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Your Viiv Ain’t Nothin’ But Jive!
Viiv. Rhymes with Five. I don’t know how I knew that, other to admit, their marketing campaign must have been a success. Intel, in conjunction with Microsoft, is touting a system called Viiv that will let consumers pipe movies and music through their house with wireless abandon. They had a nice little video that showed you how easily it all worked. To quote Brendan Traw of Intel, “Our vision with Intel® Viiv™ technology is that digital media content can be enjoyed on these Intel-based PCs and consumer electronics devices in and around the home in an easy and affordable manner.” There was no F.A.Q. in their announcement or on the websites I found, not yet at least, so I’ve read up on Viiv best I could, and here’s what I gleam:
Q: Viiv sounds great, right?
Q: They say it's affordable. Is it? Let’s start with the medium of choice for most of our readers, the optical disc. At first glance, you might think a Viiv equipped network would allow you to load and watch the movies we already own on DVD. Such is not the case. Only HD-DVD movies can be directly loaded from an optical disk and played elsewhere in the house. Standard DVD’s will continue to require expensive video jukeboxes or media servers for whole house distribution. Then there is the question of how many movies you can load on a Viiv equipped computer. I mean, an HD-DVD movie could be 30 GB large. I know harddrive prices are dropping, but hey, even a terabyte (1,000 Gigabytes) would only hold about 30-40 movies.
Q: What about BluRay discs? That’s another hi-definition optical disc format, right? Is that supported by Viiv?
Q: What about video on demand and downloading movies?
Q: Can I record TV shows and watch them later?
Q: What about hi-def movies or TV shows?
Q: Can I turn my PC into a Viiv PC?
Q: Can I download music? I ran into somebody at CES who works as a businesss development consultant to a major Japanese corporation that would very much like to take on Apple’s iTunes. You know what he told them? Don’t bother. Apple won. And they did. If Viiv thinks they're going to start something new, I’d give them the same advice that consultant gave his client. Don’t bother. Downloading music that can’t be put on an iPod is a dead end.
Q: So what about my existing DVDs? < Previous Post | Blog Home | Next Post >
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