Google is finally to offer its TV service in the UK, nearly two years after its American launch.
The first hardware, made by Sony, will offer direct access to the internet,
and Google hopes it will also encourage software developers to write apps
for televisions as well as for mobile phones and tablets.
Google TV has struggled in America, and the interface has been redesigned
since it was first unveiled. Special versions of YouTube, Twitter and some
websites have now been created for the TV interface, and Google hopes more
users will rent films through the new service. A company spokesman said that
internet on television needed to be more of a "lean back experience" than it
is on a computer.
Apple is rumoured to be working on a television, too, while major hardware
manufacturers such as Samsung are already building "connected"
televisions that connect to the web.
The Sony-branded GS7 set-top box will launch from 16 July first in Britain and
then in Canada, Australia and a number of European and South American
countries. It was first unveiled at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas in January, and a Blu-ray player with Google TV built in, called the
GP9, is also planned from October.
Sony’s Giladas Pelliet claimed the new devices would expand “the reach and
interoperability of the powerful Android platform with Sony’s smartphones,
tablets and audio and video products”.
Google’s Chrome web browser is built in to the new box, which also features a
remote control that has a touchpad on one side and a full keyboard on the
other.
A smartphone or tablet can also be used as a remote via the free Media Remote app.
A smartphone or tablet can also be used as a remote via the free Media Remote app.
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