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Apple TV deal breaker (for me anyway) (Page 3)
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Jul 2004
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Originally Posted by mitchell_pgh
Why have a hard drive?
I'm obviously missing something.
If I was playing Unreal Tournament, and a family member started streaming stuff off my laptop, the give-away would probably be single digit frame-rates.
With a hard-drive, the tv can play media without taxing the computer. Hell, the computer doesn't even need to be home.
Also, imagine taking your tv to a family event, hooking it up to your uncle's ultra-huge plasma display, and showing off your pics, vids, and music.
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Grizzled Veteran
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Originally Posted by lpkmckenna
Also, imagine taking your tv to a family event, hooking it up to your uncle's ultra-huge plasma display, and showing off your pics, vids, and music.
Um, yeah. The iPod has been able to do that for a while now. And its a lot smaller and easier to transport.
Even if you insist on saying "what about plasmas and HDTVs" the chances are you have a DVD player with RCA inputs somewhere on it.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Rockville, MD
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Originally Posted by Gossamer
No. As the very article you cited states:
In recent years, the terms Luddism and Luddite or Neo-Luddism and Neo-Luddite have become synonymous with anyone who opposes the advance of technology due to the cultural changes that are associated with it (emphasis added).
Besides, she's only forty-four.
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Last edited by selowitch; Jan 27, 2007 at 12:10 AM.
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Mac Enthusiast
Join Date: May 2001
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Originally Posted by Kerrigan
Ya but isn't it a bit odd to pay for a device with HD out and 802.11n and all that fancy stuff, if you're just going to use it as an iPod? I don't understand why you considered the Apple TV to begin with, since it's for TV, not music/karaoke/visualizations.
My TV has good speakers hooked up to it. Currently the Xbox Media Center can connect to my iTunes share, no need to shuffle cables and I can control it from the couch. It is a killer setup, the cpu is a little slow however for h264 encoded movies.
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Addicted to MacNN
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Originally Posted by Langdon
Um, yeah. The iPod has been able to do that for a while now. And its a lot smaller and easier to transport.
Oh, I agree. But handing the remote to your Grandma would be new.
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Professional Poster
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Originally Posted by Langdon
Um, yeah. The iPod has been able to do that for a while now. And its a lot smaller and easier to transport.
Even if you insist on saying "what about plasmas and HDTVs" the chances are you have a DVD player with RCA inputs somewhere on it.
The iPod plays video at a 320x240 framerate. Not HD.
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Moderator Emeritus
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The iPod can display 640x480 on external screens. Even there, it's nowhere near 1280x720.
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Professional Poster
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Originally Posted by vmarks
The iPod can display 640x480 on external screens. Even there, it's nowhere near 1280x720.
It scales it to 640x480, but it's 320x240 natively (right?).
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Mac Elite
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Originally Posted by Gossamer
It scales it to 640x480, but it's 320x240 natively (right?).
No, it can play 640x480 video. All of the movies and some of the TV shows on the iTunes store are 640x480 (or whatever vertical resolution fits the aspect ratio)
The tv can play 1280x720, but only movie trailers from Apple or videos you encode yourself.
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"I start fires!"
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Professional Poster
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Originally Posted by MaxPower2k3
No, it can play 640x480 video. All of the movies and some of the TV shows on the iTunes store are 640x480 (or whatever vertical resolution fits the aspect ratio)
The tv can play 1280x720, but only movie trailers from Apple or videos you encode yourself.
Okay, thanks for the clarification.
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Grizzled Veteran
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Originally Posted by Gossamer
The iPod plays video at a 320x240 framerate. Not HD.
Right, but that's not the point. We're not talking about bringing over a copy of Sin City on your iPod so you can watch it at a relative's home. We are talking about personal media content... pictures, home movies, and MP3s as the person I was responding to mentioned.
So what if the iPod can't do HD quality. I was talking about the portability of the tv and how its not really meant to be a carry along electronic device like the Video iPod is.
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Grizzled Veteran
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Does everyone, or anyone, think tv will eventually become the pvr/dvr device many hoped it would be?
I was also hoping it would stream broadcast tv to other machines around the home ...
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Last edited by OB1; Jan 27, 2007 at 09:17 AM.
Reason: typo)
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tin pot, garden shed
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I'm still considering getting one, but I'm going to wait and see how the reviews turn out.
If you can encode a DVD easily for the tv, I'll consider it. If it's a pain, I'm out.
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Addicted to MacNN
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Originally Posted by mitchell_pgh
If you can encode a DVD easily for the tv, I'll consider it. If it's a pain, I'm out.
Lots of free DVD ripping utilities out there. Handbrake is my fav.
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