monitoring capabilities, said...

Now showing in rich people's homes: first-run movies

"There are thousands of people out there, if not tens of thousands of people, that could buy this product," Pang said. "We found the secret sauce to make billionaires act like little giddy schoolch...

Hard-core gamers turning to social networks

It's not just time. "Camelot" players also spend more money. The average social game on Facebook succeeds in getting between 2 percent and 5 percent of players to spend money on the game, according...

Former Apple exec markets a thermostat for the iPhone generation

Getting the average homeowner to take an interest — and make an investment — in managing energy is a chronic problem for the industry. But it's the wave of the future, and utilities, service provid...