[Home]   [Full version]  

Personal TV Channels: Guiding you through a multi-channel universe

Aug 30 ,Technology



Full size image
Finding your way through the ever-growing amount of TV content can be frustrating, especially when all you want to do is watch your favorite show. Now Philips has found a way to make everyone’s TV experience easier and more enjoyable. With Philips’ new Personal TV Channels technology, you select your favorite TV shows just once and then the system automatically manages the recording of all upcoming episodes. Based on the programs selected, the system (integrated into a set-top box) even suggests other programs that match your interests. Philips’ technology is easy to use and quickly responds to your preferences.

Over the last three decades, the amount of content available to TV viewers has exploded, as media companies offer an increasing number of channels, and even video-on-demand. But quantity does not always increase the quality of watching TV: satisfaction levels have decreased, with viewers complaining that they dislike the ‘Endless zapping’, ‘still missing my favorite show’ and all the ‘irrelevant commercials’. To solve these problems, and provide viewers with a more fulfilling viewing experience, Philips has developed a technology called Personal TV Channels.

Integrated into a regular set-top box, this technology makes it simple to enjoy the wealth of content available on TV, video-on-demand services and Internet today. It automatically learns your preferences and favorite TV programs and uses that to add new, personal channels to your TV. Personal TV Channels shows only the content you’re interested in – it avoids frustrated zapping. And you can enjoy it whenever you want. Because of this technology you will never miss your favorite program anymore. Using Personal TV Channels is as easy as changing channels on a regular TV.

This smart system also ensures that your movie channel always has a collection of great movies you’re likely to enjoy. And the technology uses your preferences to enable targeted advertising. So not only the TV programs but also the commercials are based on your personal interest and profile. This also improves the effectiveness for advertisers.

Personal TV Channels works as follows. Whenever you decide you want to record a program, you can add that program to one of your pre-installed personal channels, or add it to a new personal channel for the type of program you want to watch (e.g., documentary, sitcom, etc.). Each of these channels contains a Program Filter, which filters all incoming programs and selects those that are suitable for any given personal channel. These programs are then stored on the relevant personal channel for you to view whenever you have time.

The technology also includes an inbuilt Program Recommender, which remembers when you add or remove a program from a personal channel. Personal TV Channels then uses this information to decide whether to record the next episode of that particular show, and similar shows that might be of interest to you on that channel. Depending on your future feedback, these shows will either continue to be recorded, or discarded. In fact, your continuing feedback enables the Program Recommender to get increasingly accurate in predicting your viewing preferences. Personal TV Channels technology is smart, but it is still easy to use: you change between your personal channels just as you would on a regular TV, and navigating inside a personal channel is as simple as operating a VHS playback system.

Personal TV Channels technology offers a wealth of benefits to media and television companies. Most importantly, it allows them to offer their viewers a personalized television service, selected from their own program offerings. At the same time, viewers are able to access content that they find relevant and meaningful. As a result, churn rates are reduced, since Personal TV Channels ensures that viewers actually enjoy the package they receive, and won’t switch to another provider. Media companies can leverage the technology to increase the turnover of their Video on Demand services since users are supported in finding their favorite movies. In addition, Personal TV Channels enables the creation of a platform for targeted advertising.

Source: Philips

Related stories:

Make your own microfluidic device with new kit from U-M
A type of device called a "lab-on-a-chip" could bring a new generation of instant home tests for illnesses, food contaminants and toxic gases. But today these portable, efficient tools are often stuck in the lab themselves. Specifically, in the labs of researchers who know how to make them from scratch.
Tiny refrigerator taking shape to cool future computers
Researchers at Purdue University are developing a miniature refrigeration system small enough to fit inside laptops and personal computers, a cooling technology that would boost performance while shrinking the size of computers.
IBM researchers unveil green optical network technology prototype
IBM researchers today unveiled the fastest and most highly integrated optical data bus ever developed. The prototype technology could bring massive amounts of bandwidth in an energy-efficient way to all kinds of machines—from cell phones to supercomputers. This could revolutionize the way we access, use and share information across many different applications.
Jump into the screen with 360-degree immersive video
As you watch a video, have you ever wondered what's happening beyond the camera frame? If you could jump inside the video and look around, you would have a 360-degree view of the world in your TV screen or computer monitor.
NIST Measures Challenges for Wireless in Factories
Factories have much to gain from wireless technology, such as robot control, RFID tag monitoring, and local-area network (LAN) communications. Wireless systems can cost less and offer more flexibility than cabled systems. But factories, such as auto production plants, are challenging environments for wireless systems, as verified by tests conducted recently by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
Nokia N77 multimedia computer starts shipping
Finland is the first to experience optimized mobile TV with the Nokia N77 multimedia computer. Later this month also Vietnam and India will start shipments of the Nokia N77. Consumers will now be able to keep up to date with news and sports and enjoy their favorite TV shows live on the move. The affordable Nokia N77 comes in a stylish and pocketable form factor with complete Nokia Nseries functionalities.
New Laptop Data Protection Comes in a USB Flash Card
An analyst says that the low price point and ease of use could compel consumers, small and midsize businesses, and remote offices to buy a new package that includes IBM security software.
New program aims to overhaul the Internet
The Internet is enough of a marvel that most people would never ask, ''Is this really how we would build it if we could design it all today?'' But asking that very question is the job of a broad-based team of Stanford researchers. Taking a nothing-is-sacred approach to better meet human communications needs, this month they are launching a new program called the Clean Slate Design for the Internet. They will present their ideas March 21 during a daylong workshop at the annual meeting of the Stanford Computer Forum.

News discussion:

It"s about time... in Technology news

[Home]   [Full version]