Two Takes Balanced

The first Roku-powered smartTVs have been announced

via Businessweek
2 min read
Aug 19, 2014
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TECHi's Analysis

94 words

For the last several years, Roku has sold a series of devices that you connect to your TV to stream a wide range of content from thousands of different apps. Roku is getting embedded directly into TVs that will go on sale in the coming months from consumer electronics manufacturers Hisense and TCL. At the Consumer Electronics Show in January, Roku announced partnerships with Hisense and TCL, both of which committed to building Roku-powered connected TVs. Those partnerships are now bearing fruit, with both CE makers announcing their lines of Roku TV products today.

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Businessweek's Report

167 words

For the last several years, Roku has made delightful little boxes that allow people to watch video streamed from the Internet on their televisions. Now the company is cutting out the middleman, working with Chinese manufacturers Hisense and TCL to sell Internet TVs powered by its software. Roku first said it was building televisions at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, and is showing them off publicly for the first time this week. They will be on sale this fall. The general look and feel will be familiar to anyone who’s used one of Roku’s boxes. Almost all of the 1,700 channels available through a standard Roku are also available on the TVs, with the exception of WatchESPN and Watch Disney. (Roku couldn’t reach a distribution deal with Disney for the new devices.) Smartphone apps allow people to pull up Netflix or YouTube videos on their phones and play them through the new TVs, so long as the devices are on the same wireless network.

TECHi's Verdict: Balanced

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

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