Wow. This thing is great on so many levels. With the exception of one conspicuously-missing feature, I’d say Apple has a game-changing device on their hands.
The void that this product fills
On the continuum of multimedia-based, time-wasting activities there is a gap. If traditional television sits at the extreme of the passive / linear / spoon-fed type of media consumption, surfing the web and reading blogs is at the opposite end requiring too much effort and brain involvement for times when you just want to decompress. I just finished setting up an Apple TV box this evening and I’ve been playing with it for about an hour now and this thing falls squarely in the middle of that continuum as an easy way to consume digital multimedia without having to sit in front of a computer screen.
The Apple TV allows you to sync your iTunes via wireless and watch/listen via your entertainment system. It can aggregate media from multiple computers, display photos and album art in the background and has an interface for surfing youtube content (provided it’s connected to the Internet). There was an Apple TV at a birthday party I was at last weekend and it was a blast passing the remote around and be able to pull up an old SNL episode or Mr. T singing about his mom. In the same way that the Nintendo Wii transforms a typically anti-social activity of gaming into a social experience, the Apple TV makes for a fun way of exploring digital content.
Setup happiness
The setup was almost as painless and intuitive as configuring a JumpBox. Running the wires for the component video took the longest time of any step. Once we got the wiring right the on-screen setup of the Apple TV from that point was a snap and took all of about 30sec to connect to the hotspot and start syncing to my iTunes. We did have to disable mac address filtering for it to connect. You pair it like you would a bluetooth device by entering in a combo on the iTunes of the computer which you wish to sync and it does its thing. About an hour later it had successfully synced some 2000 songs, a handful of video podcasts and a movie. You’ll want to pull down the album artwork for your iTunes library if you don’t already have it because it makes flipping through your music feel like flipping through a CD collection.
Usability
The visual interface is clean and what you’d expect from Apple. The remote is the same one that comes with the MacBook laptop and has only a few buttons- it makes the universal remote on the coffee table look like a monster. You navigate a tree of options based on Music, Movies, TV shows, Podcasts, Youtube and device settings. The only thing that’s awkward is typing in characters for a Youtube search via an on-screen keyboard.
Valuable real estate for Apple
I don’t know the numbers on prevalence of Apple TV’s at this point- I would guess it’s just a sliver of the market. But this device represents the “last mile of track” for Apple in a digital entertainment railway into the living room. I can see how owning the iTunes player, the iTunes store and the Apple TV device gives them a wildly-valuable distribution channel for digital media assets.
My perception of the Apple TV before using it was “this could be neat but it seems like a technology solution chasing a problem.” My feelings after having used it is that it makes you forget that you’re using the Internet – it’s more like a Tivo experience than an Internet surfing experience. The interface, transitions and usability that went into it make you want to explore and play with it. By taking a situational vs. feature-centric approach, they zeroed in on the scenarios that people want to use this for and nailed it. There’s only a few minor deficiencies at this point – but like the iPhone, this is a strong first showing for a product.
Enhancements I’d like to see
Conclusion
This is cool device. I had tinkered with the Democracy player and Joost on my laptop awhile back thinking “wow, power to the people. I’m going to start watching non-mainstream content more” but then I never did because at the end of the day, sometimes you just want to plop on the couch and hit the remote. The Apple TV moves that unique, independent content into the living room where it can compete in watch-ability with movies and TV. I wouldn’t say drop what you’re doing and race out to get one but this definitely a neat addition to a media center and sure to further erode the receding coastline of the TV networks.
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Sean, do you think it is better than TiVo?
John, it serves a different purpose. TiVo is a DVR that gives you more control in how you watch TV. The Apple TV is more about moving your consumption of digital media off your computer and into the living room. You can certainly buy TV shows via iTunes and watch them on demand (so in that respect i guess they could be seen as competitors) but the core essence is different. I’d say if you’re looking for a TV-centric device, get a TiVo. If you’re looking for non-TV content like video blogs and youtube stuff, get an Apple TV.
sean
One word of advice: VisualHub.
It’s worth the $22 they charge for it @ http://visualhub.net
VisualHub lets me put files from ANYWHERE on my TiVo, iPod – and it works with AppleTV, too.
And I mean FROM ANYWHERE. Ripped from DVD, downloaded via bittorrent, transferred from TiVo, found on YouTube… anywhere.
Of course, if you are going to torrent, you can get a 1080i x.264 with DTS file that your AppleTV will play JUST FINE (as long as you have a DTS decoder).
John Bland: TiVo and AppleTV serve different purposes. TiVo turns a live TV feed into mpeg files. AppleTV plays mpeg files that you “find online”, eliminating the need for a “live TV feed”.
Sean, I’m glad you like your Apple TV. I love mine. Actually I run two web sites dedicated to Apple TV: http://appletvhacks.net and http://appletvsource.com .
On AppleTVHacks.net, you can find a hack that allows you to use an external HD to store your media.
And for HD content, AppleTVSource has a list of over 100 HD podcasts that are compatible with the Apple TV.