Half of US homes to have a DVR by 2011

The E-Commerce Times is running an article on the growth of DVR use in the US. According to Leichtman Research Group (LRG), just two years ago DVRs were in only 1 of 13 US homes, today 1 in 5 homes have a DVR, and by 2011 they predict that 50% of homes, or 60 million, will have a DVR. This is due largely to the proliferation from cable and satellite providers who are shifting DVRs from options to nearly standard equipment.

LRG also reported a couple of things that were a little surprising to me. They determined that 45% of DVR households record only five or fewer programs a week, and that 95% of TV viewing in the US is still live TV. I would’ve expected homes with DVRs to record more content, and even with DVRs in just 20% of homes I expected more time-shifting – 100% of my viewing is time-shifted with TiVo. And they look forward to potential future developments such as a network-based DVR.

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More on TiVo in Australia

There is a little more on plans for TiVo in Australia from Saturday’s Sydney Morning Herald. They reiterate that Seven Network plans to launch the TiVo in time for the 2008 Summer Olympics, which Seven will air in Australia. Seven is also negotiating with other networks to bring them into the TiVo platform.

The service will start out with basic functions, allowing subscribers to record programs, download content from websites selected by Seven and its digital partner, Yahoo!, play music and show photos as well as use a feature that will select programs based on a customer’s viewing history and favourite shows. Users will also be able to pause viewing, watch extended ads, and order brochures.

[Seven's director of TiVo, Mark] Hughes said more features would be added over time, with the initial offering just a “toe in the water compared to where we will be in 12 to 18 months”. They could include video on demand, more interactive services and the ability to move recorded programs onto portable devices such as an iPod. The launch date “will be sometime before the end of next year, but obviously the Olympics is a key event for us [Seven has the broadcasting rights] and we are very focused … on getting the platform out there”.

Seven plans to sell the TiVo HD-based unit for AUD$500 to $600 with subscriptions handled through Engin. Hughes said the hope is for TiVo to garner 25% of the expected 2 million unit Australian DVR market over the next five years. And I like the sound of this:

Seven is talking to other networks about allowing them to add various features such as extra program material or interactive features, with the possibility of sharing revenue. For example, Channel Ten viewers could vote for their favourite Australian Idol stars through the TiVo box.

I’d love to see some of that Interactive TV-style functionality added to the US TiVos as well.

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Amazon Unbox weekend 99-cent sale and more free downloads

The 99-cent rentals this week from Amazon Unbox are Zodiac, Superman: Doomsday, Lucky You, The Contract, I Think I Love My Wife, and Lonely Hearts.

They also have another round of free season and series premiers. Currently episodes of Bones, Rules of Engagement, Til Death, House, Big Bang Theory, Gossip Girl, Kitchen Nightmares, Back to You, K-Ville, and Prison Break are free to download. You can also download Conan O’Brien’s Pale Force for free.

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The Slingbox SOLO is now available from Amazon, Best Buy, and Buy.com

The Slingbox SOLO (SB260-100) is now available from Amazon.

I’ll keep checking Buy.com and BestBuy.com, but it isn’t there up yet.
EDIT: BestBuy.com has it now.
EDIT 2: Buy.com has it now as well.

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Sling Media making some BlackBerry jam

First SlingPlayer Mobile hit Windows Mobile devices, and then Palm OS, and just today Symbian. What next? Well, apparently RIM’s BlackBerry OS is the next territory they plan to conquer, according to this straight-forward quote at Pocket-lint.co.uk:

“We are working with BlackBerry to develop a software application at the moment”, Stuart Collingwood, VP of Europe for Sling Media told us.

This confirms what Sling co-founder and CEO said on The GigaOM Show last month. As I reported at the time:

Blake also said that Sling is working on SlingPlayer for Blackberry and the iPhone. Blackberry “is even a higher priority because there are more of them out there right now”.

One presumes that this will only be supported on the newer BlackBerry devices which are more multi-media friendly and which have 3G and/or Wi-Fi support for the data connection. Perhaps there will be unofficial support for EDGE devices, as with the Palm OS SPM – which does work acceptably over a solid EDGE connection.

Picked up from Engadget.

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