Our Team Blog

Boxee Beta Unveiling tonight!

Tonight at 7pm ET we will unveil the Boxee Beta in Brooklyn. The event has sold out, but you can still get your name on the waiting list (we have asked people who RSVPd , but can’t make it to let us know, so we can release the tickets to people on the waiting list).

If you are coming to the event, but not a local, check out the Boxee’s Handy Guide to Williamsburg. We recommend arriving early and grabbing something to eat on the way. The line will be long, but we’ll try to make it move quickly.

If you can’t make it in person then you’ll be able to watch a live broadcast here on the blog (in the player above), or on Boxee by installing the Boxee Beta Unveiling App, powered by Livestream and Cliqset. If you install the app you’ll see that you can chat in real-time with other viewers on Boxee.

We’re going to be using Hot Potato (http://hotpotato.com) during the unveiling tonight. You can join in whether you’re attending, watching on Boxee or Livestream, or just following along. Use Hot Potato for sharing the experience live via photos and commentary in real time around our event  from the web (http://htp.to/5chJRD ) or your iPhone (http://bit.ly/hotpotatoapp).

The event will be R rated for strong language and sexual content, viewer discretion is advised :)

December 7, 2009 at 9:01 am

Boxee’s Handy Guide to Williamsburg (by @zachklein)

Planning to attend the Boxee event, but new to Williamsburg? No worries. Zach Klein put together a quick guide to give you some great options for food and drinks not far from the Music Hall of Williamsburg.

Getting there

Take the L train from Union Square to Bedford Avenue (3 stops, 7 minutes). From the station, walk west 3 blocks to North 6th and Wythe Avenue. Music Hall of Williamsburg is located just west of Wythe, look for the marquee with our name on it.

Getting back

Of course, take the L in reverse or call Northside Car Service at 718-387-2222. A car to the East Village costs $12.

williamsburg

Good Places to Eat

Egg
135 North 5th Street
(718) 302-5151

El Amacen
557 Driggs Avenue
(718) 218-7284

Marlow & Sons (a little far, but worth the walk)
81 Broadway
(718) 384-1441‎

Radegast Hall and Beer Garden
113 North 3rd Street
(718) 963-3973

Sweetwater Tavern
105 North 6th Street
(718) 963-0608

Good Places to Drink

Blackbird Parlour
197 Bedford Avenue
(718) 599-2707‎

Brooklyn Bowl
61 Wythe Avenue
(718) 963-3369

Hotel Delmano
82 Berry Street
(718) 387-1945

Hugs (skeeball!)
108 North 6th Street
(718) 599-5959

The Levee
212 Berry Street
(718) 218-8787‎

December 5, 2009 at 7:38 pm

A Remote Widget to control Boxee (by @jcelestino)

I don’t know whether it is a positive trend towards enhanced experiences or early signs of ADHD, but these days I have 3 screens with me in the living room. I am sitting on the sofa with the TV on, the laptop on my lap (or on the coffee table) and my mobile by my side.

James Celestino is a Boxee user who seems to share similar media consumption habits. He wanted an easy way to control Boxee from his laptop, so he built a very simple, intuitive and mighty useful widget.

Screen-shot-2009-11-25-at-3.33.51-PM-300x65

James in his own words:

One of my favorite media applications to date is Boxee. While I was sitting on my couch one day watching some Rev3 shows, on Boxee, I wanted to turn up the volume a bit. Like many people with a lot of gadgets in their living room I couldn’t find the remote. It was the little apple remote for my mac mini which is what I run boxee on, which is connected to my HD TV. Easy to lose in the couch or under a table, etc. Like many Geeks, I think, I tend to watch TV with my laptop nearby. So I often end up launching screen sharing on my laptop to control the mac mini, a bit of overkill I thought. I went searching for a widget remote control for Boxee that I could run and do simple things like navigate and turn up the volume. I couldn’t find one. Which leads me to the creation of this page and its contents. Since I couldn’t find one, I decided to make one figuring I may not be the only one who might want this.

So here it is.

Life Hacker and Tech Startups already posted about it, and we will try to get the word out to our users, too. James is already receiving requests for additional features and for porting the widget to additional platforms (currently the widget only works on Mac, but you can use it to control Boxee running on any platform), so it should just get better.

November 28, 2009 at 12:27 am

Sign up for early-access to the Boxee Beta

We will be unveiling the Boxee Beta in Brooklyn on December 7th. If you’re in town click here to RSVP. For those who can’t make it in person there will be a live broadcast (by Livestream) on this blog and via Boxee.

The plan is to roll out the Beta gradually till we feel confident enough to release it to the general public. We will be sending Beta invites to people attending the event, people who sign up for early access and over time to all existing alpha users.

In case you want to get your name on the early-access list please fill this form.

November 24, 2009 at 8:06 pm

a Boxee Box is coming!

We launched our public alpha for Mac/Linux in January at CES. During the show we met with several device manufactures interested in embedding Boxee into their existing devices or building a dedicated Boxee device.

I am very happy to announce we have signed our first partnership with a CE company. At this point we can not say more about the partner or the specs of the device, but we can tell you we are working closely with them to make sure we deliver a great Boxee experience on it.

We will show mockups of the box and share more details at our upcoming Boxee Beta Unveiling event in Brooklyn, NY on Dec 7th. RSVP here.

Over the next few years there will be a great change in the way we consume entertainment on our TV. The Internet is (finally) coming to the TV and with it will come a whole new world of content, applications and innovations.

We are building Boxee as a platform that would:

  • make it easy for users to consume and find content – no matter what the source
  • give content owners, aggregators, and developers the tools to create unique experiences with a variety of business models
  • enable CE companies to enhance their Connected devices

This will be the first connected device running Boxee, but the idea is to provide consumers with a way to get Boxee in their living rooms, no matter whether it’s on a Connected TV, game console, set-top box, BluRay player, computer, etc.

Our goal is to be on every Connected device in the living room.

We are very excited about the partnership and looking forward to sharing more at the event.

November 12, 2009 at 10:00 am

Unveiling the Boxee Beta in NYC on Dec 7th

NYC-BETA-Unveiling-09

The date is set for the release of the Boxee Beta. On December 7th at 7pm we are going to have an unveiling event at the Music Hall of Williamsburg.

At the event we will demo the new Beta, launch new applications from partners and start a 4-weeks early-access for users to test the Beta before we release it to the public at CES on Jan 7th.

The Boxee Beta will look, feel and behave differently from the Alpha. It takes into account many of the requests and feedback we received from users in the past year.

The Beta will feature:

  • new user interface
  • improved navigation
  • search TV Shows and Movies
  • a user controlled Queue
  • shortcuts
  • more…

We’ve have been heads down working on it for the past few months, and we’re really anxious to get it into your hands.

November 6, 2009 at 9:30 am

Watching the Foo Fighters concert on Boxee

Last week U2 and YouTube have partnered to provide a live broadcast of the U2 concert in the Rose Bowl (watch it here), which attracted ~ 10 million viewers. Tonight Facebook/Livestream are broadcasting the Foo Fighters concert from Studio 606. This is great for fans of U2 and Foo Fighters, great for YouTube and Facebook and great for the Music industry.

In both cases you could watch these concerts live on Boxee, or tune in later and watch it on demand later. There is an app for the Foo Fighters concert on the App Box (screenshot below), and the U2 concert is available through the YouTube app.

I hope this is a trend that will continue to grow. There’s nothing like going to a live concert, but when it’s not playing near you, tuning to the live stream is the best thing you can ask for as a fan. It will probably raise the likelihood of that fan buying concert tickets when the tour stops in his town.

FF on Boxee

October 30, 2009 at 9:24 pm

TV: I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change

FlashForward

A few years ago TV shows started coming out on DVD, which made it possible to watch a full season in a condensed fashion. DVRs and the Internet have made this type of consumption even more common. I think we may be getting to the point where this new behavior should start changing the way TV shows are being written and the way stories are told.

For me, appointment viewing exists only in the case of sports. When it comes to scripted, pre-recorded content I have become spoiled. I don’t want to wait a week between each episode. I prefer to wait for a season to end and then watch the episodes one after the other. There are lots of great shows and I have a long list of stuff I want to watch (recently finished Rome, currently watching The Wire and in my pipeline are The Tudors, Flight of the Concords, Breaking Bad and Mad Men), so I see no reason to wait anxiously for new episodes of a currently airing show.

I realize this is far from being a mainstream behavior, but I believe this is going to be the way most people will consume episodic content in the future. The issue is that today writers create artificial suspense before commercial breaks and at the end of each episode (to ensure  viewers will tune in next week), and they also feel the need to remind the viewer of key plot themes (since it’s been a week and the viewer may have forgotten). When you watch a few episodes over a short period of time these “tricks” are clearly apparent and they hurt real story telling.

The on-demand experience should also put into question other axioms. For example, why stick with the format of 22/44 min long episodes? some plot lines could be longer and some shorter. A show could also be non-linear, letting the viewer follow different paths from different angles, putting new story telling tools in the hands of the writers.

In many ways taking TV shows made for traditional TV and putting them online is like the early days of TV itself, when the shows were essentially radio programs in front of a camera. Like TV was in the 1950′s the Internet is a new medium. It represents great opportunities for new formats to emerge. Probably in 5-10 years the most interesting shows will be made for the Internet, and they will be very different from what we see today on TV.

* the title of the blog post was inspired plagiarized from the off-broadway show I, Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change

October 14, 2009 at 6:01 pm

Come see Boxee at gdgt launch party in NYC

gdgt-ny-launch-party-banner-qla

Tomorrow (Oct 1st) gdgt is doing its launch party in NYC, and we’re proud to be part of it!

The event starts at 7pm at the Manhattan Center. If you love gadgets you should stop by. There will be demos from Blackberry, Zune, Sony, Drobo, HP, Kodak, Rockstar Games and more.

RSVP on Facebook (the event is free)

We (Gidon, Zach and myself) will be at the Boxee demo station and will be looking forward to chatting with users stopping by (we kind of ran out of schwag, but still have a bunch of stickers left :) ).

Coveroo will also be in the house etching your favorite artwork on your favorite gadget (below is a picture of my Blackberry Bold with the Coveroo etching).

BoldCoveroo

September 30, 2009 at 2:27 pm

In support of Net Neutrality

A lot has been written about the issue of Net Neutrality, but on the eve of the FCC’s Chairman speech about the subject, and given Boxee’s position as a stakeholder in this debate I thought it would be worthwhile to share our view.

Broadband networks (wired & wireless) are on their way to becoming a new type of commodity (like water, electricity, sewage). They also represent an opportunity for a world where geographical, economical, and racial barriers matter less.

The principle behind Net Neutrality is that broadband providers should not put any restrictions on the data they deliver (not on content being delivered, not what site is being accessed, not what device is being connected, etc.). All bits are made equal and should not be discriminated against.

I realize many of the people who read this blog are familiar with the subject, so I’ll jump right into the debate (if you’re interested in a more elaborate introduction to the subject see links below).

Opposing Net Neutrality is like:

… posting a sign on the entrance to the US Internet saying “take your business elsewhere”:  If starting an Internet business in the US means additional cost companies need to pay to broadband providers then entrepreneurs will start their businesses in countries that have neutral Internet policies. Europe?, Japan?, Canada?, China? they’ll be happy to welcome the entrepreneurs that were turned off by the new US “tax” on running an Internet company.

… giving incumbents a free pass: The Internet is a great platform for disrupting industries. Part of the reason it is so powerful is because there is a level playing field. A segregated Internet with exclusive “expressways” only the rich can afford will mean that a start-up will not be able to effectively compete with an incumbent who has deep pockets.

… telling investors to put their money into a different field: The Internet is a great investment opportunity. It is cheap to start a business and dream of changing the world. If the cost of starting an Internet company artificially goes up there will be less innovation and less opportunities for investors and entrepreneurs.

… killing the Internet as we know it: An Internet where only devices approved by the broadband provider can connect to the network, where only protocols that are friendly to the broadband provider’s business model will be allowed, where a site generating lots of traffic but little revenue for the broadband provider will run the risk of being put on a blacklist is not the Internet we know today. It will be a corporate, boring, stagnating, censored, complacent, crippled shadow of today’s Internet.

There are potential risks to Net Neutrality. The most prominent are claims that once Net Neutrality is in effect the broadband providers will have no incentive to invest in their networks and will not be able to fight piracy. We believe that in a competitive market the motivation for investment will continue to exist and that the best way to fight piracy it to offer an easy to use and affordable legal alternative. It seems, however, the risk of inaction on Net Neutrality is greater.

Net Neutrality is crucial for the future of the Internet and the role of the US in a global economy. Besides making any data network (wired and wireless) neutral we should set an ambitious goal for a ubiquitous, affordable and fast broadband network in the US. It should be a national and strategic priority, and I hope the Obama administration and the FCC will take on the challenge and make it happen.

Further reading:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_neutrality
http://www.savetheinternet.com
http://www.handsoff.org
http://www.lessig.org/blog/2008/04/testifying_fcc_stanford.html
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9775
http://www.openinternetcoalition.com/
http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/retrieve.cgi?native_or_pdf=pdf&id_document=6519841106
http://www.ftc.gov/reports/broadband/v070000report.pdf
http://www.google.com/help/netneutrality.html

Update: read the Chairman’s speech.

September 21, 2009 at 7:05 am