Google Launches Third-Gen Chromecast With 60fps Video, Multiroom Audio Support (variety.com) 39
Alongside the new Pixel smartphones, and the Pixel Slate laptop-tablet hybrid, Google on Tuesday also announced a new version of its Chromecast streaming adapter, the third generation of the company's streaming device, which supports playback video at higher frame rates and can also stream multiroom audio. From a report: The new device goes on sale Tuesday in the U.S., Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Great Britain, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore and Sweden. Stateside, the new Chromecast once again costs $35 -- the same as its predecessor. [...] The bigger changes are on the inside: The new Chromecast is 15% faster than the previous model, which allows it to stream 1080p HD video with a rate of up to 60 frames per second (fps). "Everything becomes much smoother," said Google Home product manager Chris Chan during a recent interview with Variety. He specifically cited the growth of 60fps content on YouTube as one of the reasons Google added the new feature.
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AV1 support (Score:4, Interesting)
Since AV1 [wikipedia.org] has been standardized six months ago and there are no HW decoders available yet, it will not support the flagship new royalty-free video codec from Google. Somewhat odd they have not delayed the launch some few months; 15% faster is an incremental improvement.
Re:AV1 support (Score:4, Insightful)
You must be new here... Why sell one significantly upgraded product when you can sell two incremental upgrades instead?
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The counterpoint is that IMO Google is basically giving away the Chromecasts to keep peoples' eyeballs on their content through Youtube and other services. I mean how profitable can it possibly be to sell one for $35, after build, packaging, transport, and letting retail take a piece? Like maybe $5? Instead of making $5 twice, why not delay a few months and then release the ChromeCast Pro Two - Revenge of the AVI codec and charge $50 for it? That way instead of 2 x $5, you make 1 x $20 !
So I really don'
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And what about the folks whose success and bonuses are measured by units shipped? :-)
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Maybe they can add it with software later. The hardware accelerated part of AV1 could be implemented as shaders on the GPU.
Glad to see 60fps support. Hopefully it's got full frame rate switching for 24 and 25 FPS too.
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The Chromecast is first and foremost an inexpensive device. My guess is that new silicon with AV1 support would not meet the Chromecast price-point for a few years.
There was no Chromecast Ultra replacement announced today - presumably the eventual replacement will have AV1 support.
Quite the opposite (Score:3)
No remote?
You don't need a remote, since any electronic device is monitored by Google at this point. Just type "volume up" in a search bar, or tap out "play cat videos on YouTube" on the door of your connected fridge in morse code. The GoogleMind will receive your desires and act on them, often desires you didn't even know you had until Google meets them.
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I guess that explains my RealDoll delivery this afternoon, but GoogleMind seriously udder-estimated my obsession with big breasts.
There, fixed that for you.
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60fps? What about 23.976fps? (Score:2)
I'd be really happy if it did 23.976fps so I could watch movies on Netflix without having to suffer judder from the pulldown.
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Heard at work: "Hey Jimmy, come here. We got a job for you."
Reliability (lack of) (Score:3)
We use our Chromecast a lot (using it right now) but ooh boy is it unreliable! You can start a show, and 2 minutes later the app has lost the Chromecast so you can't pause or rewind etc. Then a few minutes later it's there again. Then it's not there but "local device" is, and sometimes you can connect to that, sometimes you can't. It's really frustrating.
Re: Reliability (lack of) (Score:1)
Same issue. Is yours by any chance a 1st gen unit? Ours is and I've heard some people say newer versions work better but I don't really care enough to spend the money to upgrade what (mostly) already works
Re: Reliability (lack of) (Score:3)
Yes, first gen, and I feel the same -- tempted to upgrade, but it works enough that we just put up with the flakiness.
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I've had zero problems since putting a WAP within two feet of a 2nd gen Chromecast, but did have some of this before with a weak signal.
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Google Home product manager Chris Chan (Score:1)