Comcast Corp. plans to soon roll out a feature allowing its customers to watch real-time television shows, whether a crime drama or newscast, on tablet computers such as Apple Inc.’s iPad.
Plans call for Comcast to first introduce an application for on-demand video, meaning its subscribers can select from a lineup of TV shows or movies that previously aired. Subscribers can then watch the video on an iPad wherever they are — at home, a coffee shop or an airport.
That feature will be running in the coming weeks, Comcast announced Wednesday. It will launch with about 3,000 hours of on-demand content.
Less clear is when Comcast will make available its service for streaming real-time TV shows to Apple’s iPad or tablets powered by Google Inc’s Android system. Comcast said only that the real-time TV service would be available this year.
Comcast and the rest of the cable and telecoms industry have sought to extend the appeal of the existing offerings to customers who, thanks to an explosion in new media devices, have more entertainment choices than ever before.
Indeed, cable companies are trying to create a more flexible TV viewing experience for paying subscribers who are spending more time watching and sharing YouTube videos with their friends online, including on Facebook.
Although pay TV companies insist nobody is dropping their service for lower-cost online alternatives — like Netflix Inc., — they are moving protect themselves from losing more customers than they already have.
For Comcast’s customers, a real-time service would allow one family member to watch, say, a news program on the living room TV set even as another family member used an iPad to watch a first-run crime drama in the next room. Subscribers would simply enter a code on Comcast’s Xfinity TV app to gain access.
Unlike Comcast’s on-demand service, the real-time streaming feature. at least initially, would only work within a subscriber’s home. That is because mobile rights for real-time video remain a sticky issue.
Last spring, Comcast Chief Executive Brian Roberts first showed off a new iPad-based Xfinity app, which allows customers to control home set-top boxes from anywhere. At the time, Roberts hinted that programming could eventually be delivered through the app.
Verizon Communications announced in August it had developed a similar live TV application for iPad.
With all this “new” technology coming out for Comcast, consumers should remember that this technology is already available through DISH Network with more functionality and perks than Comcast’s. As it stands now, Comcast’s release will be a “step” toward TVEverywhere, but at it’s inception point will only allow customers to use the iPad as an additional TV screen in their home. With Dish you can take it anywhere and control your DVR content, view live streaming content, access the internet, and can do it for no additional monthly rate. As an employee and a subscriber of DISH, I can say with full confidence that DISH is miles ahead of Comcast with these apps. They allow for my busy schedule and give me freedom as a consumer.