Weekly rewind
Fire TV Cube review: Over at TechHive, I reviewed Amazon’s new Fire TV Cube, a $120 streaming TV box that responds to hands-free Alexa voice commands. You can ask it to launch live TV channels in PlayStation Vue or open a video in Netflix. You can use it like a giant Echo Show, with weather, sports scores, and other information popping up on the TV in response to your voice commands. It can even control the volume on TVs and sound systems through its built-in IR blaster.
When they work, these are some of the most satisfying interactions you’ll have with your television, but most apps still don’t work with Alexa, basic playback controls are inconsistent, and Alexa is still comically bad at genre search. All of this means you’ll have to fall back on the Fire TV’s physical remote and on-screen interface, both of which have the same shortcomings as the Fire TV pendant that I reviewed last year. The Fire TV Cube could be a breakthrough streaming player, but it missed its opportunity to be the best.
AT&T’s new skinny bundle: After floating the idea of a cheap streaming TV service contingent on being allowed to acquire Time Warner, AT&T has released some details. The service, called AT&T Watch TV, offers more than 30 live TV channels, many of them from Time Warner’s Turner networks (CNN, TNT, TBS, and so on), but also from AMC, A&E, Hallmark, and Viacom. (Here’s the full list.)
The service will be free for AT&T wireless subscribers who opt for new “&More” unlimited data plans. For everyone else, it’ll cost $15 per month. I’ll have a breakdown of all the details and gotchas in next week’s column. In the meantime, see what you can glean from AT&T’s press release and Variety’s coverage.
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