Surfing the Internet on TV may be a tough sell
December 27, 1996
Web posted at: 12:00 a.m. EST
From Correspondent Rusty Dornin
SAN FRANCISCO (CNN) -- From channel surfing to surfing the
World Wide Web, some people have hailed television as the
latest, greatest place to tune into the Internet.
But so far, audiences aren't convinced.
A recent survey found that 93 percent of U.S. consumers don't
want to tune into the Internet on their TVs.
But ICTV, the latest company to enter the Internet television
market, hopes to change their minds. The company plans to
launch a cable TV service that lets people dial up the
Internet, play CD-ROM games and, some day, use the television
as a personal computer.
ICTV promoters hope that adding the personal-computer element
will be the tie-breaker.
"It's not that no one at home wants to look at the Internet,
it's that no one wants to look at the Internet on their
television," Van Baker of Dataquest said.
Faster than phone lines
But how about turning your TV into a personal computer, all
for $6.95 a month, payable to your cable company?
"This service should actually be a new way that the consumer
can get multimedia computing services without requiring them
to purchase expensive computer equipment," Robert Goldberg of
ICTV said.
With ICTV, subscribers have a box like a cable
converter that lets them change channels to access the
Internet. A small laptop keyboard lets users play CD-ROM
games and send e-mail.
In the near future, it will be like a personal computer --
storing files and providing word-processing capabilities, but
there will be no upgrades required and users won't have to
worry about repairs. All the hardware and hard drives will be
located at the cable company.
Other forms of Internet television use telephone lines, which
can be slow in transmitting information and pictures. ICTV
transmits over cable, more than 50 times faster than phone
lines.
"Compared to Web access for a Web TV or even a personal
computer in your home over a modem, it's much faster," said
Emil Rojas, a trial user.
Competition for remote
But some experts believe using the living room TV as a
personal computer or a channel to the Internet won't be too
popular.
"We believe that browsing the Internet is not a social
activity. It's an individual activity," Baker said. "And you
think there's competition for the remote control with the
television -- it's going to be even worse if you're thinking
about browsing the Internet."
ICTV will get its first commercial trial run in Santa
Barbara, California. Promoters hope changing this channel
will end up changing the world of personal computing.
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