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Nintendo Television Wii Entertainment

Nintendo TVii Service Will Go Dark August 11th 34

Kotaku reports that Nintendo has announced it will shutter its Wii U TVii in just a few weeks; after August 11th, the service will be no more. The description that Kotaku offers gives some idea of why: Nintendo TVii promised to turn television watching into a robust social experience, tracking users' favorite shows, making suggestions based on familial preferences, integrating with all of the major streaming video services, programming DVR recordings and acting as a second screen experience on the Wii U game pad. It sounded pretty amazing. It wasn’t really. It was awkward and fumbling and a year later the Xbox One came along with its HDMI pass-through and voice-controlled TV watching and made Nintendo TVii look silly."
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Nintendo TVii Service Will Go Dark August 11th

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  • yeah, that's how to do it.
  • Do you want to lose users?

    Because that's how you lose users.

    • by LMariachi ( 86077 ) on Saturday July 25, 2015 @09:05PM (#50183325) Journal

      Most people, even those with some inkling of concern with privacy, really don't give a shit if a company knows what shows they like. All it means is they might get ads that might interest them instead of ads that are totally irrelevant.

      TV preferences aren't medical records or bank statements or Ashley Madison accounts.

      • If I have to be subjected to ads, I want them to be irrelevant. I'd rather be bored than tempted to spend money.

        Of course, in reality I just avoid ads altogether (including rejecting services that have them, such as cable TV).

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday July 25, 2015 @09:07PM (#50183327)

      Sadly, that's not how you lose users. At all. If anything it is how you gain them.

      Play Steam games? XBone? PS4? Every game you play, for how long, etc is tracked.

      Have a smart phone? Your travels are tracked. Your contacts are tracked.

      Use Facebook? Your friends network is tracked.

      Use gmail? What you say to your friends is tracked.

      People have demonstrated conclusively over years and years now that they do NOT care about being tracked. All the above things are wildly popular. If this thing failed, it wasn't because of that, it was because it didn't hold up in some other way that people wanted it to.

      • by Xest ( 935314 )

        Yeah, there are other reasons it's not really the issue though.

        I'm going to come out and admit that I like the Wii U, I have all last gen and current gen consoles, and it's one of my favourites. It's not got the power of my PS4 or my X1, and sure it's been screwed on 3rd party game support leaving it few titles.

        But it does have some quality titles, at the end of the day Nintendo has still put out more high quality 1st party titles that deserve game ratings in the 90%+ range than Nintendo and Sony have manag

      • by Anonymous Coward

        You forgot a pretty big and important one in your list.

        Do you watch more than basic cable already? Then you are already tracked, down to logging every button press on your cable box remote control, including DVR functions like pause/play and normal functions like volume and mute.

        If you use Nintendo or Xbox TV (or presumably the new PSN TV once it is launched) most all people are already required to have a service that tracks you before the additional service that also tracks you will even function.

        Since ov

  • Kotaku hates you (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    You gamers are dead to them. They said so [kotaku.com].

  • Actually, it's a shame, cause TVii had an interesting expansion of the concept of TV/social media integration (even though it was something already done by apps such as tvtag), plus unlike OneGuide, it actually had the CORRECT LISTINGS for my provider (last time I tried it, the channel list for my provider was out of date)
    • However, the problem you described should not be solved by a third party like Nintendo TVii - it should have been fixed by the ones delivering the programmes to the households. We have been given EPG for years now, and the broadcasters still cannot match their internal timetable to the EPG listings. I am not sure if it is malice or incopetence this time.
  • Did it launch in Europe?

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

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