Logitech International has dropped out of the Google TV
revolution.
Logitech Chief Executive Guerrino De Luca is writing off
Google TV as a "big mistake" that cost the Swiss company more
than $US100 million in operating profits.
He said Logitech will stop producing its Revue set-top boxes,
which enable televisions to receive Internet video.
At an event for analysts and investors, De Luca called last
year's launch of Google TV "a mistake of implementation of a
gigantic nature," according to technology blog the Verge.
De Luca said the company would bring "closure" to the "saga,"
which included steep price cuts to the Logitech Revue set-top
boxes, by letting the inventory run out this quarter.
He said there are no plans to introduce another box to
replace Revue. Further, he predicted that the "grandchild of
Google TV" might succeed, but not the current product.
For now, that leaves Sony televisions with the Google Inc.
software as the only other way to get the Google TV
experience.
Consumers will continue to get customer support for the
set-top boxes and automatic, free updates to the Google
software, Logitech spokeswoman Rose Maciejewski said in an
email.
She also noted that the company is "optimistic about the
long-term opportunity for the Google TV platform and the
potential for Logitech to offer associated products as the
ecosystem evolves."
A Google spokesman downplayed the blow to Google's TV
aspirations, saying the company would announce new
partnerships with hardware makers for its next generation of
Google TV devices.
Not everyone has lost faith in Google TV.
LG Electronics, the world's second-largest television
manufacturer, may take the wraps off a television using
Google's software at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas in January.
But Google still has not won over the four major broadcast
networks. That remains a big problem, said analyst Rick
Munarriz.
"As the owner of a Google TV, I appreciate the software
upgrade that the search giant rolled out earlier this month.
It does improve the platform. The interface is more fluid,"
Munarriz wrote in an article on the Motley Fool
website.
"However, Google still needs to play nice with Tinseltown for
this to revolutionise smart televisions," Munarriz wrote.
"Google can't be right all of the time. For every Android
hit, there will be a Google TV that stumbles out of the
gate."
"It's hard to argue with De Luca's painful assessment," he
said. "Google owes Logitech an apology, though what would be
even better is if it finally takes Google TV to the next
level to make Logitech regret that it ever left."
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