Asides

Roku Netflix Player First Impressions

June 12

Netflix PlayerI had read a few things about the Roku Netflix Player, but hadn't given it much thought. Then, while watching the 3 DVD's we had sitting around from Netflix for over 2 weeks collect dust, I began to think more about the player. The 3 DVD at a time subscription is $16.99 a month, and as I said, we really don't watch that many movies (I'm more a a TV junkie really), so it really hasn't been a very good deal for us. The Roku player is $100+ shipping and handling (more about that in a bit), and requires the $8.99 a month subscription or greater, which allows one DVD at a time, plus unlimited streaming movies. So my thinking was, I would almost pay for the player in the first year downgrading to the lower subscription, it's a no-brainer. Plus, there's a 30 day money back guarantee, so worst case scenario, I get it, it sucks, I send it back, and simply rethink the subscription plan regardless. So a quick discussion with the lady of the house, and we decided to order it and give it a try.

This was last Thursday. We were given an option of spending an extra $10 on 2-day Fedex (on top of the $10 ground), so be the anxious geek, I pony up the extra money, thinking I'd have it on Monday. Well, Roku sent an email saying the player would be shipped from the warehouse in the next 7-10 days on Friday, which rubbed me the wrong way, as that wasn't mentioned in the order process, but OK. Nothing else to my knowledge was emailed out (we used her email address). So I was resolved to not see it for 2 weeks. However, when I returned from running errands today, there it was sitting on my porch.

Since ordering, I had done a bit more research, and the one downfall I have seen repeated over and over is the limited amount of content available, as Netflix has to obtain digital rights to the content before being able to offer it. Consensus seemed to say that it is mostly older TV series, indie/foreign films, and few older major releases tossed in here and there. I wasn't too anxious to really look at the selection, as I wasn't expecting to receive it for another week at least, but I'm more an indie/foreign film kinda fan than Spiderman 3 anyway, so as I said, I've got 30 days.

As other reviews mention, it's nothing but a simple little black box, with an external power supply. A small, boxy remote and RCA cables fill out the included items. Again, as I wasn't expecting it so soon now, I hadn't obtained additional cables (like optical audio to connect to the receiver or component video, which are all supported, as well as HDMI and s-video). I admit right up front I'm not the techno-geek when it comes to these aspects, so I'm not really qualified to say one thing or the other about the supported connections, etc. The player can connect via wireless or ethernet (however, as I understand it, it doesn't support 802.11n). I gave the wireless a shot first, but figured I might have to run an ethernet cable.

Set up was really easy, a simple onscreen walk through entering my WEP key, a quick connection to Netflix, update some (firmware??) and restart, it gives a code that you then enter into your Netflix account. Maybe 5 minutes total, and my account was connected to the TV, any movies in my queue that were available for the Instant Viewing was added to that queue as well, and I could see them on the screen. I poked around quickly on the site, looking for something to add. Dexter season 1 was there, I never saw the first season, and figured it would be a good test. I added it to my queue, and within 30 seconds or so, it showed up on the TV. TV seasons only need the season added, all episodes are available, whereas with DVD's you have to add each disc. I navigated to episode one, clicked play, a few seconds later it starts downloading, I see •••• quality after it loads (still not sure what that means, but I think it has something to do with my connection. I generally get 18Mb/s or better with my wireless connection, even faster wired). All told, roughly a minute before the show started playing.

Episode played fine, no skipping, no jumping, quality was as good as my FIOS cable (even with the included RCA cables). Fast forwarding is a bit different, as they break shows up into little chapters of sorts, with stills for each section. I haven't really paid close enough attention yet to see what the time frame of each are, but they seem like 1 minute or so apiece. Different, but easy enough to adapt to.

Being the TV junky that I am, I poked around a bit more, and found that a lot of Law and Order SVU/CI seasons were available. I often find myself watching reruns on TNT and USA Network, as I never really watched the show during it's first runs, and heck, why not just watch it in order without the annoying commercials on those networks? I added SVU season one, and watched the first two episodes. Again, quality was fine (once I switched the perspective back to 4:3 from 16:9), with no skipping/jumping. One criticism I've read about the player is that there's no hard drive and no real buffering. ( A interview with a Roku exec I read said they did some research, and found people didn't want to hear a fan/HD spinning, thus one reason it doesn't have one. Plus, they wanted to hit a price point, as well as eliminate as many parts that could fail. Regardless of the reasons, so far, I don't see a need for any of that with the connection speed I have.)

Final ThoughtsAll in all, first day in, it seems like a fine investment. I found several more movies quickly browsing through the instant available selections (this has to be done on the computer, you can't search for movies from the TV), so not counting the TV shows, I have 7 films queued up. Plus the 3 DVD's collecting dust, so I think I'll be fine for the short term, they seem to be actively adding more content, and I'm sure as the player(s) gain popularity, they will be in a better bargaining position to obtain more. If your goal is to watch a lot of new releases, don't plan on dropping your regular subscription down anytime soon. However, at $100, the player seems like a fair investment if you are a TV/movie junkie. Also, there seems to be quite a bit of children's content as well as History channel type documentaries, so the cost might be enticing to parents as well.

I'm sure I'll discover more as I use it, please don't hesitate to ask questions if you are interested in the player.

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Obligatory Response to New iPhone

June 10

I was really looking forward to today's confirmation of the lower price 3G iPhone. I purposely held off (for a change) on adopting a 1st gen Apple product, knowing the 3G service would be coming. However, now that reports have confirmed that you will have to sign a contract, I'm not so sure now that I will be adopting the new phone. I genuinely do not use a cell phone for talking enough to justify signing such a contract, and being required to have such a plan (what $70 a month?). The previous $20 a month data plan plus minimal talk time per minute was fine with me, as I have used it with other "smartphones".

I will be curious to see how they treat 1st gen iPhone users who currently are doing pay as you go plus data plans. Perhaps those will still be allowed to use the prepay, and I'll pick one up on teh cheap, until I can justify signing a contract paying for that much phone usage.

My other option is to wait to see what happens to iPod Touch prices, as I may get just as much use out of one of those as an iPhone.

If anyone has a suggestion for a smartphone that can be used with pay as you go and unlimited data plan with AT&T, has a great web browser support, bluetooth, and is iSync capable, I'd love to hear about it. edit: and can be purchased new/used for $200 or less without a contract.

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Leaving the Nest

April 30

This past week it was proposed and not shot down in flames that my first foray into a Habari theme, mzingi , intended as a simple, image free theme to be used as a foundation for building proper themes, should be included into the core download of Habari.

I was humbled and honored to say the least, and so from here on out, all development for this project will be maintained by the community.

Thanks to all who've helped, and shared their appreciation for it's intended purpose, and I trust the community will continue to use it for creating full fledged themes. Feels a little odd, but satisfying at the same time.

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Quick Update on Themes

April 28

I recently updated my themes, and since that time a change has been made in trunk in how pagination is handled. All 3 three themes have been updated for this change. I will be leaving download links for the previous versions up as well, as I believe those versions should work with 0.4.1. If you experience any problems with either version, please set me know.

Downloads and more info on each theme available on their original post.

Also, I have a demo site up and running to check them out. I still need to tweak the themeswitcher plugin so you can only select certain themes from your theme directories, so note that only my 3 themes have the switcher code.

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Updated Themes

April 24

I've been quite lazy (or busy, you decide) lately, and have been meaning to update the 3 themes I've released to work with the latest trunk. Previously, I kept decent todos and a svn repo for mzingi, but this time I simply bore down in some late night frenzy and got everything up-to-date. I've got a new svn repo to work with, and will check them in at some point in the next few days, and hopefully will be able to better outline any changes.

Basically the changes to mzingi were minor, just a few code changes for things like atom links, and updating the YUI fonts and style sheet. I also added some styling for draft posts.

As far as swanky and Harvest Field, they have more extensive changes, most evident in the sidebar content. Harvest Field now only uses built in code for the footer content – the about, recent comments and more posts links. The sidebar in Harvest Field is entirely plugin reliant now, sans the search and subscribe link. It supports by default the Twitter, linkoid (for aside like posts - which is also excluded from the more posts offset) and the very nifty blogroll plugin. All three have their own templates in the theme. I also added support for the credits due plugin, with a built in page template, and conditional code in the footer. Also, I borrowed the watermark for draft posts from michaeltwofish's connections theme, and a little more emphasis on comments in moderation styling.

Swanky was also updated to use the current Twitter plugin/template, as well as added support for the blogroll plugin. If these plugins are not active, nothing will show, nothing will break. Recommended plugins are listed on the themes page. As with Harvest Field, the draft watermark and comments in moderation were addressed.

As usual, if you find a bug, or would like to see something added/need help, please leave a comment either on this post or the original post for the theme in question.

So without further ado :

Also, I'm putting the finishing touches on a demo site, which I'll be adding links to the aforementioned theme posts. Just need to decide how I want to add the theme switcher code (I'm trying to decide between adding a new fixed element at the top of each theme, or simply adding the dropdown to each sidebar).

As always, much thanks go to the community for the help and assistance in putting these together.

Edit Twitter, linkoid, blogroll, and credit due plugins can be downloaded from Habari extras

Second Edit To clarify the "Credits" feature is accomplished by 1)activating the creditsdue plugin from extras 2)create a page with the slug "credits", you can add additional content to the page if you want 3) there is no three (I've always wanted to say that!).

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