Vizio returns to CES with its most advanced 4K TV ever and support for Apple’s AirPlay 2

Vizio returns to CES with its most advanced 4K TV ever and support for Apple’s AirPlay 2

5 years ago
Anonymous $L9wC17otzH

https://www.theverge.com/2019/1/7/18171670/vizio-p-series-quantum-x-airplay-2-atmos-speakers-ces-2019

Vizio hasn’t had a significant presence at CES since 2014. That year, the company actually went to the effort of issuing a press release to say it was done with the big trade show and would instead introduce TVs, soundbars, and other products at its own media briefings on its own schedule. Fast forward to today, and Vizio is making a return to Las Vegas with an all-new 2019 lineup. Not much about CES has changed; a lot of tech company executives will tell you that its importance continues to shrink with each passing year.

But things have certainly changed for Vizio. It took a gamble and ditched built-in apps and the traditional smart TV experience in favor of “dumb” displays — without a TV tuner, even — that required customers to cast apps like Netflix and YouTube from their phones. Remember the tablet remotes? The company ultimately doubled back on that decision and made it easier to access popular streaming apps on the TV itself (while retaining the useful Chromecast functionality). Vizio was supposed to be purchased by LeEco at one point, but that deal came undone so badly that it led to a lawsuit between the two. And then there was the invasive tracking of customer viewing habits, which drew the ire of the FTC and resulted in a $2.2 million settlement.

Vizio returns to CES with its most advanced 4K TV ever and support for Apple’s AirPlay 2

Jan 7, 2019, 2:27pm UTC
https://www.theverge.com/2019/1/7/18171670/vizio-p-series-quantum-x-airplay-2-atmos-speakers-ces-2019 > Vizio hasn’t had a significant presence at CES since 2014. That year, the company actually went to the effort of issuing a press release to say it was done with the big trade show and would instead introduce TVs, soundbars, and other products at its own media briefings on its own schedule. Fast forward to today, and Vizio is making a return to Las Vegas with an all-new 2019 lineup. Not much about CES has changed; a lot of tech company executives will tell you that its importance continues to shrink with each passing year. > But things have certainly changed for Vizio. It took a gamble and ditched built-in apps and the traditional smart TV experience in favor of “dumb” displays — without a TV tuner, even — that required customers to cast apps like Netflix and YouTube from their phones. Remember the tablet remotes? The company ultimately doubled back on that decision and made it easier to access popular streaming apps on the TV itself (while retaining the useful Chromecast functionality). Vizio was supposed to be purchased by LeEco at one point, but that deal came undone so badly that it led to a lawsuit between the two. And then there was the invasive tracking of customer viewing habits, which drew the ire of the FTC and resulted in a $2.2 million settlement.