- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
During the 1990s, everyone wanted to surf the information super-highway — also known as the World Wide Web or just ‘Internet’ — but not everyone was interested in getting one of those newfangled personal computers when they already had a perfect good television set. This opened a market for TV-connected thin clients that could browse the web with a much lower entry fee, with the WebTV service being launched in 1996. Bought by Microsoft in 1997 and renamed MSN TV, it lasted until 2013. Yet rather than this being the end, the service is now being revived by members of the community through the WebTV Redialed project.



Late 90s is when Microsoft started scheming to take control of the living room. They introduced bunch of consumer products around that time. Not many people remember but there was the Windows XP Media Center edition that you can hook up to TV and play various media. They even made a cordless phone for the living room. Not long after they made Zune. Ultimately Microsoft’s ambition to become the gatekeeper for the living room media gave birth to XBOX but ironically it also killed it in the end. Their grand plan they’ve been working for more than a decade culminated on the XBOX One announcement of 2013. The presentation was mostly about how the XBOX One was going to be the central hub of living room media and gaming was just one of many features. We all know how that turned out.
We used Windows Media center on vista for like my entire childhood to watch linear TV and I think local movies too