User User name Password  
   
Sunday 8.11.2009 / 08:22 AM
Search AfterDawn.com:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > news > ces 2008: panasonic to launch series of youtube tvs
Show topics
News
News

CES 2008: Panasonic to launch series of YouTube TVs

8 January 2008 6:41 by Matti "Siggy" Vähäkainu | 8 comments

CES 2008: Panasonic to launch series of YouTube TVs Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., the Japanese industry giant behind Panasonic, announced at Consumer Electronics Show (CES) that it will launch Internet-ready plasma televisions that support Youtube videos and Google web albums. The rival Sony responded with its own announcement that they will also bring Internet video to upcoming TVs. Sony's new brand of TVs will feature content from AOL, Yahoo, Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony BMG Music.

"This is the first time mainstream consumers will be able to easily enjoy YouTube videos from the living room with the enhanced quality of a fully integrated Widescreen TV experience," said Matsushita.

Sony Electronics senior vice president Randy Waynick also saw Internet video a big part of future televisions as he stated, "Internet video will clearly be the next step in the evolution of high-definition television, giving users more control over the content they view."

In addition Sony Pictures Television announced that it will add content to YouTube, the videos will be separated to several new channels, first of which is called Minisode Network which offers five-minute versions of TV shows.

Source:
Yahoo! News


Permalink to this article | Topics:

Get AfterDawn's news to your favourite feed reader! Share this story with your friends!
 

 
Related articles:

  • Pioneer halts plasma display production (4 March 2008)
  • Japanese analysts see LCD boom continuing for several years (21 February 2008)
  • YouTube leads record month for online video (13 February 2008)
  • Google and Dell teaming up on mobile phone? (30 January 2008)
  • YouTube banned in Turkey, again (20 January 2008)
  • Local media firms warm to YouTube Mexico (16 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Panasonic introduces new plasma displays (10 January 2008)
  • Panasonic shows DMP-BD50 Blu-ray player (10 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Verbatim updates line of Blu-ray media (10 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Blu-ray titles to include PSP version of video (10 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Pioneer shows off several DVD writers (10 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: BDA says there will be 10 million Blu-ray users in 08 (9 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Manufacturers criticized over design and marketing decisions (9 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: NBC promotes Mediaport kiosks (9 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Microsoft could consider Blu-ray accessory for Xbox 360 (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Sling Media demonstrates Clip+Sling (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Sony shows off OLED TV (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Nero showcasing Nero 8 features at Microsoft booth (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Sling Media shows off SlingCatcher publicly (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Samsung to put 'emphasis' on Blu-ray (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: DivX Connected adds content from Veoh and Vuze (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: HD DVD standalones hit 1 million mark (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Blu-ray camp is already waving signs of victory (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Intel discusses mobile internet devices (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Samsung shows the future of HDTV (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Warner did not violate HD DVD contract (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Panasonic to launch series of YouTube TVs (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Creative adds speaker to Zen Stone line of players (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Studio executives reveal online strategy for coming year (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Westinghouse & Pulse-LINK unveil integrated wireless HDTV (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: EchoStar to make DTV converters free after government voucher (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Comcast CEO to discuss Fancast TV and movie listing service in CES address (8 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Microsoft expands Xbox Live VoD offerings (7 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: SanDisk doubles capacity of Sansa Clip and Sansa View (7 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Toshiba introduces first ever HD DVD-R/RW notebook (7 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Xbox 360 goes IPTV with new partnership (7 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Rhapsody and Philips to team up (7 January 2008)
  • CES 2008: Sony and Toshiba execs comment on Warner Bros. decision at CES (7 January 2008)
  • SyncTV shows off proof of concept HD downloads straight to TV (7 January 2008)
  • Sony announced Skype and GPS for PSP (7 January 2008)
  • High quality YouTube videos in three months (15 November 2007)
  •  

    « Previous news article
    CES 2008: Creative adds speaker to Zen Stone line of players
    Next news article »
    CES 2008: Warner did not violate HD DVD contract
     Post your comment
    Discuss this article! 
    nobrainer (Inactive) 8 January 2008 9:21 Send private message to this user   
    cool stuff Panasonic, but a bit last gen to all of us with a media centre pc!

    Quote:
    Sony responded with its own announcement that they will also bring Internet video to upcoming TVs. Sony's new brand of TVs will feature content from AOL, Yahoo, Sony Pictures Entertainment and Sony BMG Music.
    at what cost, the usual sony extortionate rates apply i suppose?



    Quote:
    Sony BMG skips DRM for Platinum MusicPass MP3 gift cards

    Originally posted by FTA link:
    Posted Jan 7th 2008 10:43PM by Christopher Grant

    Sony BMG Music Entertainment just announced Platinum MusicPass, retail gift cards which can be traded in for digital music, delivered to you in "high-quality" – and notably DRM-free – MP3 files. No word on precisely what bitrate constitutes high-quality, but for $12.99 (or $19.99 for a couple special edition albums) you can pick up a card from a local retailer, scratch the back, enter the pin number on MusicPass.com and download the MP3s (and sometimes bonus material). Is it perhaps inadvisable to require consumers to leave the internet, go to a store to purchase a MusicPass card, only to return home to the internet to download the DRM-free track? Hey, we're not business majors here and – judging by the initial album offerings – we're not their target demographic either. Celine Dion and Kenny Chesney, really?

    $12.99 for a digital album, has anyone told sony that there are very little overheads with digital distribution thus making it cheaper for consumers?

    Or is it rip of the artists & consumer time, yet again!

    http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/200...-downloads.html

    Originally posted by : Ars; Full Low Down On RIAA Screw Over Via Link:
    Radiohead: Artists often screwed by digital downloads

    You might think, if you didn't work in the music business, that famous artists stand to make mad cash from popular albums on iTunes and other digital storefronts. Sadly, that's not the case, and Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke has spent the last week calling out the labels for it. He recently told BBC Radio 4 that "the big infrastructure of the music business has not addressed the way artists communicate directly with their fans. In fact, they seem to basically get in the way. Not only do they get in the way, but they take all the cash."

    Yorke said the same thing in a widely-quoted recent interview with David Byrne. His advice to young artists in that piece was, "Don't sign a huge record contract that strips you of all your digital rights, so that when you do sell something on iTunes you get absolutely zero. That would be the first priority." He went on to say that selling the new album, In Rainbows, directly to fans made the band more money from digital distribution than "all the other Radiohead albums put together, forever."


    Or are they starting to try and force on us all, the single user licence big media's wet dream that will make the fat cats, even fatter?


    Tor: anonymity online HIDE your IP from the spies, post and browse anonymously! http://www.torproject.org/


    The RIAA Soundexchange Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, EMI.

    The MPAA Are: SONY, UNIVERSAL, WARNER GROUP, DISNEY, PARAMOUNT, FOX.

    This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 8 January 2008 9:24

    chaos_zzz (Junior Member) 8 January 2008 11:27 Send private message to this user   
    what for? my computer it's connected to my pc :) cool feature thought for most ppl who are not tech fans

    This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 8 January 2008 11:28

    emugamer (Member) 8 January 2008 12:07 Send private message to this user   
    Now I can watch Tay Zonday and talking kitties in High Def......before I pull the trigger and blow my brains out.
    redux79 (Member) 8 January 2008 12:15 Send private message to this user   
    This seems like a step in the right direction for those who don't want to buy or upgrade to a media center pc. One question though, why do I need to watch some kid get hit in the nuts with a soup can on youtube in widescreen? Most of those videos are made with low end cell phones or web cams. I can only imagine how grainy and pixilated the videos will look on a larger screen.

    I know they mentioned new regulated video services, but promoting you tube? Just seems like a gimmick to me.
    canuckerz (Senior Member) 8 January 2008 12:36 Send private message to this user   
    Wow and eveyone knows what amazing resolutions you can get from youtube and how they'd be more enjoyed on an HDTV.
    vinny13 (Inactive) 8 January 2008 16:17 Send private message to this user   
    Why can't they just make TVs with a built in media center? Like a PS3 inside a 52" screen :)

    That would be perfect.
    borhan9 (AfterDawn Addict) 9 January 2008 19:53 Send private message to this user   
    This basically means in the near future we are going to get TV's that have all the new high definition stuff plus an internet connection or wireless blutooth connection for internet connection and then we can do everything with our TV's and well this i am sure what people are doing already but this innovation is going to simplify the whole process.
    chaos_zzz (Junior Member) 14 February 2008 12:48 Send private message to this user   
    connect your pc to to your tv, youtube res is awfull thought and gets worse on a big screen
     Post your comment
     

    Subscribe to our newsfeed

    Get the latest headlines delivered directly to your favourite RSS reader or content aggregation service by using the links below.

    AfterDawn.com: News - RSS feed
    Add to Google
    Add to My Yahoo!
    Add to MyMSN

    Search for headlines

    Search through our news archive.

    Last week's most popular software downloads

    Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
    Music: MP3Lizard.com
    Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
    Software: Software downloads
    Blogs: User profile pages
    RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
    International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | download.fi
    Navigate: Search | Site map
    About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
    Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
     
      © 1999-2009 by AfterDawn Ltd.