Spb TV
Steve Litchfield looks at the latest mobile TV sensation - is it all it's cracked up to be? What's missing?
We've all been there. Moving, at some point in our lives, from an old analogue TV system with perhaps four channels to a fancy new digital one with forty channels, the initial awe is striking. 40 channels?! And so we sit down to scan through them and after an hour or two the novelty wears off and you realise that rather than 4 channels of (partly) rubbish, you've now got 40 channels of (mostly) rubbish. Spb TV brings much the same experience to your phone, except that the channel number is raised again, to a massive 100 or so. That's a lot of potential viewing. A big disclaimer is needed here, in that for most countries round the world you'll not find your own national TV stations represented in Spb TV's 100. What Spb have effectively done is take all the TV stations around the world that publish their own live public video feeds on the Internet or via 'premium' mobile Internet feeds and give you a sanitised, integrated, easy to use interface for watching it all. The fact that they've done this reasonably well shouldn't obscure the fact that a lot of the TV footage itself is going to be irrelevant, rubbish, or both. However, amidst 100 channels, there's bound to be something of interest to everyone. There are channels for news, sport, culture, music, kids, classic b/w movies, cartoons, Christian, weather, with at least a third of the channels in non-English languages. That's a pretty broad spectrum. Spb TV's interface makes it all manageable though, with a 'Channels' listing letting you toggle off and on particular channels that you don't or do want to see in the main carousel. But let's back up a step. Spb TV is a purely Internet-hosted TV system, in which Spb's servers send your specific phone the video packets needed. It'll run on most S60 devices - I was testing it on a Nokia N95 and the 5800 and the video stream itself seems to be QVGA or similar, with the frame rate varying between a couple of frames per second and about 10, depending on the content on screen and the speed of my connection. The quality was certainly 'good enough' (after all, this is TV on your phone - which is pretty cool), though some channels showed up to a second of audio lag, with the sound being very obviously 'out' when watching a person speaking (i.e. lip sync). As I browsed through the channel carousel, I was impressed by the way the thumbnail graphics for each are compiled on the fly from the live stream for each, i.e. you get a frame from the current programme that's 'on'. Select a thumbnail and bang, you're watching the channel, with a typical buffering delay of only a second or so, very impressive in comparison to other streaming TV/video solutions. Select the full-screen video again and there's the chance to browse other channels' thumbnails ('picture in picture') while carrying on watching (and listening to) the original TV stream. Other on-screen controls let you adjust brightness and volume. It's all rather slick, though I was disappointed by the way the audio is cut when you switch away to another application - it means a break in your intake of a programme if you need to check something in Messaging or Calendar, for example. Another annoyance was the amateurish 'first time' screen, presumably popped up while Spv TV is processing the channel data it grabs when you first start it: the screen simply says 'Please wait 1-2 min'. Umm..... what??! An explanation and a progress bar wouldn't have been too much to expect here, surely? Once this is past, it's possible to enter a registration code for the full product and then you're off and running. There's a free version of Spb TV, by the way, effectively a trial version, with half a dozen channels - giving you a good idea of the interface and what to expect from the full set. I was impressed overall by the concept, by the interface and by some of the content (NASA TV stands out for sheer 'awe' value, but there are other niche stations that you'll like, especially if you live outside the USA and always wondered what sort of things were on the air). Downsides are the slight lip sync issues and the (inevitable) hit and miss factor of the content itself. Should you have to pay for streamed TV in this day and age? I think it's fair, considering the trouble Spb TV have gone to, to amalgamate all these video feeds and to arrange permissions and (in some cases) license fees. Plus the overhead in maintaining their own servers to stream all of the video out - that can't be cheap. Another hit for Spb Software, which is steadily making a serious impact on the S60 software world. And just in time for Ovi Store too - I'm guessing the timescales for this were very much on Spb's mind! Steve Litchfield, All About Symbian, 20 May 2009
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Screengrab from a music channel and from NASA TV
Browsing through the full channel list and picking the ones I want to appear on the carousel
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Published by Steve Litchfield at 10:03 UTC, May 20th 2009
Categories: Applications
Platforms: S60 3rd Edition, S60 5th Edition
News Discussion
Boo - Getting this error message "Menu: Feature not supported"
Exciting stuff though ..
The widget has a simple javascript file that can easily be edited to remove the block on 3G connectivity and even to add phones that it doesn't 'officially ' support ( my e90 for example )
its a utter godsend when shopping for stuff with a 4 year old who is happy to sit watching Cbeebies whilst me/SWMBO talk to the sales people.
Again, don't even think about it without a decent data package though!!!!!!
Its ok through wifi .. but just ok
.. over 3G it would be less than ok.
.. its an alternative to the carrier pay-for-TV options
.. if you're paying for bandwidth over 3G its expensive!
for a one off $14.95 (assumes upgrades are free) I don't think I'll bother.
Shame! Neither BBC iplayer nor Spv TV. It's a nice phone for watching videos...
Payd 14.95$ and cannot change connection to Wi-Fi.
I dont want to pay 3G data!
How can i switch to wi-fi?
Thx
The .sis file goes fine on E90 , including choice of access point : Wifi or 3G , when Web is set to : " Always ask "
:) Regards jApi NL
Hard to say. I couldn't tell from the trial, so I went ahead and bought it. I received a 20% discount because I had already purchased Spb Puzzle, and they offer a 30 day money back guarantee. I haven't had time yet to go through everything.
The implementation is way ahead of the content. It is not perfect, but this is very nearly THE way to execute TV on a handheld and for that alone they can have my $11 USD. The content is mostly stuff that is freely available, in many languages. There are certainly some interesting distractions here, but I'd love to see them pick up things like BBC. This is not Hulu, but it certainly could be. If they could get better content, I would even be willing to go to a subscription model.
For the small investment it's worth it as a "because I can" trick for your phone and worth supporting in hopes of seeing better content choices down the road.
<snip>
its a utter godsend when shopping for stuff with a 4 year old who is happy to sit watching Cbeebies whilst me/SWMBO talk to the sales people.
[/quote]
I don't see any BBC channels. I'm in UK but at work atm; maybe something to do with the firewall I'm behind...?
No, they actually say in their manual:
[quote]The trial version (Lite) of Spb TV has a restricted number of channels and features that are available in the registered version (full). You can use the trial version only to check how Spb TV works. In order to watch all public channels, use the Calendar reminder feature, and manage the channels list, you need to purchase the license. [/quote]
You really can't tell much from the trial. They do have a 30 day satisfaction guarantee.
[quote=neilhoskins;420044]I don't see any BBC channels. I'm in UK but at work atm; maybe something to do with the firewall I'm behind...?[/quote]
I think unregistered eas referring to iplayer, not this program. See his post title.
Many thanks for the info, it works great on the E90, worth the £11 ish just to be able to watch Sky News etc on the fly.
Nick
I think unregistered eas referring to iplayer, not this program. See his post title.[/quote]
So if I pay my $15, do I get BBC, or just the channels I can see dimmed-out in the trial version?
No BBC.
No point for me, then. SkyNews is available in the N95's VideoCentre (as is Sky 7 Days and Reuters), Nasa TV is available just as a simple RealPlayer stream, and France24 is available live via an excellent standalone client (or highlights via VideoCentre). I'm not really interested in any of the others.
I'd hate to go off topic but can you point me in the direction of the Nasa TV stream?
On S60 FP1 devices, you can put rtsp://a1747.l1856745839.c18567.g.lr.akamaistream.net/live/D/1747/18567/v0001/reflector:45839 directly into Gallery as a "streaming link". (I don't suppose I keyed that link in manually. I think I just browsed to the website, played the live stream, then saved it.) The NASA stream seems to work from behind my basic firewall at home, but not at work. It [I]didn't[/I] work at home with my previous router/firewall unless I faffed about with the settings making holes in it. Don't forget that you need to set your RealPlayer access point in the Applications Settings if you have a pre-FP2 device.
That NASA stream is quite brilliant when there's something going on up there. The highlight was sitting in bed watching them working on the Jules Verne ATV live as it was happening.
There's also nothing to stop you putting the BBC live stream urls directly in as "streaming links". If you can get the urls from somebody, you can put them directly in there, and bypass the nanny-BBC telling you that your device isn't suitable. I've got BBC1 TV and most of the radio stations if you're interested.
AFAIK, Video Centre is just an aggregator that's optimised for video, rather than audio podcasts. I don't know about other devices, but on my N95-1 I prefer to use it for video podcasts because it's a "better user experience" as Rafe always puts it. So, no, you can't use it for live TV. Also, in fairly typical Nokia fashion, they haven't really supported it and the number of services in "add new services" hasn't really increased since day 1.
Having said that, there are a few good feeds that work well. I currently have:
[url]http://skyscape.sky.com/synewsradio/NEWS/sevendays1.xml[/url] (Sky 7 Days)
[url]http://skyscape.sky.com/synewsradio/NEWS/dailyheads.xml[/url] (Sky News Headlines)
[url]http://feeds.reuters.com/reuters/video/andfinally/rss/m4v/[/url] (Reuters "and finally")
[url]http://www.podshow.com/feeds/gbtv-n95.xml[/url] (Geek Brief - US-centric but the presenter's hot)
[url]http://feedproxy.google.com/video/playlist[/url] (Al Jazeera Playlist if you're interested in world music)
That NASA stream is quite brilliant when there's something going on up there. The highlight was sitting in bed watching them working on the Jules Verne ATV live as it was happening.
There's also nothing to stop you putting the BBC live stream urls directly in as "streaming links". If you can get the urls from somebody, you can put them directly in there, and bypass the nanny-BBC telling you that your device isn't suitable. I've got BBC1 TV and most of the radio stations if you're interested.[/quote]
That's great! Thanks.
Download here:
[url]http://www.softspb.com/downloads/SpbTV/Symbian/179/spbtv_s60_3_1_v_1_0_179.sis[/url]
Thanks!
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