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Google TV to launch in Europe next year
EDINBURGH, Scotland |
EDINBURGH, Scotland (Reuters) - Google Inc will launch its TV service in Europe early next year, Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt said on Friday, despite teething problems that had led some observers to question how committed the company would remain to the project.
Google TV, which allows viewers to mix Web and television content on a TV screen via a browser, was launched in the United States in October but received mixed reviews and was swiftly blocked by three of the top U.S. broadcast networks.
Large parts of the television industry, like the news and telecoms industries, view Google with suspicion and accuse it of stealing their advertising revenues without contributing to the costs of making programs.
Schmidt sought to allay the fears of Britain's broadcasting elite in a speech to the Edinburgh television festival, the first time a non-TV executive had been invited to give the keynote MacTaggart lecture at Britain's premier industry event.
"Some in the US feared we aimed to compete with broadcasters or content creators. Actually our intent is the opposite," he told an audience who quickly warmed to his friendly style and liberal compliments to the quality of British television.
"We seek to support the content industry by providing an open platform for the next generation of TV to evolve, the same way Android is an open platform for the next generation of mobile," he said.
"We expect Google TV to launch in Europe early next year, and of course the UK will be among the top priorities."
Google TV has gained little traction so far in the United States, and its set top box provider Logitech International SA slashed prices to $99 in July from an initial price of $299.
Schmidt also included a warning to British television regulators, who he said were far more stringent than their U.S. counterparts and threatened to throttle the development of British television companies in an increasingly global market.
"Stifling the Internet -- whether by filtering or blocking or just plain turning the 'off' switch -- appeals to policy makers the world over," he said. "Instead, policy makers should work with the grain of the Internet rather than against it."
OPPORTUNISTIC
Google has long held ambitions in the television arena, hoping to extend its online advertising business, which made $28 billion for the company last year, to the big screens that still command the lion's share of global advertising budgets.
"If his ambition was to go there and convince the TV people he wasn't a big threat, I don't think he achieved it," said Keith McMahon, an analyst at research firm Telco 2.0/STL Partners.
"The message I got was that TV is such a big market that Google can't ignore it. They're never going to give it up."
So far, Google has had little success breaking into the TV market, despite its ownership of the world's most popular online video site, YouTube.
Last week, however, Google agreed a deal to buy Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc for $12.5 billion, handing it the world's leading set top box business which delivers content for many of the top cable TV companies in the United States.
The headline attraction of the deal was Motorola's huge portfolio of wireless patents but the set top box business could help Google transform its TV project by giving it insights into pay-TV.
Google has not spelled out its plans for the set top box business, and many analysts expect it to divest the unit at the first opportunity, having no experience or previous interest in running a hardware business.
Others believe Google could change tack under CEO Larry Page, Google's co-founder who took back the reins from Schmidt in April and has already started a social network to compete with Facebook while ditching other projects.
"Google describes itself as an opportunistic company. So while it may not have wanted to buy Motorola's operations, it may now assess whether retaining these assets can compensate for the risk of owning them," New York-based Nomura analyst Stuart Jeffrey wrote in a note this week.
Schmidt made no mention of the Motorola acquisition or its implications on Friday, but will hold a question and answer session in Edinburgh on Saturday.
(Additional reporting by Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco; editing by David Cowell, Tim Dobbyn and Andre Grenon)
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First they would have had a huge established online data base in the form of MySql. This could have been developed into a wealth of cloud based apps that could easily be customized by end users and programers alike. The “Apps” would have been endless and they would have quickly distanced Google from Apple and Microsoft by having both portability and the big brother control they so desire. Like Android, they could have left MySql in the public domain for host providers and developers. Data from existing Google Apps like calendar, favorites, contacts, and others could be exported for more advanced use and customization creating a virtual development platform. App Heaven.
Second Google would have acquired Open Office a multi-platform office suite far more compatible with MSOffice than any of the Google offerings. Putting this on the ChormeBook would offer a real option to pads, laptops, and netbooks.
With sun they would have had enough server, switch, hardware and software patents to keep them bullet proof for the next 20 years.
Finally they would have has a wealth of second generation talent that understands the construction details of the roads Google wants to own.
Part of me is glad Google missed this one…
Just a thought Ken Harwood
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