Search Results for "september 28"

About DisplayPort

KALM-150x150"

Tom dives into the history of DisplayPort and explains why DisplayPort isn’t just HDMI with a new-fangled connector.

Featuring Tom Merritt.

Episodes mentioned:

About USB 4

About Variable Refresh Rate

About HDMI 2.1

MP3

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

Thanks to Kevin MacLeod of Incompetech.com for the theme music.

Thanks to Garrett Weinzierl for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Send us email to [email protected]

Episode transcript:

A buddy of mine gave me a monitor and it uses DisplayPort? What the heck is that?

I looked it up and the connector looks like Thunderbolt AND USB-C. What the heck is up with that?

And what is it good for anyway? Why isn’t it just HDMI?

Confused? Don’t be. Let’s help you Know a Little More about DisplayPort.

DisplayPort is one of many different interfaces that turn bits of data into pictures on a monitor for you. It’s the one that has that rectangular connector with a funny angle on one corner.
DisplayPort is developed by the Video Electronics Standards Association or VESA. VESA is a standards incorporation created by NEC Home Electronics in July 1989 as a successor to the VGA standards. The organization now made up of about 300 companies and is based in San Jose, California.
OK back to DisplayPort.
DisplayPort is a high-quality display tech. It has something called Dual mode that can output either DisplayPort, Single-link DVI or HDMI from the same port. I know. That’s more than two. But it’s still called dual mode. Deal with it.
Because of dual mode, DisplayPort is compatible with HDMI and single-link DVI with passive adapters. Just dongles. If you want more, like dual-link DVI, you’ll need a powered active adapter. But I know you only care about HDMI. You can use a passive adapter to use a DisplayPort jack with an HDMI display. But you can’t connect DisplayPort to an HDMI source. Well, technically, it can be done but it’s not practical. So if your laptop has a DisplayPort jack and your monitor is HDMI you can get a dongle. If your laptop has an HDMI port and your monitor only has DisplayPort, that’s probably not going to work.
Now I know that most of you identify a display connection by the connector. The shape of the plug.
DisplayPort supports two types of connectors. A full-size connector, the previously mentioned one with the angled corner. That one is called Standard DisplayPort. It sometimes comes with a latching mechanism.
The second type is a mini display port connector, which was developed by Apple and logically called Mini DisplayPort. Thunderbolt 1 and 2 used the Mini DisplayPort connector shape before Thunderbolt switched to USB-C’s shape for Thunderbolt 3.
There are a few other types of DisplayPort connections you may encounter.
An embedded DisplayPort connection or eDP is used in some laptops to connect the motherboard to the screen. That all happens inside your laptop so you’ll probably only run into it during repairs. And inside TVs there is a version called Internal Display Port or IDP. Again. All on the inside.
One you’re much more likely to come across is DisplayPort’s Alt Mode on USB-4. This lets DisplayPort signals come out of a USB-C port. You can do this because some of the pins on the USB-C connector are reserved for other protocols. Like DisplayPort. DisplayPort is part of the USB4 standard. (See our episode on USB4!) So you can connect a laptop with a USB-C port to a DisplayPort monitor! Yay!
So what does the DisplayPort protocol itself do?
DisplayPort has 4 lanes of data and can transmit video and audio either simultaneously or one without the other. It can also carry USB 2.0 data. It supports up to 32 channels of 16 or 24-bit audio. Because it has independent data streams it can support multiple monitors– if it has enough bandwidth for the resolution.
A note about bandwidth numbers. You’re going to hear two kinds of bandwidth specs in this episode. The DisplayPort spec notes both. Maximum bandwidth is how much the standard is capable of. Effective bandwidth is how much you get after accounting for the overhead of encoding.
VESA approved DisplayPort version 1.0 on May 3 2006. It allowed a maximum bandwidth of up to 10.8 gigabits per second. Version 1.1 added support for HDCP and fiber optics, meaning cables could be longer.
In January 2010, Version 1.2 doubled the maximum bandwidth to 21.6 Gbps. It added Multi-stream Transport, or MST so you can daisy-chain multiple monitors on one port. It officially included Apple’s Mini Display Port as well. That’s the one that shared a connector shape with Thunderbolt before Thunderbolt changed its connector shape to be the same as USB-C. Sigh.
In January 2013, version 1.3 added optional support for adaptive sync like AMD’s FreeSync. We covered that a little in the episode on Variable Refresh Rate.
On September 15 2014 brought out DisplayPort 1.3 with a maximum bandwidth of 32.4 gigabits per second with HBR3 mode that featured 8.1 Gb/s per lane. The effective bandwidth was 25.92 Gb/s. That gave enough overhead to support 4K at 120 Hertz, two 4K monitors at 60 Hertz, or even 8K at 30 Hertz. It also added support for HDMI 2.0 (see our episode on that as well) and HDCP 2.2 copy protection.
In March 2016, Version 1.4 didn’t increase bandwidth, but it did add support for HDR10 metadata, Forward Error Correction and a big one, Display Stream Compression aka DSC. DSC helps squeeze more bandwidth out of video signals. It really accounts for a lot of what DisplayPort can do now. But it does modify the signal a bit. They call it a “light compression.” In practice it affects video quality more than latency since it encodes and decodes in real time, but it doesn’t affect either very much. Version 1.4 also increased the maximum in-line audio channels to 32.
Finally, DisplayPort 2.0 came along June 26 2019. It has a maximum bandwidth of 80 Gbps. and supports 8K at 60 Hertz without compression. With DSC it can go all the way up to 16K at 60Hertz or two 8K displays at 120 Hertz and even three 10K displays at 60 Hertz. Oh, I know. None of you have 8K monitors. Fine. For someone who would like a more practical example, try two 4K monitors at 144 Hertz with no compression or three 4K at 90 Hertz.
If you’re using USB-C to connect to a display-port monitor, Display Port Alt Mode 2.0 can support one 8K monitor at 30 Hertz with no compression or 2 4K monitors at 120 Hertz and 3 4K monitors at 144 Hertz with compression.
Another thing it can do with all that adaptability is support VR and AR headsets at high resolution since headsets have one screen for each eye.
OK. Now you know what the DisplayPort can do, let’s talk cables!
There are three certifications for DisplayPort cables and 5 names for the speed of the cable. The speeds I’ll give here are the effective speeds, aka the speeds you get after accounting for overhead. When shopping you may see either the speed name or the certification type, so I’ll give you both.
RBR (both the name for the certifications and the speed) supports version 1.0 up to 6.48 Gb/s. You probably won’t see this one anymore.
Standard certification supports version 1.2. That covers the HBR and HBR 2 speeds of 10.8 Gbps and 17.28 Gbps.
And DP8K certification supports versions 1.3, 1.4 and 2 and the HBR3 and UHBR speeds of 25.92 Gbps and 77.36 Gbps.
Cables can run from from 2 meters to 15 meters long. Though if you’re daisy-chaining that will reduce the maximum length it works at.
If you don’t know what version your device supports… good luck? One annoying thing about DisplayPort is you usually have to look at spec sheets to tell the version. There’s no standard way of identifying it on ports or cables.
And another annoying thing is Deep Sleep. This is an energy-saving mode on some DisplayPort monitors that doesn’t cut power entirely when they go to sleep in order to wake faster. Great when it works. If you’re having trouble getting your DisplayPort monitor to wake from sleep, disabling deep sleep may help.
So who is DisplayPort for? If you’re not trying to get the cheapest option and you don’t need the widespread compatibility of an HDMI, DisplayPort will give you higher refresh rates and more options to configure adaptive refresh rates.
In other words, I hope you know a little more about DisplayPort.

About USB4

KALM-150x150"

Tom shares the history of the USB standard and the real benefits and limitations of USB4.

Featuring Tom Merritt.

MP3

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

Thanks to Kevin MacLeod of Incompetech.com for the theme music.

Thanks to Garrett Weinzierl for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Send us email to [email protected]

Episode Script
I hear I can now get stuff with USB4. What the heck does that get me?
USB has been a mess and confusing and I don’t know if I want another number?
Also it relates to Thunderbolt 4 somehow?
Are you confused?
Don’t be.
Let’s help you Know a Little more about USB4
USB stands for the Universal Serial Bus, a standard released first in 1996 to provide an industry standard for connecting peripherals and computers.
It is maintained by the USB Implementers Forum or USB-IF, a non-profit group founded in 1995 by Compaq, Digital, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, NEC and Nortel – it’s expanded its membership since of course.
Friends, before USB, each peripheral had its own connector and you couldn’t use the same wire or port for the other. Well there were a few exceptions but for the most part, a monitor had a VGA connector, a printer used a serial Port, a mouse used a PS/2 port and examples like that were many.
People at the founding companies of the USB-IF got together in 1994 to fix that mess and make it easier to plug things into computers and make it cheaper to make the computers because you didn’t need a separate port for every single peripheral someone might want to connect.
A team at Intel led by Ajay Bhatt produced the first integrated circuits to support USB in 1995. And Joseph C Decuir credited his work on the Atari SIO 8-bit communication implementation as the basis of the standard.
The USB 1.0 specification was officially released in 1996 and supported 1.5 megabit/second low speed and 12 megabit per second full speed data transfers. The high speeds were meant for printers and floppy drives, the lower speeds for cheaper peripherals with unshielded cables like joysticks and your mouse.
Microsoft began supporting USB in Windows 95 OSR 2.1 in August 1997. Apple’s iMac was the first mainstream product to support it and popularize it starting in August 1998.
It took off from there.
USB 2.0 arrived in April 2000 adding a higher signaling rate of 480 megabits per second and adding the Mini and Micro connectors.
USB 3 came along in November 2008 bringing superspeed capability at 5 gigabits per second and the blue ports to designate them. USB 3.1 followed in December 2014 doubling the speed to 10 gigabits per second called SuperSpeed Plus. And USB 3.2 arrived in September 2017 allowing for multi-lane operation to get data rates of 20 gigabits per second.
That brings us to the present. USB4 was released as a spec on August 29, 2019. And when you’re searching for info remember that unlike previous specs the USB-IF spells USB4 without a space between the B and the 4. All one term USB4.
While USB 3.2 was designed for use over USB-C cables – you know the small reversible ones–, USB4 is the first spec to require it. USB4 does not run over previous USB ports or connector types without an adapter.
ALSO USB 4 incorporates Intel’s Thunderbolt 3 spec. A USB4 host or peripheral device does not have to support Thunderbolt 3 but it can. The spec does require USB4 docks to support Thunderbolt 3 and hubs to support Thunderbolt 3 on the downward-facing ports – aka the one that peripherals plug into.
USB4 is mostly an attempt to simplify USB. The spec itself can be said to just tunnel other specs, like Thunderbolt, DisplayPort, USB 3.2, USB 2.0 and PCIe. It is therefore backwards compatible with all of those.
Also a USB4 connection requires USB Power delivery of at least 7.5 Watts per port up to 100 watts. So no more trying to guess if a USB port provides power or not by looking for the little lightning logo. It does. And it will make sure it only sends as much power as your device can handle.
The first products supporting USB4 arrived near the end of 2020 and the connector became common in new products released in 2021.
So what do you get if you get USB4?
USB 4 can share a single link with multiple end device types. So you can daisy chain. AND you get speed. USB4 devices must support 20 Gigabit per second data and can support up to 40 gbps data. And with video you can get an even faster effective rate. We’ll talk about that in a minute.
So while USB4 does simplify things quite a bit over previous USB versions you still have to check a device to know whether you’ll get 20 or 40 gbps. To help with that, packaging will carry a USB20 or USB40 logo to help you tell the difference. Ports and cables get a more stylized logo that just says 20 or 40 with the little USB trident symbol.
Oh and none of the logos say USB4, just the bandwidth amount. So if you see USB40 you’re getting USB4 with 40 gbps capability.
But that’s it. Even USB 3.2 had lower-speed variants. USB4 has just the two. 20 and 40.
The other thing that you’ll need to check for is that previously-mentioned Thunderbolt compatibility.
Intel is no longer charging for implementation of Thunderbolt 3. And Thunderbolt 3 uses the USB-C connector just like USB4. That means a new computer with a USB4 port could offer compatibility with your existing Thunderbolt 3 devices. Could but not must. The spec makes it optional. Most devices seem to be implementing it because why not, but you will want to make sure it’s there if it’s important to you.
So how does Thunderbolt 4 fit in? Well some are looking at it is that Thunderbolt 4 gives you USB4 at its highest capacity with all its options. We have a whole separate episode on Thunderbolt 4 if you want all those details.
As I mentioned a minute ago, there’s also a situation where USB4 can handle more than 40gbps. That’s because it can also support DisplayPort Alt Mode 2.0 for high resolution displays. If that DisplayPort spec is implemented in a USB4 device it can transmit video data– just video data– at 80gbps meaning you can power multiple DisplayPort 2.0 displays at 8K and 60Hz refresh rate or one 16K monitor at 60 Hertz. And yes, a bunch of 4K monitors if you have that many. It achieves this by using all the lanes to send video data and leaving none to receive. So to get that speed you won’t share the connection with anything else but monitors.
Also if you’re not using every lane for display purposes, USB4 is smarter than USB 3.2 in how it allocates bandwidth. You could do that on previous USB versions but the lane would be split 50-50.
USB4 can divide up its capability dynamically. If you have a USB4 device that can support 40gbps, Your 4K monitor could be given 12 Gbps and your external hard drive would use the remaining 28 Mbps all on the same connection.
Oh and what about cables. Well good news your old cables will work. And other news they won’t work faster than they used to. If you have a 5gbps cable that’s all you’ll get out of it.
Finally this is it for USB4. No 4.1 etc. The next version of USB is intended to be called USB5. Simple.
Right?
I hope this helps you cut through the confusion. Thankfully the USB-IF has helped us do that. Thanks USB-IF!
In other words I hope now you know a little more about USB4.

Week in Review for the Week of 07/22/19 – DTH

DTH_CoverArt_1500x1500The US FTC reaches settlements with Facebook and Equifax, the US FCC approves the Sprint – T-Mobile merger, and the Galaxy Fold goes back on sale this September.

MP3


Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the theme music.

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Send us email to [email protected]

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

US DOJ Launches Antitrust Review of Online Platforms – DTH

DTH_CoverArt_1500x1500The US Department of Justice’s Antitrust division launches an investigation into online platform, Samsung announces the Galaxy Fold will go on sale in September, and an Anti-Defamation League report finds 74% of adults experience harassment while gaming online.

MP3


Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the theme music.

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Send us email to [email protected]

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

DTNS 3378 – Between a Rock and Hardware

It’s our end of September round table show! We talk to Ryan Shrout of PCPer.com and Patrick Norton of TekThing and AVExcel about the future of DIY PC building and trends in PC hardware!

Starring Tom Merritt, Sarah Lane, Len Peralta, Roger Chang, Ryan Shrout and Patrick Norton.

MP3 Download

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

Subscribe through Apple Podcasts.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to Anthony Lemos of Ritual Misery for the expanded show notes!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

Cordkillers 229 – So Darn Comfortable Con

Hot new SDCC trailers, Shonda Rhimes on Netflix, and broadcasting alerts on Spotify? All this and more on Cordkillers! 

Download audio

Download video

CordKillers: Ep. 229 – So Darn Comfortable Con
Recorded: July 23 2018
Guest: None

Intro Video

Primary Target

How to Watch

  • DC’s streaming service will be a one-stop shop for its TV shows, movies, and comics
    – DC announced at San Diego Comic-Con, DC that its streaming service DC Universe will launch this fall as a hub for all things DC, with content, comics, an encyclopedia, and a social platform for fans. DC Universe will cost $7.99 a month or $74.99 for an annual subscription. Subscribers who preorder will get an additional three months for free. DC will bring five original shows to the platform in conjunction with Warner Brothers, in addition to existing live-action and animated works.

What to Watch

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer Is Getting Rebooted, With an Emphasis on Diversity
    – Joss Whedon to executive producer a reboot of Buffy, The Vampire Slayer with a new young diverse cast.
    Monica Owusu-Breen, whose previous writing credits include Alias, Charmed, and Agents of SHIELD will write.
  • Netflix and Shonda Rhimes reveal eight exclusive series in the works
    – Netflix announced 8 shows in development with Shonda Rhimes.
    – Alleged con artist Anna Delvey
    – Adaptation of the 2010 book The Warmth of Other Suns detailing the flight of African-Americans north from 1916-1970
    – Adaptation of Kleiner Perkins’ Ellen Pao’s memoir Reset: My Fight for Inclusion and Lasting Change
    – Based on Julia Quinn’s Regency England feminist romance series.
    – Pick & Sepulveda set in Mexican California in the 1840as.
    – Adaptation of The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House.
    – Sunshine Scouts – half hour comedy series about teenage girls at a sleepaway camp who survive the apocalypse.
    – Hot Chocolate Nutcracker documentary of Debbie Allen Dance Academy’s award-winning reimagining of the classic ballet.
  • Netflix announces its first Mark Millar titles
    – Netflix announced the first titles from Millarworld:
    Jupiter’s Legacy:
    An original series about Golden Age superheroes having kids…and those kids becoming angsty millennials.
    Empress:
    An original film about a space Empress on the run.
    Huck:
    This movie wonders if the greatest super power is just all the friends we made along the way.
    Sharkey:
    Adapted from an upcoming comic, a film about a bounty hunter. In space. Named Sharkey.
    American Jesus:
    A comic-turned-Spanish-language TV show about a boy who may or may not be the second coming of Jesus.
  • Amazon Orders Sci-Fi Series ‘Tales From the Loop’
    – Amazon has given a series order to “Tales From the Loop,” a science fiction drama from “Legion” writer Nathaniel Halpern, based on the art of Simon Stålenhag, whose paintings blend elements of futuristic science fiction with images of rural life in the Sweden.
  • Hulu’s Mars drama ‘The First’ debuts September 14th
    – Hulu’s “The First” starring Natascha McElhone and Sean Penn and developed by Beau Willimon, premiers September 14. It follows the first human Mars mission.
  • The Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Comic-Con Footage Was Absolutely Amazing
    – Sony showed but didn’t release a trailer for Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse which hits theaters December 18. (Features Miles Morales, Gwent Stacy, Peter Parker AND more sipdeys from other universes like Spider-Ham (voiced by John Mulaney), Peni Parker (Kimiko Glenn), and Spider-Man Noir)

What We’re Watching

Front Lines

  • Disney fires ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ director James Gunn over ‘indefensible’ old tweets
    – Disney cut ties with James Gunn and he will not be directing Guardians of the Galaxy 3. A series of old tweets from Gunn referencing pedophilia and rape resurfaced online this week. Others tweets, which have since been deleted, included satire about 9/11, AIDS and the Holocaust. Thursday Gunn wrote, “Many people who have followed my career know when I started, I viewed myself as a provocateur, making movies and telling jokes that were outrageous and taboo. As I have discussed publicly many times, as I’ve developed as a person, so has my work and my humor.”
  • Senate wants emergency alerts to go out through Netflix, Spotify, etc
    – Senators in Hawaii and South Dakota introduced a bill (the “Reliable Emergency Alert Distribution Improvement,” or READI, act) that would “explore” broadcasting alerts to “online streaming services, such as Netflix and Spotify.”
  • Survey: 5.4 Million Americans Will Cut The Cable TV Cord In 2018
    – Management Consulting firm cg42 is the latest to put put a study that says cord-cutting is on the rise. cg42 projects 5.4 million more people will cut the cord in 2018 in the US for a total of 18.8 million cord-cutters. The study surveyed customers and cites frustrations with lack of reasonable rates, getting nickled and dimed with fees and new customers getting better deals than existing ones.
  • Comcast concedes to Disney in bidding war for Fox assets
    – Comcast withdrew its offer to purchase most of 21st Century Fox, leaving Disney in position to acquire everything except the broadcasting network, Fox News, Fox Businss, FS1, FS2 and the Big Ten Network which will be spun off into their own company. Disney also previously agreed with regulators to sell off the Fox Sports Regional Networks it will acquire as part of the deal. Meanwhile Comcast will focus on acquiring Sky which is 39% owned by Fox.
  • Netflix redesigns its TV interface with new navigation, full-screen trailers
    – Netflix is rolling out a redesign to its TV-based apps over the next few months. A ribbon menu on the left side will now contain Search, My List, and separate sections for Movies and Series as well as a section called New.
  • Walmart is reportedly building a video streaming service to take on Netflix
    – Sources tell The Information that Walmart is considering offering a streaming video service for $8 a month matching Netflix’s cheapest plan and less than Prime Video’s standalone amount. Walmart currently offers free streaming video with ads through it’s Vudu service.

Dispatches from the Front
Hola gents (and lady guest?),
I’d like to thank you guys for a number of show alerts, mostly courtesy of Bryce. Not everything in his wheelhouse is my flavor, but he seems to find serials early that we haven’t seen and enjoy.
If you guys haven’t talked about Letterkenny yet, you should go watch it. The first two short seasons are available on Hulu. It’s Canadian dry humor full of puns and stereotype characters. It doesn’t waste time with backstory we don’t care about and just rapid-fires the funny.
Give it a shot and see what you think.
Keep cutting them cords, fellas,
Dan and Emily

 

 

 

Hello to all – one thing I’ve been thinking a lot is a way to watch shows without having to have a month to month membership with the different services considering that most services allow you to watch their whole catalog. For example I would pay Netflix in Jan and catch up on all the shows during that month, then cancel it. Feb I pay for Hulu and watch the first two seasons of Handsmaid, catcha few othe shows them cancel it. HBO on March, cbs all access in april, etc.
Or what about an AI like you guys tak about that just gives you the algorithm (ala traveling salesman) that computes the best course to take to hit the most shows you want to watch while paying the least per month.

Love to hear your thoughts.

Arturo

 

 

 

Hey Tom, Brian, and guest,

It seems like everyone compares Netflix and HBO to each other, but I don’t think that’s the right approach anymore. It seems that Netflix no longer wants to be HBO; they want to be your entire cable package. They now have original programming that target so many niches they cover most of the major basic cable channels. Because of this, I don’t think Netflix cares about people criticizing their garbage programming – it’s essentially just a channel you’d never tune in to!

Keep killing those cords,
Andy

 

 

 

 

About the listener who wrote in last week about wanting to have in-progress, “themed streams” – I think he is on to something. For horror fans, the streaming service Shudder broadcasts a constant stream of its content on rotation dubbed “Shudder TV“. In fact, you don’t even have to be a subscriber to access it. If you do subscribe however, you can switch between several sub-genre “channels” of Shudder’s content. Because it comes up as soon as you start the app, I’ve found myself getting interested in movies that I haven’t seen which I may not have otherwise chosen. I can always pull up the on-demand version in the app to get the beginning later. Its an easy way to discover new content without searching through titles, summaries and trailers.

Love the show – keep up the great work.
Tim

 

 

 

What I think Netflix (and perhaps other streaming services) needs is an “I feel lucky” button that will just “pick something” that its algorithm “knows” you’ll like based on your watching history, etc. Don’t like what it picks? Hit next and it could pick something else for you.

Or at least that what *I* would want! I’m not keen on dropping in, in the middle of a movie, TV show, etc. That’s one reason I watch everything via streaming, DVR’d, etc.

Later!
Michael

 

 

 

I subscribe to some movie trailer channels on YouTube. I frequently see movies I would LIKE to watch later, but I am not aware of a service that’ll let me “tag” movies that haven’t even hit theaters yet that I’d like to see whenever they’re available (especially on streaming). Do you know of such a service?

Thanks!
Michael
 

Links

2018 Summer Movie Draft
patreon.com/cordkillers

Cordkillers 196 – You Might Be Part of the 7% (w/ Kristi Kates)

A streaming service for the sports apathetic, why people watch Netflix in the bathrooms, and Twitter tries to win the 24 hour news game. With special guest Kristi Kates.

Download audio

Download video

CordKillers: Ep. 196 – You Might Be Part of the 7%
Recorded: November 20 2017
Guest: Kristi Kates

Intro Video

Primary Target

  • Philo non-sports Pay TV service
    – Philo launched this week
    – Streaming service from A&E, Scripps, Discovery, AMC and Viacom
    – Base for $16 a month, Extras for $20 a month
    – Web, Roku, iOS

How to Watch

  • People watch Netflix at work and in public bathrooms 
    – Netflix commissioned survey
    – 37,000 adults between late August and early September
    – 67% of people watch TV and movie in public
    – planes, buses, commuting most popular
    – 26% said binged shows at work.
    – 7% worldwide admitted watching TV and movies in public restrooms
    – Mobile makes up 10% of its viewing though half of users stream from phone during a month

What to Watch

What We’re Watching

Front Lines

 

Dispatches from the Front

 

I would like to points out that when you use MoviePass to artifically inflate points that it’s the movie theater that loses out because you are getting stuff for free

John

 

Tom and Brian,

Just finished listening to Episode 195 in which you read an email from Joshua where he says he buys tickets using his Moviepass everyday just to rack up loyalty points. A quick look at the Moviepass terms of service shows that is in fact against the TOS.

One of the items that they list as a reason to terminate your account is:

(ix) On more than one occasion during any thirty (30) day period you do not view the movie for which you purchased a ticket with your MoviePass Card in its entirety.

I’m sure you’ve gotten several emails on the same subject, but I just thought it was worth a mention. Moviepass seems like a great deal and I am getting ready to sign up, and I would hate for everyone to lose it because some folks aren’t playing by the rules.

Thanks

Don

 

 

So I have to reverse my opinion that I tweeted to Tom and Brian earlier about MoviePass. It was a great company when it was $40 a month. The price cut and expansion with $10 a month has thrown all levels of customer service they used to have in the trash.

As someone who works in customer service I’m a little less lenient in this area than some (I broke relations with a game developer from poor service regarding $15.) but my partner and I have two different problems and they won’t respond to either of us. I have my card and no way to activate it and my partner has an activated card but no physical card. We have tried Facebook, Twitter, instagram in addition to the in-app chat support and email and no response from the company at all. It’s been a rather disappointing experience since the business model changed for MoviePass.

Jeff

 

 

Hello Valued Employees (and guest),

So I’m wondering what you think about the idea that Netflix is ahead of the game in international distribution, with the key being their Netflix Originals brand.

With shows such as Peaky Blinders, The Expanse and ST Discovery all being branded “Netflix Originals” outside of their home territories, it seems like Netflix is playing the long game worldwide to increase their prominence and their mindshare with audiences, while the other big media companies still haven’t risen their eyes above the horizon and are just obsessively squabbling over the US domestic market.

TL;DR Netflix is focusing on the rest of the world, discuss!

Thanks for a great show – keep up the good work and maybe you’ll get those xmas bonuses!

Micky

 

 

 

Hey there, just a small note on CW shows on Netflix. Tom had said that the previous season is available the day the new season starts. However, they show up 8 days after the season ends:

Netflix and the CW Confirm New Licensing Deal for All Scripted Series

Sorry if 400 people pointed this out! 😀

Rob

 

Links

2017 Winter Movie Draft
patreon.com/cordkillers

Cordkillers 187 – Embarrassment of Riches (w/ Scott Johnson)

Hulu wins the Emmys, JJ Abrams is back on Star Wars, and what we think of the Apple TV 4K. With special guest Scott Johnson.

Download audio

Download video

CordKillers: 187 – Embarrassment of Riches
Recorded:  September 18 2017
Guest: Scott Johnson

Intro Video

Primary Target

How to Watch

  • New Apple TV 4K announced, launches September 22nd for $179
    – Apple introduced the Apple TV 4K with support for HDR10 and DolbyVision. The new Apple TV runs on an A10X processor with a new tvOS. And Major studios, exclusing Disney, will make 4K movies available in iTunes for the same price as HD and Apple will upgrade previous purchases. The TV app is coming to seven new countries starting with Canada and Australia. Apple is also adding live news and sports to the TV app. The new Apple TV is available with 32GB for $179 and 64 GB for $199 for pre-order September 15 shipping September 22.

What to Watch

What We’re Watching

Front Lines

  • Emmy winners 2017: the complete list
    – Netflix: Jon Lithgow (Crown) Aziz Ansari and Lena Waithe (Master of None) Charlie Brooker writing (Black Mirror) San Junipero Television Movie (Black Mirror)
    Hulu: Bruce Miller writing (Handmaid’s Tale) Ann Dowd (Handmaid’s Tale) Reed Moranao directing (Handmaid’s Tale) Best Actress Elizabeth Moss (Handmaid’s Tale) Best series Handmaid’s Tale
  • WSJ: Discovery, AMC and Viacom try a sports-free streaming bundle
    – The Wall Street Journal reports that Discovery Communications, Viacom Inc., A+E Networks, AMC Networks, and Scripps Networks Interactive are teaming up to launch a sports-free streaming service. The expectation is it will cost $20 a month. College-oriented streaming service Philo will provide the technology for the platform.
  • Time’s streaming service gets rebranded as ‘PeopleTV,’ passes 100M views in year one
    – Time has rebranded the People/Entertainment Weekly Network free ad-supported streaming service PeopleTV. The network streamed from the Emmys red carpet and provided the stream on Twitter. Time says the service has received 100 million views since launching in September of last year.
  • YouTube TV is expanding to eight more cities
    – YouTube TV expanded to Albuquerque, Austin, Birmingham, Greenville, Norfolk, Portland, Raleigh, and Sacramento. YouTube TV now offers almost 50 networks and costs $35 a month.
  • Hulu reportedly plans to spend around $2.5 billion on programming this year
    – Variety reports that Hulu CEO Mike Hopkins told an audience in New York City that Hulu plans to spend $2.5 billion on content this year. That’s less than Netflix’s $6 billion and Amazon’s predicted $4.5 billion but more than Apple’s $1 billion. If you’re keeping track. Hulu has about 12 million subscribers next to Amazon’s 80 million and Netflix’s 100 million.
  • Sling TV is now giving away digital antennas to those who prepay for its service
    – Sling announced two new bundles. If you prepay for two months of service you get a free Winegard indoor antenna. Prepay for three months and pay an additional $70 and you get the antenna plus an adapter and Sling’s AirTV Player which integrates over-the-air channels into Sling TV. Sling will verify you live in an area that can get OTA channels.

Dispatches from the Front

Hi there, Brian, Tom and Bryce!

In May I recorded a show about film franchises and late sequels. …one of our guests who works doing PR for some film distribution companies mentioned that he already knows who is going to own the franchise for the upcoming sequels after Sony leaves.

This falls under the “people familiar with the matter” category. Long story short: the rights go to 20th Century Fox. They already have the distribution rights for home video (BD, DVD) since 2002 so that’s the main reason they are up front of everybody else in the race for The Bond, besides any extra deals that they have been negociating.

However (and this is very interesting) since both Amazon and Apple are apparently on the race for the rights of the franchise, I wonder if the original plans have changed with a better offering. Video Streaming and Digital Sales have a stronger arm with any of those companies. Way stronger than Fox. This makes me think that perhaps they could acquire the rights if they make the right proposal to Barbara Broccoli, but since they already have a stablished bond (pun intended) with Fox, I doubt it.

You can see the video with the interview here and the comment from Jaime is at the 1:42:00 timecode. It’s all in Spanish and unfortunatelly there are no subtitles available. That’s the video for our Patreons so if you want to link it, please use the Patreon Post instead.

Dan

 

 

Howdy Brian, Tom, Bryce, and Roberto:
Enjoyed the discussion in Cordkillers #186 about the Multi-cultural approach of Netflix.

I am a big fan of Japanese Anime as I watch Crunchyroll and Funimation and more. Been a fan of Anime since the 70s. Unfortunately, Anime still suffers from prejudice which is not deserved because many people still associate Anime with sexy fanservice and violence. Many Anime contain parody and often reference other anime even with cross-overs with characters in other anime animation. So the new title “Neo Yokio” seems to be a typical style for Anime. Parody is very common in Japanese Anime.

I am very happy that Netflix is expanding it’s Anime offerings and even producing original Anime titles. It may not appeal to some people, but there are many Anime fans out there like me.

Love Cordkillers! Keep up the Great Work!

Michael

 

 

 

Tom and Brian,
I think you’re underestimating the number of people who use Kodie on a Fire TV Stick. This topic comes up all the time on our neighborhood Facebook page and based on the number of people who brag about owning one I would say about 10% of my neighbors have one (so about 50 to 100 households).
I don’t think they realize it’s pirating or at least they have convinced themselves it’s not becuase they agure that since they bought it from a vendor it must be legal (with that agruement all the pot I bought and smoked in high school must have been legal too).
They talk about how nice it was to watch the fight or big game for free but I don’t think they realize it’s piracy since they are using an app and stream, like Popcorn Time, and not going to some shady site to download something.

You rock!

– Charles

 

 

Hey Tom and Brian,

I really do have a friend who has the Fire Stick with all the “free” stuff, and he’s actually made fun of me for being a cord cutter without one. He bought the Stick from Amazon and sent it to a guy who loaded Kody and all the extensions onto it. Bottom line, it’s crap. Live streams were incredibly low quality (like RealPlayer in 2002 low quality) and they kept buffering even over our other friend’s gigabit Comcast, and movies were mostly guerrilla-cam or Blu-Ray rips with GIANT Korean subtitles. I stated my “it’s crap” opinion to him, and his response was “Who cares? It’s free!” – which comes from a guy who makes six figures. Personally, I would rather spend my money on better quality legal versions of content, whether it’s a subscribing to a service or renting/buying a digital copy of a show or movie. Anyway, love the show.

Joel

 

 

 

I know it’s not exactly related to the conversation, but I’ve found a fairly comfortable setup for over-the-air TV in my house.

-I have a cheap HTPC hooked up to my TV
-I have this USB TV dual-tuner ($70): https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B015IL0FIW/
-I use this antenna which picks up pretty every station in Seattle ($26): https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01FUB4ZG8/
-I use NextPVR for all my scheduling and TV viewing (Free): http://www.nextpvr.com/
-I subscribe to Schedules Direct for the TV listings that NextPVR uses ($25/year): http://www.schedulesdirect.org/

It wasn’t the most user friendly thing to set up initially, but after that initial setup it’s been working really well ever since.

Jordan
 

Links

2017 Winter Movie Draft
patreon.com/cordkillers

 

DTNS 3114 – Apple Announced A Bunch Of Things

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comApple’s new phones, watch and OTT TV device, plus Samsung promises a bendable Galaxy Note phone next year.
With Tom Merritt, Roger Chang and Patrick Beja

MP3

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

Follow us on Soundcloud.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, Jack_Shid, KAPT_Kipper, and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

Patrick Beja

 

Cordkillers 186 – I Like The Way I Said it Better (w/ Roberto Villegas)

Should Apple make James Bond, Plex gets easy with Kodi, and Netflix takes on an anime parody? Is it parody? With special guest Roberto Villegas.

The draft is next week! Here’s the movie list.

Download audio

Download video

CordKillers: Ep. 186 – I Like The Way I Said it Better
Recorded: September 11 2017
Guest: Roberto Villegas

Intro Video

Primary Target

  • Apple, Amazon Join Race for James Bond Film Rights
    – Sony’s deal to make James Bond movies ended in 2015 and bids for the rights are being negotiated now. Hollywood Reporter has sources who say Apple and Amazon are in the running with Warner Brothers and Sony to buy the rights to make the movies for MGM. Former Sony executives Zack Van Amburg and Jamie Erlicht are leading the push for Apple.

How to Watch

What to Watch

What We’re Watching

Front Lines

  • Amazon’s new flagship Fire TV looks like a square Echo Dot
    – AFTVNews says it has sources who say Amazon will release two new Fire TV models later this year. One will be a square FireTV stick and the other a regular box that has Amazon Voice Service far-field microphones and speaker built in. Both will support 4K. and HDR.
  • Disney’s streaming service will exclusively get Marvel and Star Wars movies
    – Disney CEO Bob Iger announced that Disney will make its Star Wars and Marvel movies exclusive to a new streaming service launching with Disney and Pixar content in late 2019.
  • Disney Movies Anywhere drops Microsoft as a partner
    – Disney Movies Anywhere sent out an email saying it no longer works with Microsoft’s Movies and TV Store. That applies to future purchases. Existing linked movies will remain available.
  • Roku files for $100M IPO
    – Roku filed paperwork for an IPO. The filing shows 15.1 million active accounts streaming 3.5 billion hours last quarter, up 60% on the year. Revenue per unit is up 35% on the year to $11.22 for a total annual revenue of $398 million. Advertising and platform subscriptions make up 81% of company profits, up 104% over the last six months, while profits from hardware fell 28% in the same span and represents 19% overall. Roku also launched its own channel for Roku users that streams free movies licnesed directly from studios by Roku and supported with advertising.
  • AT&T’s DirecTV Now is testing a cloud DVR with 100 hours of storage
    – TechCrunch confirmed a Cord Cutters News leak that DirecTV Now’s forthcoming DVR plan will have up to 100 hours of storage managed from a “My Library” feature. No word on the price.
  • Netflix and Hulu already won 21 Emmys ahead of the main event
    – The Creative Arts Emmy Awards were given out this weekend These are the ones they give away a week before the main awards broadcast, which is this coming Sunday September 17. Stranger Things took home 5 awards include sound and picture editing as well as main title. Netflix documentary 13th from Ava Duvernay got four awards. Handmaid’s Tale got three including production design and cinematography. Overall Netflix got 16 Hulu five and Amazon two.

Dispatches from the Front

Hey guys. Since becoming a cordcutter, I’ve been more attentive on how people get their media. This is only anecdotal, but one thing I’ve noticed over the past year is how widespread the knowledge and use of “Amazon fire sticks with access to everything free” has become. People come to my house and I show them how to watch stuff on my apple tvs and remind them that I don’t have cable. People from 14 year old cousins to 50 year old uncles will say “oh do you have the fire stick where it has everything free”? I tell them I don’t and then they tell me I should get one. I will admit I’ve done my fair share of pirating back in the day. However, I now consider myself a born again cordkiller that is mostly legit because there are actually easy legal options to access content these days which is what I thought everyone wanted. To me, it seems getting it free may still be a larger component to the equation for some people. I’ve never used a “special” fire stick , but if it’s as easy as ordering it and plugging it in to your tv , I don’t know how big media can compete with that if there truly is a growing population that doesn’t see any issues with it.

Your favorite boss

Jerry

 

 

 

Hello Tom and Brian,
Do you know of a box or app that will allow me to use single sign and create playlists of the shows I watch in all of my steaming services (Hulu, Netflix, Amazon).
Thanks
Chuck

 

 

 

Hello fellow cord cutters,
The best website I found for comparing and choosing a streaming service is suppose.tv. You can set your location and choose local channels and cable channels to filter by and determine which service they are available on. You can even compare costs and filter by streaming device. This is the tool you are looking for.

Zach

Links

2017 Winter Movie Draft

patreon.com/cordkillers