Today, we explore the US Supreme Court's decision to pull the plug on Aereo, take a look at Android Auto, ponder Google's new cardboard VR headset and happily welcome Android device mirroring on the Chromecast.
"Aereo has very little chance surviving in the business and Barry Diller got his hands caught in the regulatory cookie jar," he said. "You can't use technological tricks to bypass [cable network] rules and regulations. I think that's a very reasonable
The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that Aereo, a service that lets users watch broadcast television on Internet-connected devices with dime-sized digital antennas, is effectively stealing content from the media companies. In a 6-to-3 decision
Reality: Aereo was relying on a fairly straightforward business model of charging customers a base fee of $8 for content that it paid nothing for. To continue offering its service, it will need to negotiate deals with the major networks, CBS, Fox, NBC
What will happen to the fledgling live-TV-over-the-internet industry that Aereo represented?
Myth-Busting The Aereo Decision: No The Supreme Court Didn't Kill It... Nor ...