 | Washington Post December 31, 2006 Ever since their invention, the television set and the home computer have remained separate devices, often in separate rooms. But next year could be the year they come together -- or at least become less distinguishable. |
 | San Digeo Daily Transcript December 29, 2006 I'm sitting at a gate at Chicago O'Hare waiting for my flight back home. But instead of the usual boredom, I'm watching my home TV on my notebook computer. |
 | Forbes December 29, 2006 Sling Media -- The company's ingenious Slingbox enables consumers to watch live TV and DVR programming on their PCs and Windows Mobile-enabled wireless devices. Its recent hiring of two former MTV executives signals that CEO Blake Krikorian is open to making deals with TV networks, movie studios and other owners and creators of content. Expect a busy year for Krikorian and Sling. |
 | San Jose Mercury News December 29, 2006 One of the things consumers will get out of this computer-consumer-communications mish mash is choice. Thanks to devices such as Sling Media's Slingbox, an Internet-connected video translation machine, you can watch recorded shows like ``Lost'' on your laptop or your cell phone, for example. And NPD Group tracked more than 190 different flat-panel TVs advertised on Black Friday. |
 | BBC December 29, 2006 Anyone who has been online for some years, as I have been, should have felt very smug this year as the internet and all its associated technologies, services, protocols and applications went mainstream. |
 | Sports Illustrated December 22, 2006 I first met Blake Krikorian, the CEO of Sling Media, in February and as he showed off his tiny silver invention and what it was capable of, I literally laughed. The mini box, about the size of a six-inch sub, with perforated words such as, "My DVR, My Satellite, My Music, Anywhere" on the top, was nice but it couldn't possibly change the way I watched television. At best, I thought, it might make a cool little doorstop. |
 | Inside Bay Area December 22, 2006 Shoppers have three days to finish buying Christmas gifts and some haven't even started. The idea of last-minute shopping has taken on a different meaning this year since giftgivers have a full weekend left and some online vendors are offering Saturday delivery. |
 | ESPN December 21, 2006 Great for anyone who travels: You can hook it up to your TV (warning: it's complicated), then access your TV through your laptop from anywhere in the world. For instance, let's say I have to go to New York for business, and I'm staying in a hotel that night, but I want to watch the Celtics-Clippers game. If I TiVo'ed the game, I can watch the game on my laptop with the Slingbox. Not only is this incredible, I have no idea how it's legal. But I hope you get one while it still is. |
 | Personal Computer World December 21, 2006 I consider few products to be innovative. Most are step changes that bring improvements, but rarely have the wow factor that stops you in your tracks. A product this year that was, in my eyes, truly innovative, was Sling Media?s Slingbox. |
 | ABC News December 20, 2006 The set-top market will undergo a transition this year at CES, as boxes begin to truly rival the traditional media players as the primary source of televised entertainment. |
 | Advertising Age December 18, 2006 As if the Slingbox wasn't cool enough, the Pro model adds high definition and the ability to hook up to four AV sources. The basic premise of place- and time-shifted TV watching remains unchanged, with the ability to watch via a computer or Windows-enabled mobile device anytime, anywhere. One bummer: A necessary HD cord is not included, and costs an extra $50. |
 | USA Today December 18, 2006 The San Francisco Giants were in the thick of the pennant race in August 2002. And Blake Krikorian and his brother, Jason, were stuck at their office with no way to watch. |
 | New york Post December 17, 2006 The latest gadgets for Christmas |
 | Digital Lifestyles December 15, 2006 So why would you upgrade from the Silver package (£5/month extra) to the Gold (£10/month?). The key offering here is the Slingbox, which you can buy at a discounted price of £99 (it's usually about £150). This connects to your TV or set-top box and fires video over your domestic broadband service to the X-Series handset (or a laptop) running the SlingPlayer software. Unlike other mobile TV services, this is actually streaming your very own telly signals, so if you've got a Sky box, for instance, you'll be able to watch exactly what's showing on your TV at home, be it BBC One, Premiership footie or a 'specialist' subscription channel. |
 | The Guardian December 14, 2006 What impressed me most was not the Carl Zeiss camera (excellent though it is), nor the free phone calls through the internet via Skype, nor the one-click access to Yahoo and eBay; it was the link with a set-top device called Slingbox. It is difficult to get the measure of this device without seeing it in action. Slingbox, amazingly, enables you to watch surprisingly high-resolution television on your mobile phone anywhere on 3's network. (Article Requires Free Registration) |
 | The Independent December 08, 2006 |
 | Sunday Telegraph December 03, 2006 |
 | CED Magazine December 01, 2006 Sling Media has done for place-shifting what TiVo has already done for time-shifting: given the category a brand identity and a mainstream coolness factor. |
 | Men's Health November 29, 2006 |
 | ABC News November 29, 2006 Watch TV from anywhere, anytime. |
 | Digital Trends November 28, 2006 In the world of technology there are a few companies whose names are held in high regard by early adopters for their creativity of products. One is Apple with its iPod, another is Tivo and its digital video recorder. And still another working its way into this ranking is Sling Media with their Slingbox.
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 | Twin Cities - Pioneer Press November 27, 2006 I have more gotta-watch TV shows than usual this fall. Along with my regular diet of "Smallville" and "Battlestar Galactica," I've become addicted to "Heroes," "Jericho" and "Doctor Who." I'm even tuning into such nongeeky fare as "Ugly Betty." Keeping up with it all is a challenge, lemme tell you. But I've stumbled on a technology that makes it a lot easier.
It's called a Slingbox, and it has a sole purpose: Hijacking your home's live-TV feeds and TV recordings (with your blessing, of course) and retransmitting them over the Internet so you can tap into them from afar. |
 | The Independent November 25, 2006 |
 | CNN November 17, 2006 Embracing a technology that has unnerved media and telecommunications companies, a major European wireless provider will let customers watch their home cable TV on a cell phone if they also have a device called the Slingbox back at the house. |
 | Wired Blogs November 16, 2006 Hutchinson Whampoa, which operates British mobile provider 3, has teamed up with Sling Media to delivery streaming television to mobile devices. The service includes broadcast, cable and satelite content. |
 | Blender Magazine November 16, 2006 Rock Star Recommendation - John Legend |
 | Stuff Magazine November 16, 2006 If there's one thing that can make a day at the office more bearable, it's being able to watch The Office, or any other TV show on your phone or PC. |
 | T3 Magazine December 01, 2006 |
 | Toronto Star November 09, 2006 Slingbox lets you watch T.O. stations around the world All you need is a laptop and an Internet hookup |
 | The Hollywood Reporter October 26, 2006 Some video programming is on TV screens and some is on PC or mobile phone screens. Some is free, some isn't. Some is available on-demand and some isn't. The whole system is begging for simplicity, according to many of the speakers who took part Wednesday in Forbes' two-day Media, Electronic Entertainment, Technology conference at the Beverly Hills Hotel. |
 | MSNBC October 23, 2006 The Tuner, AV and high-definition-ready Pro deliver as promised |
 | BBC October 20, 2006 Technology commentator Bill Thompson says the move of TV series Lost from Channel 4 to Sky is a growing irrelevance in the online age...There are also innovative ways to get access to broadcast TV or shows you have recorded yourself. One of the highlights of the Symbian Smartphone show this week was the mobile version of the Slingbox player. |
 | Guardian Unlimited October 20, 2006 What possessed the organisers of the uber-posh Monaco Media Forum to invite a scruffy blogger like me in? It was pitched to me as the media does Davos in Monaco. It's an interesting mash-up of global and regional media companies trying to figure out how to catch the GooTube, MySpace, Web 2.0 wave. |
 | Telecom Redux October 19, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including quotes from Blake Krikorian. |
 | PC Magazine October 19, 2006 The place-shifting Slingbox Pro is a great way?especially for DVR users?to watch a virtual version of your home television on PCs or Windows Mobile devices. |
 | Mediacenterpcworld.com October 19, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including quotes from Blake Krikorian. |
 | Forbes October 19, 2006 Digital video recorders such as TiVo have allowed us to record shows while we're away and watch them later (the technological name for this capability is "time-shifting"). Slingbox, on the other hand, does "place-shifting," allowing you to control and watch your television, DVR, DVD player and virtually any other AV component while on the road. Slingbox sends the audio and video inputs out over the Internet, compressing the signal so you can tune in on your laptop or even a Windows Mobile cellphone. |
 | Sports Illustrated October 19, 2006 It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that sling. That's what Cal fans were saying last Saturday at Memorial Stadium as the university, hamstrung by the Pac-10's awful TV deal and its maddening restrictions, found a way to provide video coverage of the Bears' 21-3 victory at Washington State. |
 | PC Advisor Online October 18, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including quotes from Blake Krikorian.
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 | Time Magazine October 18, 2006 Place shifting in the age of high-definition television |
 | Newswireless.net October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including a quote from Blake Krikorian.
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 | Mobile Entertainment Online October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including quotes from Blake Krikorian. |
 | The Oakland Tribune October 17, 2006 Slingbox lets 6,000 watch game live in stadium by aligning technology |
 | , News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including quotes from Blake Krikorian. |
 | The Inquirer October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software.
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 | The Register October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software.
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 | T3 Online October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software.
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 | YouTube October 17, 2006 Video: Slingcast of the Washington State University vs. UC Berkeley football game made possible by a Slingbox. |
 | Gizmodo October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including a quote from Blake Krikorian.
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 | Pocket-lint.co.uk October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software.
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 | EE Times UK October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including a quote from Blake Krikorian.
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 | Advanced Television.com October 27, 2006 Digital lifestyle consumer electronics products company Sling Media has teamed up with smartphone open operating systems Symbian to enable users to redirect or ?placeshift??TV from their home to their mobile phones. |
 | Stuff Magazine October 17, 2006 News article on the SlingPlayer Mobile for Symbian OS software. Including a quote from Blake Krikorian.
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 | CNN September 28, 2006 |
 | MaximumPC September 28, 2006 Sling Media is now shipping several new models of their products that enable you to watch and control your TV or DVR anywhere you have web access and a PC or smartphone. We?re particularly interested in the Slingbox Pro, pictured here, which looks to be much more sophisticated than the original product that we reviewed in December, 2005. |
 | TWICE September 28, 2006 San Mateo, Calif. Not to be outdone by Sony's recent next-generation LocationFree TV introductions, Sling Media is now shipping three next-generation Slingbox tuner models, at more affordable price points. |
 | Orange County Register September 28, 2006 Several options exist today. Services, like Verizon's VCAST ($15 a month), stream CNN clips, "Sesame Street" segments and other video. Slingbox, the gadget that lets you watch what's on your home TV when you're nowhere near, has a version for smart phones ($30 at www.slingmedia.com). And then there's real TV. Roundbox Inc. in New Jersey is creating a way for phones to include TV tuners and take advantage of broadcast channels. Mobile companies are interested because video wouldn't hog up valued cell-phone bandwidth. |
 | MobileTech Review September 28, 2006 Sling Media today three new Slingboxes that increase streaming performance by up to 300 percent over the home LAN. Slingbox PRO includes an optional HD component input for customers who have next generation HD receivers. |
 | SciFi.com September 28, 2006 Slingbox is a much-loved time shifting device for your TV. It allows you to watch your TV from anywhere that has an Internet connection, including portable devices such as the Motorola Q, at 640 x 480, the same resolution as the new iTunes movie store downloads. It doesn't just stream a few channels ??it lets you control your own TV, including your TiVo, on demand, and pay per view, just like if you were at home. Sling Media is releasing three updated Slingboxes today for various types of users, replacing its original single model. |
 | CrunchGear September 28, 2006 Sling Media?s Slingbox is one of those products that you might not grasp the necessity of until you use it?like a tablet PC, TiVo or condoms. For the uninitiated, the short of it is the Slingbox lets you watch and control your home TV on a laptop, desktop or select mobile devices. The first version had some very minor drawbacks but all-in-all it was a great product. |
 | , Sling Media this week lifted the lid on three new versions of its Slingbox remote TV appliances. The latest models allow users not only to time-shift content, but also to view it from any location through laptops, desktop PCs, PDAs and smartphones using an Internet connection. |
 | Multichannel News September 28, 2006 Sling Media is expanding its product lineup of portable TV products with a trio of new devices aimed at analog-TV viewers, as well as those with HDTV sets. |
 | ABC News September 28, 2006 The Slingbox Tuner lets you watch your home TV anywhere, but it's useful only for those who have a good basic cable lineup. |
 | Geek.com September 28, 2006 When I met with the Sling Media executives last month (see my interview) I was shown some mock-ups of three new Slingbox products. Yesterday at Mobius Boston, Brian Jaquet revealed the three new units: the Tuner, AV, and PRO. They should be officially announced sometime today on the Sling Media site, and I understand that Best Buy stores started selling them before they were announced. |
 | Reuters September 28, 2006 |
 | CNET September 27, 2006 The original Slingbox (model SB100-100) may not have been the first place-shifting device to hit the market, but it quickly became a favorite way for gadget fans to watch their favorite TV shows regardless of their location. Now, about 18 months after the release of the original Slingbox, the second generation has arrived, made up of not one but three new models: the Slingbox Tuner ($180), the Slingbox A/V ($180), and the Slingbox Pro ($250). See how they compare. |
 | Red Herring September 28, 2006 Sling Media introduced three models of its Slingbox remote TV viewing devices Thursday, featuring speed increases of up to 400 percent, a new look, and support for high-definition TV and various TV setups |
 | Laptop Magazine September 28, 2006 The company that gave us the coolest innovation in TV since TiVo is at it again, today launching three new Slingbox devices that promise a 300 percent video quality improvement along with a much easier setup. If you like the idea of watching your favorite shows on your laptop or smart phone, and don't want to pay a monthly fee to do it, check out our impressions of this slick gadget. |
 | PC Magazine September 28, 2006 Sling Media has slung its Slingbox into the HD generation, announcing three products that address the high-end consumer as well as a traveler who simply wants to view the local news while on the road. |
 | Laptop Magazine September 28, 2006 Today, Sling Media announced three new additions to the Slingbox family: the Slingbox Tuner, the Slingbox AV, and the Slingbox Pro. These new items follow up the successful Slingbox , a device that connects to a cable box, satellite receiver, or digital video recorder to redirect television programming to the computer of your choice. |
 | SFGate.com September 28, 2006 Sling Media, maker of the Slingbox, has broadened its line of "place shifting" gadgets that allow television lovers to watch their own home programming from remote PCs and mobile devices. The San Mateo company released three new components Thursday that help television watchers connect to their television from outside their home. |
 | New York Times September 28, 2006 The original Slingbox ??the set-top device from Sling Media that pipes programs from your home television across the Internet to your computer screen ??is getting some siblings. The company announced three new versions this week, each intended for a different technological need of the television-obsessed public. |
 | CNET September 27, 2006 Sling Media, maker of the placeshifting Slingbox device, on Wednesday released three new gadgets for watching TV remotely: the Slingbox Pro, Slingbox AV and Slingbox Tuner. Each product targets a different segment of the TV-watching market--home-theater enthusiasts; DVR or cable set-top box owners; and basic-cable subscribers. |
 | Engadget September 27, 2006 Details about all three of these already leaked out over the past couple of weeks, but Sling Media is formally introducing three new Slingboxes, the Slingbox PRO, the Slingbox AV, and the Slingbox Tuner. All three perform the same basic function -- they let you stream TV from your cable box (digital or analog), satellite receiver, or DVR to a computer or mobile device -- it's just that each is aimed at different segments of the market. |
 | informitv.com August 16, 2006 Viasat will use the Sling Media Slingbox to deliver Viasat Everywhere as an extension to its satellite service in Scandanavia. This will allow users to watch and control their home television programming on any internet-connected computer. |
 | What Laptop September 01, 2006 |
 | Information Week March 30, 2006 Sling Media Inc. CEO Blake Krikorian testified before the House Commerce Committee that his video "place shifting" device will help, not hurt, broadcasters and cable providers. |
 | This Week in Consumer Electronics August 22, 2006 Sling Media has kicked off a special promotion that will give customers who purchase a Slingbox Internet-based TV sender a free registration key for either a SlingPlayer Mobile for Pocket PC or the just released version of SlingPlayer Mobile for Windows Smartphone." |
 | Forbes August 25, 2006 Sling Media made a big splash last year with the debut of Slingbox, a funny-looking device resembling a large, chunky candy bar still in its silver wrapping. Despite its toy-like appearance, Slingbox is a serious piece of hardware that can remotely connect a personal computer to a home television set via the Internet. This enables customers to watch live broadcast, cable or satellite TV, as well as programming stored on a digital video recorder, anywhere they can find a broadband connection. |
 | MediaShift May 01, 2006 With some gadgets, there?s a ?wow??factor that you can milk with each person you encounter. But when the ?wow?s wear off, you?re sitting there with a device that doesn?t always have an everyday purpose. That?s my feeling with the Slingbox , a cool device that lets you watch your home TV ??including your TiVo or digital video recorder ??from any Windows computer or mobile device with a broadband Internet connection. |
 | Maxim September 01, 2006 |
 | The Independent August 10, 2006 |
 | Press Gazette August 10, 2006 It might look like an oversized Yorkie bar, but this little gem packs more punch then a 50g slab of cocoa and milk solids any day. |
 | Stuff August 06, 2006 |
 | Business 2.0 June 01, 2006 TiVo sparked a media revolution by popularizing "time shifting" -- allowing TV viewers to watch on their own schedules. Krikorian is doing the same with "place shifting" -- enabling people to remotely watch programming streamed from their home TVs |
 | Cnet July 03, 2006 The Motorola Q lives up to much of the hype by offering good call quality, an excellent multimedia experience and the essential productivity tools, all wrapped up in a sexy package. You can use the TV-streaming Sling Media Slingbox with the Motorola Q (or any Windows Mobile device, for that matter) to watch live sports right on your device. |
 | Broadcast & Cable March 29, 2006 Sling Media CEO Blake Kirkorian argued that his product represented "place shifting," a new phase in TV viewing that met the needs of an increasingly mobile populace for TV on other than their home reciever. |
 | Shiny Shiny August 01, 2006 Since its launch in the US many moons ago, you will have noticed a string of national disasters caused by people taking their eye off the ball because they've been watching TV on their laptops, via Slingbox. |
 | Wall Street Journal August 12, 2006 Start-Ups, Small Firms Are Especially Keen to Hire - Mr. Boos Eats His Words. (Requires Registration to View Article)
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 | Red Herring January 11, 2006 The rush to deliver streaming video via cell phones or the web is forcing television networks to deliver more than just archived content on these rapidly emerging entertainment platforms. |
 | Digital TV Center March 29, 2006 Slingbox and TiVo are small entrepreneurial companies that represent the best of American innovation. They empower Americans to watch their lawfully acquired content where and when they want. These ingenious products are good for consumers and good for the content industry, and will help America remain the world leader in innovation. |
 | Silicon Valley Business Journal April 28, 2006 In a matter of mere months, Sling Media Inc. and its Slingbox device have become the hot topic of the sports and media worlds and the subject of a caustic debate few... |
 | Houstan Chronicle February 18, 2006 Slingbox steals show as NBA talks technology |
 | Electronic Design June 29, 2006 The TV still may be the main source of entertainment for most consumers, but now it has some company?and competition. |
 | Daily Candy July 31, 2006 Before your nose gets any bigger, Pinocchio, get Slingbox, a technological miracle that brings television to your laptop, desktop, or PDA ??anywhere with an Internet connection. |
 | Motel & Hotel Management Magazine August 07, 2006 Mark Ozawa, managing director at Accuvia Consulting, said there are technologies that ride on the available Internet bandwidth such as Slingbox, which allows guests to watch their home television programming over the Internet, Movielink, which allows guests to download and watch movies on demand, and Skype, which allows guest to make phone calls via their computers, that are starting to siphon some of the hotels' revenue. |
 | KLKN Channel 8 August 01, 2006 For the traveling executives, the Slingbox enables you to watch your TV programming from wherever you are by turning virtually any Internet-connected PC into your personal TV. |
 | Girlawhirl June 22, 2006 Slingbox, by Sling Media allows Girlawhirl to watch her home TV via her laptop, anywhere, anytime. Here?s how it works: a small candy bar looking device (how delicious?) rests peacefully on top of her television, and can even be connected through her TiVo®. |
 | Slyck March 30, 2006 The growing sophistication of consumer electronics continues at a spell binding pace. Consumer devices are becoming more integrated with the capabilities of the home computer and the widespread adaptation of broadband. The growing important of Bluetooth has brought about a level of interoperability who's potential is only starting to be realized. |
 | MSNBC March 23, 2006 Slingbox?s Mobile software is available as a free download ??for now |
 | North Jersey News March 30, 2006 Whoa! A Slingbox has place-shifted my TV. |
 | PC Advisor August 01, 2006 |
 | CBS 2 Chicago August 18, 2006 Internet-Based Gadget Lets You Stream Your Home TV To Your PC, Pocket PC, Or Smartphone |
 | Red Herring February 13, 2006 Now that TV is being launched on mobile phones, consumers are clamoring for the ability to both time-shift content and ?place-shift?—access home satellite and cable television connections while on the move. So it comes as no surprise that Sling Media, whose Slingbox redirects a TV stream from a cable box, satellite receiver, or digital video recorder in a consumer?s home to an Internet-connected PC anywhere in the world, is going mobile. |
 | Wireless Week March 15, 2006 Wireless carriers are becoming increasingly concerned about companies that treat them as pipelines. |
 | Red Herring April 04, 2006 "Red Herring narrows competition for ?Red Herring 100 North America??to 200 companies." |
 | Electronic Design June 29, 2006 Entertainment PCs are becoming more popular?and cheaper?every day. So what will become of the media center PC? |
 | Jupiter Research / Analyst Weblogs August 16, 2006 Yesterday, the Slingbox launched in Sweden, but in an extremely interesting development it's being sold by leading satellite TV operator Viasat under the name Viasat Everywhere. So, rather than Sling threatening the pay TV market, Viasat is looking to add additional value for their pay TV customers by offering Slingboxes alongside their NDS-powered DVR."
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 | Rocky Mountain News August 21, 2006 Aspen Summit to mull joys, trials of tech convergence |
 | Contra Costa Time April 13, 2006 "Technology allows traveling customers to keep up with favorite television programs" |
 | Red Herring January 30, 2006 Sling Media, which makes a set-top box that allows users to access their television programs, music, and pictures from their laptops and other mobile devices, said Monday it has secured $46.6 million in a second round of financing. |
 | Engadget January 31, 2006 Not that we were worried about those guys, but for those interested in the higher level goings on of Sling Media, makers of the Slingbox, they just got a $46.6 cash infusion from a number of notable investors, including Mobius, The Hearst Corporation, and EchoStar. |
 | Cnet January 31, 2006 Sling Media, one of Silicon Valley's hottest start-ups, announced Tuesday that it has raised another $46.6 million in funding. |
 | Red Herring March 23, 2006 Slingbox maker adds mobile devices to the growing reach of the home TV. |
 | EE Times March 30, 2006 Sling Media's ?Slingbox??grabs the TV signal at the home and slings it out over a broadband connection to a laptop, cell phone or any other connected device. Where the Tivo allows viewers to ?time shift??their programming, Sling allows them to ?place shift??it. |
 | Business Week March 27, 2006 SlingPlayer does a good job of bringing TV shows to mobile phones and PDA. |
 | Market Watch February 08, 2006 Soon enough, we'll be in another world as we watch ballgames, episodes of Seinfeld, or the end of a movie we didn't finish watching that was recorded on our TiVo. And, we'll have the option of accessing those shows on our cell phones, thanks to Sling Media. |
 | Chicago Sun Times February 23, 2006 There are some technologies and products that simply speak for themselves. It's a terrific idea, it's well-executed, and it hasn't been done already a million times. |
 | Red Herring January 10, 2006 Sling Media adds the Mac to its rapidly growing list of extensions to the home TV. |
 | USA Today March 22, 2006 I am riding a New York City bus watching a live baseball game on a Palm Treo "smartphone." Given the device's small screen, I am not exactly in couch-potato heaven ??it is difficult to make out balls and strikes. Still, there is something novel and thrilling about taking in TV on a cellphone. |
 | Mac World January 10, 2006 Blake Krikorian, the CEO of Sling Media, is an old-time Mac user and told me he?s excited about finally getting their technology up and running on the Mac. |
 | Market News March 30, 2006 Sling Media, Inc. celebrated the Canadian debut of its Slingbox device at an event today at the Gibsone Jessop Gallery in Toronto?s Historic Distillery District. Slingbox allows users to access their home video sources using a Windows PC or handheld device anywhere in the world where there?s a high-speed Internet connection. |
 | Washington Post March 22, 2006 I watched television while I walked to the Metro on Tuesday morning -- and during my trip through the subway, then at my desk at the office. My TV set was a Treo 700w "smart phone," my antenna was the phone's wireless data connection, and the broadcast came from a small silver rectangle parked next to the TV in my living room. |
 | Cnet January 11, 2006 Yes, indeed, the Mobile version of the software works well using either a Wi-Fi or a 3G network, and honestly, it--along with the Slingbox itself--is one of the coolest and most useful products I've seen in a long time."
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 | Cnet March 28, 2006 The Slingbox rules. The space-age-looking silver set-top box will stream live or prerecorded TV that you would normally watch on your own TV to virtually any modern Windows computer. |
 | Time Europe April 23, 2006 "TiVo? That's so last year. There's a new cool device for the TV: the Slingbox, which lets you watch your home television when you're halfway around the world. Don't worry if that business trip to Australia has inconveniently come just when Man U is playing Arsenal in London. With a Slingbox in the living room and an Internet-connected laptop or 3G mobile phone on the road, you can follow every live strike by Thierry Henry and Wayne Rooney just as if you were slumped into your favorite comfy chair in Highbury. " |
 | San Francisco Chronicle March 27, 2006 There was nothing remarkable about the movie I was watching -- I, Robot -- it amounted to a lot of computer graphics. The special appeal for me was watching it on my cell phone during my Muni ride home. |
 | Brighthand June 21, 2006 Sling Media is offering a device that lets you stream just about any kind of video or audio directly to your Windows Mobile device. All you have to do is buy a simple gadget that can convert your audio or video into a digital format in real time and broadcast it over the Internet to your handheld or smartphone.
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 | Economist March 09, 2006 Consumer electronics: Will ?placeshifting?? which lets you watch your TV from anywhere, be as disruptive as timeshifting? |
 | Newsweek International Edition August 01, 2006 Love to travel but hate missing your team's matches? Whine no more. New "place shifting" technology lets you take local programming on the road. Slingmedia's Slingbox redirects your home TV signal from an antenna, cable box or satellite to your Net-accessible PC or laptop. The Slingbox connects to the TV and the Net, while SlingPlayer software is uploaded to your PC |
 | Digital Journal March 30, 2006 Leading the American placeshifting craze is Sling Media, an electronics company born out of Silicon Valley. |
 | MacObserver January 10, 2006 Sling Media, Inc. announced Tuesday its Slingbox -- a set-top box that allows users to watch recorded programs or live TV from an Internet-connected computer anywhere in the world -- will be available to Mac users beginning in the second quarter. |
 | Wall Street Journal March 16, 2006 Stations Are Using Technology To Restrict Who Watches - Seeking Aid From Congress Undermined by a 'Slingbox' (Requires subscription to view) |
 | Cnet June 09, 2006 This is one piece of gear that can stay at home. The $200 Slingbox streams live TV--and your TiVo'd shows--from your home to any Web-connected Windows PC or Windows Mobile device in the world. And that means you can watch live baseball when you're in Belgium, your hometown news in Hawaii, and American Idol in Azerbaijan. All you need is a Wi-Fi hot spot, a Slingbox, and a laptop or a Windows Mobile phone. And an excuse for vacationing in Azerbaijan. |
 | Light Reading April 24, 2006 "In March, Sling Media Inc. jumped out in front of the mobile video craze by enabling owners of its Slingbox device to send the TV services they pay for so dearly at home to their cell phones and PDAs. (See Sling Media: We're Good for Cable.) The SlingPlayer Mobile software is available for free today, and Sling says the uptake has been substantial so far. Why buy specialized mobile content when you can just plain watch your own TV?" |
 | New York Times March 22, 2006 Starting today, Slingbox owners can install new player software on Windows Mobile palmtops and cellphones, thereby eliminating even the laptop requirement. |
 | BBC June 27, 2006 |
 | Inside Bay Area May 01, 2006 FOLLOW THE MONEY, the old detective adage says, to find clues to what is happening. |
 | ZDNet April 25, 2006 "The panelists included Rob Bennett, general manager, MSN Entertainment and Video Services at Microsoft, Jennifer Feikin, director of Google Video at Google, Blake Krikorian, founder & CEO of Sling Media, John Papanek, senior vice president and editorial director of ESPN New Media, and Ben White, vice president of Digital Media at MTV. Frank Rose, a contributed editor to Wired Magazine was the moderator." |
 | USA Today August 17, 2006 A prime example is Sling Media's Slingbox, a $200 cigarette-carton-size box that connects to your home TV or TiVo and redirects that content through the Internet to certain phones (and more commonly) laptops. |
 | Business Week March 03, 2006 The outfit's technology lets users watch homegrown programming from anywhere -- and it could end up in the crosshairs of a buyer. |
 | What HiFi Sound and Vision August 01, 2006 |
 | PC Retail July 01, 2006 |
 | PC Pro June 26, 2006 |
 | Personal Computer World May 30, 2006 |
 | Active Home May 30, 2006 Watch British television programmes anywhere in the world |
 | PC Advisor May 30, 2006 |
 | Bios Magazine May 30, 2006 Sling Media, a digital lifestyle consumer electronics products company, today announced that its award-winning Slingbox is now available for purchase across the United Kingdom. |
 | T3 May 30, 2006 Workload giving you World Cup woes? Set yourself up with a Slingbox and let the action follow you. |
 | Reuters UK , An electronic gadget that promises to unshackle consumers from their TV sets became available in Europe for the first time on Tuesday, opening up new ways for users to watch television wherever they go. |
 | The Register May 30, 2006 Sling Media has launched its Slingbox location-free TV system in the UK, pitching the product at consumer who want to watch British digital television broadcasts anywhere they can get hold of a broadband internet connection. |