Yahoo widgets: a dark day for ADD sufferers or a new dawn for Internet-on-TV?
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)The variation of Yahoo widgets designed specifically for TVs debuted at the Consumer Electronics Show last January. Not to be confused with its PC-centric incarnation, the TV-only widget feature will be available on certain HDTVs from LG, Samsung, Sony, and Vizio shipping this year. The first widget-equipped sets to hit store shelves are members of Samsung's UNB7000 series, and this hands-on review was performed on a UN46B7000--although we expect the widget experience to be similar across brands.
What is a widget? It's basically a gateway on your TV screen to Internet-supplied content in a certain subject area. All TVs with Yahoo widgets can connect to the Internet, and via that connection can populate the widgets with real-time information and updates. At the time of this review there are only four widgets, all of them available as soon as we turned on the TV, connected the Ethernet cable, and hit a button to activate the feature. The four, namely News, Weather, Finance, and Flickr, were all created by Yahoo.
In the coming weeks and months, we expect more widgets to become available and offer more content and information, and widgets for Twitter, sports scores, eBay shopping, and CBS content (CNET Reviews is published by CBS Interactive, a unit of CBS) are reportedly already in the offing. Developers announced include CBS Interactive, CinemaNow, Cinequest, Disney-ABC Television Group, eBay, GE, Group M, Joost, MTV, Samsung Electronics, Schematic, Showtime, Toshiba, and Twitter. Notable absentees include Google (which owns Picasa and YouTube), Netflix, Amazon, and Apple.
We also expect advertising to appear on the system eventually, which could make the user experience less consumer-friendly. For now, however, the widgets are blessedly ad-free.
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