News

Input one belongs to Comcast and Time Warner Cable. Input one belongs to television. Avner Ronen and Boxee want to change the way you think about input one. The new Boxee TV is an unassuming $99 ...
This month Boxee announced the availability of its public beta release, a major new version of the popular media center software. The update brings significant improvements to the user experience ...
Boxee went with an RF remote system over IR for cost reasons, and that means the Boxee Box can't be controlled by universal remotes out of the box -- although you can plug in a Media Center remote ...
Boxee began as a spin off of XBMC - an open source project to make TV something that developers could build on. And from 2008 until 2012 Boxee was the developer's choice for a free desktop video ...
NBC head Jeff Zucker testified to Congress that the media organizer Boxee was not a web browser and, therefore, should not have free access to Hulu, the website that has been blocked from Boxee.
Entertainment & Arts Arts Books Stand-Up Comedy Hollywood Inc. The Envelope (Awards) Movies Music Television De Los ...
Free, open source application Boxee is a new media center application for the Mac (and soon to be Linux and Windows). Based on the open source media center application Xbox Media Center ...
you can still get there from here with add-on boxes that connect to your TV. One of the more intriguing is the Boxee Box, which is made by D-Link and features software by a company called Boxee ...
Boxee launched the Boxee TV shortly before Christmas. At 3,000 Walmart stores. And a major feature is still in beta. As Boxee’s Andrew Kippen explains in the video above, the Boxee TV is ...
Boxee is a free and easy-to-use cross-platform media center that puts all your videos—and most of the web's—in one place. Loaded on a small, cheap, and sleek computer, it might just change ...
See About archive blog posts. Boxee unveiled plans at an event in New York tonight for the next generation of its Web TV software and the first steps of a strategy for invading the set-top box arena.