While the rest of the consumer electronics and pay-TV worlds are still stuck in more traditional native code environments, the push for online video and social communities in the living room has resulted in ever-increasing interest in HTML and other web-based technologies on consumer TVs.
The consumer-usable living room browser market is led by a few companies such as Opera and ACCESS, while other companies such as OpenTV, Oregan Networks and ANT Software are active in selling their browser products as part of a Web-based UI rendering solution. Nokia-owned Trolltech recently integrated Webkit into its “Qt” platform to allow CE developers to create mixed Web and native user interfaces. Lastly, the Consumer Electronics Association has developed the CE-2014 standard that leverages HTML to render user-interfaces in a connected living room, though vendor support for this effort appears limited at this time.
HTML, Adobe’s Flash/AIR, and Java are the three main contenders for the next-generation of user interfaces. While there will be many other advances in consumer user-interfaces such as 3D rendering using hardware acceleration, one of the inevitable trends will be the continued integration of Web content and Web technologies as the more online services connect to the living room.
A new ABI Research study, “
Web-Based Living Room User Interface Overview” examines the different standards involved, and explores vendors’ efforts to integrate Web-based technologies into various user interfaces, as well as tracking the increasing adoption of Web browsers for consumer living room Web surfing. It forms part of the firm’s
Home Networking Research Service.