When it comes to building connected-TV apps, most video providers are
stuck trying to decide which devices to build for: After all, it seems
like every consumer electronics manufacturer has its own software
development kit (SDK) to do so. There are more than a dozen different
frameworks for creating applications that run on different connected
TVs, Blu-ray players, game consoles, streaming set-top boxes, tablets,
mobile handsets and the like, which is more than most publishers can
reasonably be expected to develop for.
Enter SyncTV, which aims to
deliver third-party video applications for multiple platforms without
going through the process of reinventing the wheel each time a publisher
wants to reach a new device. The company delivers video experiences to
the PC and Mac, as well as mobile frameworks like Android and iOS. But
the real key is in reaching TV screens, with apps built for connected
TVs and Blu-ray players.
SyncTV builds apps for connected TVs and other devices from a wide
range of major CE manufacturers, such as Sony, Samsung, LG, Vizio,
Philips and Panasonic. Its apps are also available on Roku and Boxee Box
streaming devices, and it’s also working on applications for the
upcoming launch of Microsoft’s new Xbox Live user interface.
Being available on such a wide range of devices is becoming
increasingly important for video publishers. When you think about
Netflix, for instance, one of that company’s main advantages over
competitors has been its relative ubiquity on connected devices.
However, that ubiquity comes with a price: Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has
admitted to paying an “innovation tax” for being in all of those
places. But not everyone has the resources that Netflix does, which are
necessary to build all those apps.
With SyncTV, however, video publishers don’t necessarily need to
create apps for every device. Because it’s already built the user
interface and has the back end necessary for ingest, encoding, digital
rights management, ad insertion, reporting and billing, it can simplify
the process of rolling out to new devices. It can also reuse a lot of
the same code and infrastructure.
For video publishers, that reduces a ton of complexity associated
with being everywhere that consumers want them to be. There are already a
number of publishers taking advantage of that offer: SyncTV’s named
clients include NBC Universal in the UK, French broadcaster M6,
U.S.-based VOD provider Avail-TVN, German TV station Wider.TV and South
Asian content provider Bollywood Nirvana.
SyncTV is being spun out of DRM provider Intertrust, and it is going
independent. The company, which currently has more than 30 employees, is
based in Sunnyvale, Calif., and also has offices in France, Spain, the
UK, the Netherlands, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and China.
Source is
http://gigaom.com/video/synctv/
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