By Ryan Nakashima
Nintendo is switching on a television service that transforms the tablet-like controller of the new Wii U game console into a remote that changes the channel on your TV and puts programs from the Internet just a few finger taps away.
The TVii service will debut in the
U.S. and Canada on Thursday, the company said. That's a delay from
previous plans to have the service available when the game console went
on sale in North America on Nov. 18. The TVii service launched in Japan
on Dec. 8.
The aim of TVii is to bring order to
the hundreds of channels on regular TV and the thousands of shows and
movies available through apps from Netflix Inc., Amazon.com Inc., Hulu
Plus and Google Inc.'s YouTube.
It's the first time a video game console maker has integrated live TV
controls in a device and could be the extra incentive needed for
on-the-fence shoppers ahead of the Christmas holiday.
Nintendo Co.'s Wii U console has a
unique controller — the GamePad — which is covered with joysticks and
buttons and boasts a front-facing camera and 6.2-inch touchscreen. The
GamePad also houses an infrared emitter that talks directly to your TV
or set-top box.
TVii scans what's available and
offers you the option of watching a show, sports event or movie on live
TV or through apps that connect to the Internet. By the end of March,
Nintendo says that it will integrate TVii with TiVo so that it will be
possible to program a TiVo digital video recorder through the game
console as well.
“This is a way to get every member of
the household to pick up the GamePad hopefully every day,” said Reggie
Fils-Aime, president of Nintendo of America. “Hopefully this leads to a
significant change in how consumers view and interact with their TV.”
For years, home entertainment
enthusiasts have had to grapple with a bunch of different controllers to
work their televisions, set-top boxes, DVRs, disc players and game
consoles. TVii has the potential to dispense with some of that hassle.
If you search for The Walking Dead,
for example, TVii will show you the next time it's on AMC and give you
the option of buying previous episodes from Amazon or watching them on
Netflix. If it's on now, you can change the channel from the GamePad.
Users will be able to watch only channels they already get via antenna
or through their TV provider, but search results will include all the
options available, which could entice some people to upgrade their
channel packages. Netflix and Hulu Plus require separate subscriptions
that cost $8 a month each. TVii itself is free.
TVii also has a traditional channel
guide and will recommend shows you might like based on favourite shows,
networks and movies that you enter. Different users can have different
profiles, and parental controls are included.
Nintendo hopes the service boosts
sales of its console. About 425,000 Wii U units were sold in the first
seven days on sale. That's faster than the rollout of Microsoft Corp.'s
Xbox 360 and Sony Corp.'s PlayStation 3 when they debuted in November
2005 and November 2006 respectively, although initial sales are often
constrained by supply, not demand.
Analyst Michael Pachter of Wedbush
Securities said the TVii service puts Nintendo a step ahead of its
competitors, but he expects Microsoft to close the gap next year with a
next-generation Xbox that includes a TV tuner. Microsoft hasn't
announced such a device.
“It gives them a head start. I think
they should be congratulated on making this a truly multimedia device,”
Pachter said. “I don't think that advantage is going to last very long.”
Nintendo has also added social
networking features to its service. A team of curators will watch the
top 100 shows on live TV and post details and a screenshot of important
events, such as “a great shot in a basketball game or an unexpected
twist in Mad Men,” according to Zach Fountain, director of network business for Nintendo of America.
Users can then comment on these
moments and have those posts show up on Nintendo's Miiverse network, as
well as Facebook and Twitter if they choose. Users that express emotions
could wind up with a sad or happy-looking Mii avatar.
Live sporting events such as pro or
college football will also be accompanied by scores and play-by-play
summaries on the GamePad's screen.
One problem with the service could be
the GamePad's battery life. Nintendo says the controller can be used
three to five hours depending on activity and screen brightness before
it needs to be charged. But TV ratings agency The Nielsen Co. says the
average American watches nearly five hours of TV per day. Heavy users
may need to keep the controller plugged in to a wall socket, or buy a
$25 battery pack that its maker, Nyko, promises will double the battery
life.
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