GOOGLE’S
NEW TV device, the Chromecast is a thumb-size dongle that plugs into an HDMI
port, receives power from USB, and acts like a Chrome browser, which lets it
play movies, TV shows, music, and photos on your HDTV. You control it using any
Android or iOS device, a Mac or Windows PC, or a Chromebook.
Although
I hit a couple of snags, this little device is a pretty big deal. The
Chromecast has plenty of competitors: The Apple TV and Roku set-top boxes
deliver similar results, though they don’t work the same way. The Chromecast’s
first advantage is price—it’s only $35, versus $99 for an Apple TV. (Roku boxes
start at $50.) Setup takes a couple more steps than for an Apple TV or Roku
box, but it’s still easy: First, plug the Chromecast into a free HDMI port on your
TV. Most people will need to connect the included Micro-USB cable to the
Chromecast and then plug the other end into a USB port Google’s Chromecast: The
Internet on your TV BY SUSIE OCHSon the TV or into the supplied power adapter
to plug into the wall. Then you visit a website on your Android device or in
the Chrome browser on your Mac or PC, where you’re prompted to download another
small Chromecast app to complete the setup.
Controlling
the Chromecast
The
software to control the Chromecast consists of names you most likely already
have on your phone, tablet, or computer: Chrome, Netflix, YouTube, and Google’s
own iTunes Store-like Play Movies & TV and Play Music. “Casting” a tab from
the Chrome browser on your Mac or PC requires a Chrome extension called Google
Cast, which adds the Chromecast button to your toolbar. The idea is that you
control the Chromecast using the same apps that you already employ. Why does
Google call it “casting” instead of “streaming”? Once you tell the Chromecast
what you would like to watch, it goes out on the Internet and retrieves that
material—your device isn’t involved in the streaming end at all. The Chromecast
can turn on your TV and select the right input, without your going anywhere
near the TV remote. It employs an HDMI feature called CEC, or Consumer Electronics
Control, to turn on your TV and choose the appropriate HDMI input when you tell
your control device you intend to use the Chromecast. TV manufacturers all have
their own trade names for CEC. You may need to go poking around your TV’s menus
and turn on all the link features that you find. Every website I tried in
Chrome on my Mac played on the Chromecast. You can even watch locally stored
videos by playing them in the Chrome browser, provided they don’t use QuickTime
or Silverlight. The Chromecast doesn’t have security features of its own—you
can’t set a password for it. That means you must handle any security on the
network side. Right now the Chromecast doesn’t do anything the Apple TV can’t
do, but its implementation of YouTube is better, and its support for content
from the Google Play store makes it a no-brainer if you’re invested in that
ecosystem. Its cross-platform support also makes it ideal for households with a
variety of devices. And finally, its price makes it almost an impulse buy.
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