The big TV news this week is about hardware, with Amazon launching its Fire TV to rival Roku, Apple TV and Chromecast. For a while, speculation was hot and heavy that Amazon would launch its own pay-TV service, but that hasn’t happened… yet. That’s what the real TV wars likely will be fought over, though — how content reaches consumers. The Supreme Court later this month will hear arguments on both sides of cord-cutter startup Aereo’s business plan. Aereo lets users stream or record live television programming.
How to Watch TV on Your Laptop
Posted by: Patrick Nelson April 3, 2014 06:54 AMThe big TV news this week is about hardware, with Amazon launching its Fire TV to rival Roku, Apple TV and Chromecast. For a while, speculation was hot and heavy that Amazon would launch its own pay-TV service, but that hasn’t happened… yet. That’s what the real TV wars likely will be fought over, though — how content reaches consumers. The Supreme Court later this month will hear arguments on both sides of cord-cutter startup Aereo’s business plan. Aereo lets users stream or record live television programming.