brochiller
Member
It isn't going to make somebody with no interest buy the system, but it is definitely make that $350 premium edition seem more reasonable.
Not a huge tv Person but its cool for those who want it.
I miss the gaming industry that was just about VIDEO GAMES and none of this other nonsense.
The announcement video is here, in case anyone else was still searching for a link:
http://www.nintendo.com/wiiu/videos/#/nintendo-tvii
http://kotaku.com/5943067/heres-what-nintendo-tvii-looks-like-in-actionThis is a pretty nice surprise! The integration seems pretty good, but there are still a lot of questions that need to be answered. The signing in with your TV Provider's info gives me hope that it's just more than a TV input switch to watch live TV, I'm hoping it will be a TV input switch with the option to schedule recordings from the pad and perhaps scroll through my recorded list without interrupting whats playing live on the TV (my wife would love this!) Overall I'm excited how this is truly executed.
Bring HBO GO and I'll be a happy camper
So watching the TVii trailer again it looks like the virtual remote on the Wii U LCD screen does have a power button. That seems to suggest you can control the power at least one device besides the Wii U. So that is interesting. It would have to control all my device like a harmony remote for it to be a system seller for me.
EDIT: Pic from the OP ( power button near the volume + button )
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But being 100% honest, my wife would probably prefer this TV control scheme over our harmony remote so I probably would buy it for TVii![]()
If Nintendo want to go for the jugular here, they really need to integrate Bluray playback into this. I think this could really sell the product to those on the fence, especially since their concerned with the Japanese market and 'not taking up space in the TV cabinet' thing they seemed to be waffling on about - two prodcuts into one.
Shit I want this feature here in NZ. Even if they let me just stream my own collection through the interface it'd be nice.
Weren't there some numbers that showed a huge number of Wii owners used the system for streaming video?
If Netflix et all are big among the original Wii audience, it would make sense to push this angle of Wii U as a major feature.
Would that suggest I'd be able to use my Wii U in my dorm to access my family's cable?
Would that suggest I'd be able to use my Wii U in my dorm to access my family's cable?
It's probably only using that inputted cable data to figure out what shows are on right now so the interface knows when to show the TV option. The cable show isn't streamed through Wii U -- the Wii U acts like a universal remote to change the TV to the appropriate cable channel.Would that suggest I'd be able to use my Wii U in my dorm to access my family's cable?
It's handy, but no TV function should ever be a system seller for a videogames console. Watching TV means you're not playing or buying more games.
I will never understand people who comment on a movie or TV show while watching it live.
That would be the last key feature for me ( assuming everything else worked perfectly which is a big assumption alone).
I agree. Supporting something like DLNA would be important.
Not a huge tv Person but its cool for those who want it.
I miss the gaming industry that was just about VIDEO GAMES and none of this other nonsense.
Just saw the Nintendo Direct portion of TVii. I must say, I'm quite pleasantly surprised Nintendo is on the ball on this one and not going 2 steps forward and 3 steps back.
More excited now that I know it has Cable/Satellite/Facebook/Twitter/IMDB/Wikipedia integration and actually timeline progression and posting (like the example they did with Modern Family).
Since this has Facebook integration, I wonder if Miiverse will too...
When asked about a Verizon Fios DVR, this guy was clear to respond that "you'll be able to control your TiVo DVR, and any cable box." I.. don't think this is controlling any non-TiVo DVRs, guys. Which renders it effectively useless. I'm not gonna use one remote for normal watching, and another for watching my recordings.
Remember this?
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Was it replaced by Nintendo TVii?
I already have a remote control for my TV.
Remember this?
![]()
Was it replaced by Nintendo TVii?
His answer definitely was open to interpretation. I think you'll just have the gamepad as a universal remote, so you should still have "full" access to you dvr, it just won't be a nicely integrated to the gamepad like the TiVo feature. So you really shouldn't need a second remote.When asked about a Verizon Fios DVR, this guy was clear to respond that "you'll be able to control your TiVo DVR, and any cable box." I.. don't think this is controlling any non-TiVo DVRs, guys. Which renders it effectively useless. I'm not gonna use one remote for normal watching, and another for watching my recordings.