A magician over on the boxee forums has posted a simple and easy way to get Hulu shows working on Boxee again!
All you need to to is:
1) Download the file from the post (or click here)
2) Rename it to hulu.js
3) Put in the following folder:
mac: /Applications/Boxee.app/Contents/Resources/Boxee/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
linux: [Boxeepath]/system/players/flashplayer/hulu.js
windows: c:\program files\boxee\system\players\flashplayer\hulu.js
Its working great on my Windows 7 computer running the latest Boxee beta.
Tech Home Blog is your reliable resource for experience based information and advice about technology in your home.
Friday, November 26, 2010
Friday, November 12, 2010
Open letter to Hulu re:Boxee
Dear Hulu,
I have been a loyal Hulu user on my Windows PC running Boxee for 3 months. I love the ad supported model - especially when "the following program is brought to you on Hulu with limited commercial interruptions" Thanks to Chase slate card (triplets?!) and the campy StateFarm insurance guy who decides he's tired and ready to die.
That is until today.
Why would you block Hulu on a windows computer just because I use Boxee as my browser instead of Firefox or Chrome?
Are your advertisers asking you to reduce viewership?
Do you really think this move on your part makes users want to pay for a Hulu plus subscription?
I want to watch shows on Hulu with advertising. I want to do it on my Windows computer running Boxee.
Please tell me this was a mistake and Hulu is going to allow Boxee users to view Hulu content and optionally subscribe to Hulu plus for additional content and fewer ads for those who desire those features.
For those of us who are willing to watch ads so that you are compensated for the content and advertisers capture our consumer dollars, let us watch Hulu content and your advertisers' content on our computers that run Boxee.
I'm posting this email on my Blog and will gladly post your reply as well. Http://techhomeblog.blogspot.com
Thank you,
Craig L. Davis
I have been a loyal Hulu user on my Windows PC running Boxee for 3 months. I love the ad supported model - especially when "the following program is brought to you on Hulu with limited commercial interruptions" Thanks to Chase slate card (triplets?!) and the campy StateFarm insurance guy who decides he's tired and ready to die.
That is until today.
Why would you block Hulu on a windows computer just because I use Boxee as my browser instead of Firefox or Chrome?
Are your advertisers asking you to reduce viewership?
Do you really think this move on your part makes users want to pay for a Hulu plus subscription?
I want to watch shows on Hulu with advertising. I want to do it on my Windows computer running Boxee.
Please tell me this was a mistake and Hulu is going to allow Boxee users to view Hulu content and optionally subscribe to Hulu plus for additional content and fewer ads for those who desire those features.
For those of us who are willing to watch ads so that you are compensated for the content and advertisers capture our consumer dollars, let us watch Hulu content and your advertisers' content on our computers that run Boxee.
I'm posting this email on my Blog and will gladly post your reply as well. Http://techhomeblog.blogspot.com
Thank you,
Craig L. Davis
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
BoxeeBox will have Netflix!
The good folks at Boxee held quite a launch event tonight in NYC for the new BoxeeBox
Major announcements at the event:
A very nicely revised user interface which looks great and has an AMAZING new search function to find just about any video, show, or movie "on the interwebs" (to quote Avner Ronon).
Currently only available on the BoxeeBox but coming soon for Windows, Mac, etc.
in HD!
Hulu Plus will also be on the BoxeeBox (no date announced)
Other cool content sources on BoxeeBox:
NHL GameCenter Live (Up to 40 out of market games per week)
Vudu's 9,000+ titles in HD (starting at $2.00 for 2 nights)
I kept saying I was waiting until NetFlix is on it, but I may just get one anyway now that its officially announced that NetFlix will be available on the BoxeeBox! I need a content source on a second TV (we fired DirecTV about 3 months ago and refuse to pay $100 per month for cable or satelitte). BoxeeBox will work perfectly for the second TV.
I doubt that I'll be ditching the HTPC I'm running Boxee on in the living room, though. That's working great, and as soon as the 1.0 software is available, it will actually have more than the boxee box (except the cool remote) since the computer version will run NetFlix today. Plus, its the computer that has all of our DVD's, Music, and Pictures on it anyway so it may as well also be the Boxee computer for the living room while its at it.
Congratulations Avner and team!
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Vudu HD Movies come to Boxee!
Thats right, Boxee does it again! Today, the Boxee Blog announced that they are adding Vudu's huge collection of on-demand, new release movie titles to Boxee users on Mac, PC, and the forthcoming Boxee Box
(amazon.com
preorders set to ship Nov 10th
)
New Vudu users who signup via Boxee will even get a free movie to try it out. Count me in.
New Vudu users who signup via Boxee will even get a free movie to try it out. Count me in.
Movies are $2.00 each for a 2 night rental. Combine this with the huge library of free content already available, and NetFlix streaming titles at $9.00 per month and you've got better-than-cable choices for a fraction of the cost.
Users of the free Boxee software on PC and Mac will only get SD, but with the Boxee Box
, users can get up to 1080p in Dolby Digital 5.1 (depending on your bandwidth):
- SD (480p) requires 1 Mbps
- HD (720p) requires 2.25 Mbps
- HDX (1080p) requires 4.5 Mbps
Friday, October 1, 2010
New AppleTV Ships (Thanks, but no thanks)
I'm actually surprised at the small number of folks bragging and tweeting about their AppleTV's arriving late this week.
It has started shipping and folks have started unwrapping them, but the most exciting news seems to be that you can backup the Apple SHSH with TinyUmbrella (the tool that allows you to revert back to an older iOS firmware after Apple stops officially allowing you to do so). This probably means the device will eventually be jailbroken, and at that point, it may have some interesting and useful purpose to me.
Why "Thanks, but no thanks"? For starters, the closed ecosystem of the device. You can stream your local content to it, however, the only other source of content is Netflix and the iTunes store (for $0.99 per show or $3.99 per movie).
Sure, $99 is cheap, but it I had to pay a buck every time my kids watched a SpongeBob episode I'd be broke! Why would I do that, when the content I want to stream is already available for free (as advertiser supported content) over at Hulu and other similar sites. No streaming of NHL GameCenter Live + no MBL.com + no Hulu = no thanks (for me).
Maybe as a jailbroken device it will have a better justification for a place in my entertainment system.
Let us know what you think:
Can AppleTV do anything that we can't already do?
Does it do any of it better?
It has started shipping and folks have started unwrapping them, but the most exciting news seems to be that you can backup the Apple SHSH with TinyUmbrella (the tool that allows you to revert back to an older iOS firmware after Apple stops officially allowing you to do so). This probably means the device will eventually be jailbroken, and at that point, it may have some interesting and useful purpose to me.
Why "Thanks, but no thanks"? For starters, the closed ecosystem of the device. You can stream your local content to it, however, the only other source of content is Netflix and the iTunes store (for $0.99 per show or $3.99 per movie).
Sure, $99 is cheap, but it I had to pay a buck every time my kids watched a SpongeBob episode I'd be broke! Why would I do that, when the content I want to stream is already available for free (as advertiser supported content) over at Hulu and other similar sites. No streaming of NHL GameCenter Live + no MBL.com + no Hulu = no thanks (for me).
Maybe as a jailbroken device it will have a better justification for a place in my entertainment system.
Let us know what you think:
Can AppleTV do anything that we can't already do?
Does it do any of it better?
Labels:
AppleTV,
Hulu,
NHL GameCenter
Thursday, September 30, 2010
PlayON iPhone App in the App Store
PlayON.tv now has their app available in the Apple iPhone App Store! (app store link) (itunes link)
Starting today iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users can download the free PlayON Mobile app to their device. This allows you to have nearly any streaming web content available in the palm of your hand from sources such as Hulu, MLB, NHL, Netflix, Amazon VOD, CBS, Comedy Central, TV.com, ESPN.com, ESPN3, CNN, PBS, PBS Kids, Fox News, SpikeTV, MTV and Vevo.
Thats right, Hulu.com on your iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch without having to subscribe to HuluPlus.
The software requires the PlayON software for Windows running on a PC on your network (tdownload a free trial from PlayOn.tv -- after the trial users can subscribe to PlayON for $39 for the first year and $19 for each year thereafter). Well worth it for giving us all this content on our iDevices, XBox360's, PS3's, Wii's, and any other DLNA compliant playback device.
So far the app looks good and is quite speedy (even compared to the previous HTML5 web interface on iDevices) and best of all, it works over WiFi or 3G.
Way to go PlayON! Keep up the good work!
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
NHL GameCenter App Coming to the iPad!
I recently wrote an article about how you can get NHL, Hulu, and many other video sources on your iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad (plus your XBox360, PS3, and Wii) using PlayOn.
Now, it looks like the NHL GameCenter folks have big plans of their own. Many have noticed and asked about the "New: Connected Devices" feature shown on the NHL GameCenter sign-up screen. While the NHL folks have been silent on this issue, I recently learned first-hand from the good folks at NHL GameCenter that they are in fact planning GameCenter Live support for the following "Connected Devices":
Playstation 3, iPad, Boxee, Roku, and Sony Bravia web-enabled HDTVs and Blu-Ray players.
Monday, September 20, 2010
VLC now on iPad, Napster on iPad/iPod/iPhone
2 great headlines for iPad, iPod, and iPhone media hounds.
In the video department, the renowned VLC video player is available on the iPad for free from the Apple App Store! This release was made possible by Applidium (and the newly published App Store Rules). I don't have an iPad to test this one out, but maybe an avid reader of the blog can try it out for us and tell us all about it (@Samboni!?). My first question: Will it play VOB files with menus? It does look like it relies upon features currently specific to the iPad allowing it to get files from your computer during the sync process. It also looks like HP is using a similar file sync method on its iPod and iPhone printer tool under iOS 4 so we may see VLC on our other iDevices soon.
In the music department, the infamous Napster released their app for iPod, iPhone and iPad today at the Apple App Store. Users get a free trial (with the condition of signing up with a credit card -- beware, if you don't cancel you automatically start your $10 per month subscription). I'll take the plunge on this during the free trial, but once you add up all of the recurring fee subscriptions I want (NHL GameCenter, Netflix, and now Napster), I need to start deciding which ones are worth it. I'll update this post with my experience during my trial period.
In the video department, the renowned VLC video player is available on the iPad for free from the Apple App Store! This release was made possible by Applidium (and the newly published App Store Rules). I don't have an iPad to test this one out, but maybe an avid reader of the blog can try it out for us and tell us all about it (@Samboni!?). My first question: Will it play VOB files with menus? It does look like it relies upon features currently specific to the iPad allowing it to get files from your computer during the sync process. It also looks like HP is using a similar file sync method on its iPod and iPhone printer tool under iOS 4 so we may see VLC on our other iDevices soon.
In the music department, the infamous Napster released their app for iPod, iPhone and iPad today at the Apple App Store. Users get a free trial (with the condition of signing up with a credit card -- beware, if you don't cancel you automatically start your $10 per month subscription). I'll take the plunge on this during the free trial, but once you add up all of the recurring fee subscriptions I want (NHL GameCenter, Netflix, and now Napster), I need to start deciding which ones are worth it. I'll update this post with my experience during my trial period.
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Boxee Box about the size of a Coke Can!
Wow -- I've seen people posting concerns about the odd shape of the Boxee Box, then I saw how big it really is.

According to the Boxee Blog:
“Rest assured the Boxee Box will fit into your entertainment center. If the look doesn’t quite fit with your decor, not to worry. The RF remote means you can place the box out of sight and still control it. Of course, the Boxee Box prefers being on top.”
You could fit this thing anywhere! And it really only needs 2 wires -- the power and the HDMI (since it has WiFi the network can be wireless or wired although clearly in this photo they show it with a wired network connection and all of the audio connectors in use). Even fully loaded with all of its connections, you've got lots of options on where to put it. And since it comes with an RF remote, you can choose to hide it or show it off (and make the SD slot even easier to access).
Read more about the Boxee Box and its new features (vs the beta) in my other articles or pre-order one from Amazon.com
today! I can't wait to get mine!

According to the Boxee Blog:
“Rest assured the Boxee Box will fit into your entertainment center. If the look doesn’t quite fit with your decor, not to worry. The RF remote means you can place the box out of sight and still control it. Of course, the Boxee Box prefers being on top.”
You could fit this thing anywhere! And it really only needs 2 wires -- the power and the HDMI (since it has WiFi the network can be wireless or wired although clearly in this photo they show it with a wired network connection and all of the audio connectors in use). Even fully loaded with all of its connections, you've got lots of options on where to put it. And since it comes with an RF remote, you can choose to hide it or show it off (and make the SD slot even easier to access).
Read more about the Boxee Box and its new features (vs the beta) in my other articles or pre-order one from Amazon.com
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Streaming Video Anywhere with TVersity or PlayON
We've cut the cord on the cable/satellite and using Boxee on the main TV to watch Hulu, Netflix, MLB baseball games, NHL hockey games, and just about anything else available online, on the big-screen TV. So what about the other 3 TV's? Sure, free over-the-air HD is fine for network shows, but what if we want to watch Psych in the Den (there's no computer attached there but there is an XBox360). What if the kids want to watch the newest Deadliest Catch on their iPod Touch?
In the near future, all the TV's in my house will have their own Boxee Box
but until then how do we get more than 3-4 "local" networks?
There is a solution (actually a few, but, this article will focus on the option I chose to solve everything for multiple devices in my house).
How Will This Work?
It all hinges upon getting the content into your home from the internet either via Hulu, Netflix, or a download from uTorrent; then getting it to your PS3, XBox360 or iOS devices like iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch. So how does one accomplish this?
In the near future, all the TV's in my house will have their own Boxee Box
There is a solution (actually a few, but, this article will focus on the option I chose to solve everything for multiple devices in my house).
How Will This Work?
It all hinges upon getting the content into your home from the internet either via Hulu, Netflix, or a download from uTorrent; then getting it to your PS3, XBox360 or iOS devices like iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch. So how does one accomplish this?
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Boxee Box's New Features
In my excitement about the Boxee Box pre-orders starting yesterday, I overlooked 4 great new features mentioned in the Product Description on Amazon that are quite noteworthy (and not in the free beta version)
1) When users of the free beta get their Boxee Box and sign-in... "the Boxee Box by D-Link will automatically import your account – making your favorite TV shows, movies apps, and shortcuts instantly available. Booyah." That "Booyah" is a direct quote from the Boxee Box marketing team, but I second it -- "Booyah!"
2) It's an RF remote! Double-Booyah! (ok that "booyah" was mine).
3) Looks like there's some new premium pay-per-view services that will be available based on the following quote: "If we can’t find it for free, the Boxee Box will connect you with premium options who can, instantly."
4) Facebook/Twitter feeds (and it implies to me that you will even be able to post to facebook and tweet using the QWERTY remote on your big screen but I am reading between the lines on that one...)
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Boxee Box Pre-Orders
This Just In... (and first on my list of "What It Does" items from my welcome article)...
At $199 this network based media playback device has great promise for the living room media portal. And it even comes with a fantastic remote control with a built-in keyboard for easy searching of shows and movies!Click here for the Amazon.com pre-order page: Boxee Box Pre-Order
Its got a great user interface for browsing thousands of television episodes available for online viewing via Hulu, PBS, Discovery Channel, NHL Game Center, MLB, ESPN, and many more. You're sure to find enough content for the entire family, and its super easy to search and navigate. According to the Boxee staff, they also plan to have Netflix integrated -- expect a press release on that soon!
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Welcome
Welcome to my blog -- http://techhomeblog.blogspot.com
My goal is to provide you with useful information about every day technology applications for your home, especially digital media.
Topics and reviews will mostly focus on digital audio and video distribution throughout the home and the underlying technology.
Imagine sitting on the deck or the back yard with your iPod touch or iPhone, with wireless control of the music being played on the deck and in the kitchen. Then, using the same device, starting a movie in the basement for the kids to watch. All wireless, from anywhere in your home (and even away from home).
My goal is to provide you with useful information about every day technology applications for your home, especially digital media.
Topics and reviews will mostly focus on digital audio and video distribution throughout the home and the underlying technology.
Imagine sitting on the deck or the back yard with your iPod touch or iPhone, with wireless control of the music being played on the deck and in the kitchen. Then, using the same device, starting a movie in the basement for the kids to watch. All wireless, from anywhere in your home (and even away from home).
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