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The arrival of interesting internet-connected TVs at CES had me thinking that, for what’s supposed to be a very fast-moving sector, the technology industry can shift very slowly indeed. Consider this: the PC, TV and internet are often cited as the three most important modern developments in the way we consume information and are entertained. And yet, in two decades of trying, nobody has come up with a good way to combine all three phenomena.

CES: The time for the smart TV must be nigh

The internet on the PC works great if you have broadband, but TV on the PC is a kludge that works out as enriching an experience as editing a spreadsheet on a smartphone. Similarly, attempts to put the web on TVs have usually been horrible or suffered from severe compromises such as dependence on streamed content. Nobody has cracked the code of making a product that takes all the best features and enhances them through the combination. Instead they go together like boiled eggs and silver spoons — respectively nice in isolation but leaving a nasty when taken together.

For a cocktail of reasons from vendor politics to lack of standards and woeful design fails, that goes for any attempted combination seen so far: so-called ‘smart TVs’ have tended to dumb down the individual component strengths so we’ve been left with an orchestra of related bit parts from set-top boxes to DSL routers, high-quality programme content, huge displays, 3D and multicore processors, all refusing to harmonise except through plug-ins, spaghetti wires and cables. And yet everybody believes there’s a huge market for a device that takes the best from all three capabilities.

The smart TVs at CES suggest we remain at the ‘close but no cigar’ stage but the pace is picking up as rivals anticipate the arrival of the long-rumoured Apple TV. The stakes are so high that no major device maker or platform owner can ignore the action; forecasts are necessarily hazy but an outstanding product would surely become an instant must-have purchase.

After 20 years of Frankenstein attempts to bodge together recalcitrant pieces of the puzzle, the time has come for a device with all the processing power of the computer, live programming strengths of the TV, access to information afforded by the internet and the user interface that can make ingredients improved by the blend. If not now, then the time for the smart TV must be nigh.

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Google: This time, it’s personal

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Google’s mission is to “organise the world’s information” and it has done a fine job over the past decade or so by bringing order to the web’s trillion+ pages. But the web has changed since Google was incorporated in 1998. The web is no longer static and the content that makes up the internet has [...]

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Since discussing the FIFA racism furore on this blog, I took part in a PRWeek podcast to discuss how the issue could have been handled properly by establishing a robust point of view and avoiding crisis management mistakes:

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The furore over FIFA and Sepp Blatter’s handling of the recent football racism row and Mr Blatter’s recent interviews has provided some important reminders of how, or rather how not, to handle a crisis.
At Bite we have always believed there is no such thing as a crisis, just an issue that hasn’t been handled or [...]

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Recently, HTML5 has been gaining widespread recognition and as a result has had many articles written about it in a variety of publications. When talking about the web, it’s practically a buzzword – and a recent article in the Wall Street Journal demonstrated that although people are aware of it, they don’t necessarily understand it.
HTML5 [...]

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Topman, T-shirts and the daily Twitter-go-round

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I’m endlessly fascinated by the news agenda that Twitter creates. No readers’ digest or news search could effectively recreate the contradictory values that coexist at any moment in time on Twitter. No debate could mimic the melting pot of opinions that spew forth in real time, in brief and breathless miniature [...]

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What’s eating Bite?

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Or more accurately, what are Biters across the world eating? Earlier in the year we were set a simple challenge: “Come up with an interesting way of using social media.” To spice things up a bit, we wanted to make it something that would be pretty damn difficult to do without social tools and keep [...]

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