Echostar Shutting Down U.S. Cable Set-Top Unit

CK SatGuy

Formerly ckhalil18
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Feb 7, 2011
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The Motor City
From Multichannel News:

EchoStar Technologies is pulling the plug on efforts to sell set-top boxes to U.S. cable operators and will cease development of its Aria platform immediately, citing lack of sales traction, the company confirmed Monday.
With the change, the company said in a statement provided to Multichannel News, it will shift resources to support "EchoStar's unique intellectual property and advanced content-delivery technologies." The company owns Sling Media, developer of the Slingbox device, and acquired the adaptive bit-rate technology of Move Technologies last year for $45 million.

However, EchoStar said it "remains firmly committed to supplying advanced hardware, software, and system solutions to its global cable, satellite, and telecom customers outside of the U.S. cable set top box market."

"EchoStar recognizes that the highly demanding and competitive nature of the U.S. set-top market is very cost-competitive," the company said. "After considerable review of the market and EchoStar's sales/product development efforts, EchoStar has concluded the U.S. cable market offers insufficient revenue return opportunities to the company and our investors."

EchoStar last year launched the Aria
suite of products, which included hybrid Internet set-top boxes designed to let independent cable operators deliver over-the-top VOD and HD user interfaces.

The set-tops included "SlingLoaded" units, which provided access to TV and DVR recordings programs over the Internet. Along with the Aria devices, EchoStar was offering IP-based content delivered via the Internet to servers at an MSO's headend, to let smaller cable operators deliver VOD, an HD guide and Slingbox features to customers without a large capital outlay for infrastructure.

EchoStar had previously said at least one major mid-tier operator was planning to test out Aria. Cable One had been testing the Aria boxes but ended those trials after the vendor missed several delivery deadlines, Light Reading Cable reported in February.


EchoStar Shutting Down U.S. Cable Set-Top Unit - 2012-04-23 22:36:01 | Multichannel News
 
In other words no cable company wanted to do business with a company they consider the competition.

Too bad the boxes were actually nice receivers.
 
Yep, Moxi is gone from the consumer market...Tivo is not doing well...others, like Sony, have long ago left the market...and the Cable Co's continue to put the screws to the Cablecard community. Likewise, if you're not a "Cable Bubba" then you won't be allowed to complete with the likes of Motorola and Cisco/SA since they don't know the secret handshake and cannot recite the CableLabs manifesto. It's a shame because Echostar had some nice boxes and consumers certainily need more choices.. :(
 
Echostar could have converted them to cable card boxes to try to compete in that market. It wouldn't be that hard, considering that all all cableco dvr's now have cards installed to make them work. And Tivo is doing pretty well. I mean the they are getting some nice profits due to winning lawsuits. Honestly, their products are some of the best around. And some cable providers (and DirectTV) are marketing Tivo based dvr's.
 
And Tivo is doing pretty well. I mean the they are getting some nice profits due to winning lawsuits.
How long do you expect that they can keep that business model up? At some point they are going to have to take on the Ciscos, Motorolas and Microsofts. If you don't protect it from everyone, you WILL lose it.

We've all seen dozens of promising companies and technologies substantially erased in the hands of Microsoft.
 
At some point they are going to have to take on the Ciscos, Motorolas and Microsofts. If you don't protect it from everyone, you WILL lose it.
Ummm, TiVo has "won" a couple of these related lawsuits and in the court system, they now have "precedence". Notice how quickly after they won against Dish that ATT, I believe, settled ? Expect the same from the companies you listed...
 
Ummm, TiVo has "won" a couple of these related lawsuits and in the court system, they now have "precedence". Notice how quickly after they won against Dish that ATT, I believe, settled ? Expect the same from the companies you listed...
actually microsoft vs tivo ended up in a stalemate. Tivo definitely did not win as there was no settlement.

Microsoft And TiVo Drop Their Patent Lawsuits Against Each Other | TechCrunch

If you have patents of your own, that's enough to get Tivo or anyone to back off.
 
How long do you expect that they can keep that business model up? At some point they are going to have to take on the Ciscos, Motorolas and Microsofts. If you don't protect it from everyone, you WILL lose it.We've all seen dozens of promising companies and technologies substantially erased in the hands of Microsoft.
They're already taking on Cisco and Motorola. Tivo has deals with the two biggest players in pay-tv, Comcast and DirectTV. As well as deals with a few smaller guys too. Comcast is even running VOD tests with Comcast supplied Tivo boxes. I really don't see them going away anytime soon. At the worst, they'll end up being a non-retail cabelco supplier.
 
Could be worse... I'd take a Cisco/SA or Moto box over the Piece of Junk PACE DVR that my local cable company "Insight" has.. It does only two tuners and the DVR function menus are ugly and a pain to navigate (You can view recordings by channel, by date, by title) that's it.. and their not grouped either (all one big list)
 

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