Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

San Jose Mercury News

Tuning in Olympics made easier with new tech

It marks the first time the app has been available on a set-top box and the first time that Olympics coverage streamed over the Internet has been easily available on a TV. In the past, if you wanted such streaming video on your TV, you either had to plug your computer into your television or use a program to wirelessly stream video from your computer to it.

The app could prove popular with Comcast customers, said Brett Sappington, a director of research at Parks Associates, a consulting firm.

Consumers "want the video they can get on their phone (and) see it on the biggest screen they can," he said. "It's not really the app itself that consumers care about, it's the content that it provides."

From the article, "Tuning in Olympics made easier with new tech" by Troy Wolverton.

Previously In The News

RadioShack bets on in-store, same-day repairs to smartphones, tablets

With the wireless phone industry moving away from subsidized smartphones, the cost of the phone psychologically is going to feel more expensive, said Harry Wang, director of mobile research at Park...

Is wearable tech already wearing thin?

Parks Associates' Wang said smartwatches will eventually compete against luxury watch makers such as Rolex, not other tech companies. Entering into the already established watch market would ha...

Wolverton: Bluetooth may be the key to your future smart home

That ubiquity means consumers can control Bluetooth-based smart home devices directly with their phones or tablets, rather than having to go through a so-called bridge. In order to interact with no...

Biz Break: Google Chromecast tops Apple TV in streaming battle, report finds

The booming market for streaming video has created another venue for Google and Apple to battle, and Google appears to have ridden lower prices to yet another market-share victory over its Cupertin...