Get BitTorrent on Your TV with Myka

Written by Ben Jones on March 21, 2008 

Until recently, if you’ve wanted to play videos you’ve downloaded on your TV, you either needed to hook it to your PC, buy an AppleTV, or use an Xbox. Now, one company aims to add another option - one which can get the videos itself, via BitTorrent.

Myka TV torrent boxThe Myka box, is a small set top box, not all that dissimilar from the AppleTV although larger. Like the Apple product, it aims to be a video playback device for your television, able to pull video from computers on a local network. What makes the Myka different, however, is that it incorporates a BitTorrent client.

Incorporating torrent technology into a set-top box could be a very powerful driving force for the torrent community, bringing it into the homes and minds of many more people. Quite how Comcast will feel about it though, is another matter.

Technically, the box’s specs look good, with HDTV resolutions up to 1080i available. Of perhaps greater note is that it may be possible, with its h.264 support, to playback Blu-Ray torrents. Also, there has been suggestions posted to the Myka forums, that a Blu-Ray drive could be coming in the future. If so, it might cut into some of the sales the PS3 has been getting.

Hardware wise, the system seems solid enough. The only options, at present, are the size of the included hard drive. The OS, for those of you that care, will be a highly customised version of Linux. PAL versions, with SCART are also promised.

Legally, there are some worried about how the Grokster decision might affect things in the US. Selling a product which can infringe copyright was held in that case to be ‘contributory infringement’. Myka boss, Dan Lovy, told TorrentFreak “We’ve looked the legal side extensively. We are like a movie projector. It has kept the competition down though, to our advantage.”

Price-wise, its comparable with the Apple offering. The 160Gb model is $20 more expensive than the equivalent AppleTV but this may be felt by many, to be a small price to pay for access to the vast library of content available.

At present, we haven’t seen one in the flesh, so to speak. According to Myka, BitTorrent inc. is currently developing the torrent software, but we hope to bring you a full review as soon as possible.

Previously: German Court Decision Hands Big Win to File-Sharers

Next: BitTorrent Sites Show Explosive Growth

61 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)

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26 Mar 21, 2008 at 11:43 by thenotsojollyroger

ye tools…..you can get a divx player and burn your .avi’s to blank cd-r’s as data, then crack it on!
blank CD’s cost like 20c……why put it on blank dvd?:?

27 Mar 21, 2008 at 12:09 by Digimuse

It reminds me of the LamaBox.

What ever happened to that?

28 Mar 21, 2008 at 13:17 by Robin

RESPECT!

29 Mar 21, 2008 at 14:07 by The P!nk Pr!nce

Looks pretty mental, if they can get all the niggly bits that are bound to pop up sorted out by x-mas I would be up for getting one!

30 Mar 21, 2008 at 14:33 by Bruce Wagner

Don’t forget about the other option:

You can now buy a Philips/DVD/Divx-AVI/JPG player… which allows you to watch downloaded AVI files through a menu…

And it costs some incredibly low amount.

There are other brands too.

We bought one and love it!

31 Mar 21, 2008 at 14:49 by Anonymous

[quote]Won ton searching, d/l could bring viruses. A novice in bittorrents[/quote]

This thing runs Linux, therefore no chance of viruses.

[quote]What happens when the videos it finds are in Rar format?[/quote]

It either unrars them or can’t.

[quote]Or the torrent is stuck at 97% because there are no seeders?[/quote]

The same thing happens as to anyone who downloads torrents - it doesn’t complete. Simple.

[quote]ye tools…..you can get a divx player and burn your .avi’s to blank cd-r’s as data, then crack it on!
blank CD’s cost like 20c……why put it on blank dvd?:?[/quote]

Because blank DVDs cost the same (or less) and can hold 6 times more.

32 Mar 21, 2008 at 19:01 by Crandom

I don’t bother with this. I have a laptop with a ATi mobility radeon HD2900 which easily takes HD formats and attach it by the DVI to HDMI cable to my HDTV. It’s much cheaper than buying and Blu-ray player, as you only have to buy the external blu-ray disk drive.

33 Mar 21, 2008 at 23:14 by Ben Jones

[quote comment="315801"]I don’t bother with this. I have a laptop with a ATi mobility radeon HD2900 which easily takes HD formats and attach it by the DVI to HDMI cable to my HDTV. It’s much cheaper than buying and Blu-ray player, as you only have to buy the external blu-ray disk drive.[/quote]
so…
What you’re saying is you bought a laptop for about $1500 which can do the same job as this $350 box? This is surprising?

The point is, this is a standalone box. It’s going to be ready to go out of the box, and it should be simple enough for anyone to use.

Yes, I’m sure many of us could assemble boxes to do the same, might even be able to do cheaper, but whilst you can use it, will your grandmother be able to? That will be the big test of the Myka unit - its usability.

Also, speaking as one who trained as a design engineer, assembling a system from lots of pre-made parts that only go together one way isn’t really that much of an accomplishment, nor is using the box afterwards with the software you’ve decided to put on it. copmuter assembly nowadays is no more difficult than a 5yo’s jigsaw set.The trick is making it retailable and attractive to people.

Now please, no more e-penii waving of “I bought a $2000 computer and I can just plug a TV in and do the same, so I’m not interested” It’s irrelevent. I have 3-4 systems I could do the same with, but I’m still looking forward to this box.

34 Mar 22, 2008 at 00:05 by slash

[quote comment="315356"]Good Idea but $460 for 500 gig model. I paid $60 for an upconverting dvd player that lets me plug in usb flash drive. Also what would a virus do to this myka?[/quote]

…it said linux, not windows. show me a torrent with a virus for linux in it.

35 Mar 22, 2008 at 10:15 by Venkat

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36 Mar 22, 2008 at 10:16 by Dinesh

have a look at this alternative!

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37 Mar 22, 2008 at 13:29 by lol

This is going to be a major flop. The only people that would buy something like this are the people that use torrents already (this isnt going to open up bittorrent to the masses). We already have on demand TV, films etc. And anyone can buy a slingbox for a quarter of that price and stream everything hassle free anyway.

The people that would buy this are smart enough to have already set up a cheaper and workable solution.

38 Mar 22, 2008 at 13:49 by eggs

Torrefntfreak is dead

39 Mar 22, 2008 at 14:52 by Psi

That is awesome. I will probably get one when the price drops.

40 Mar 22, 2008 at 16:57 by Norm

Ever since I started using torrents, I haven’t needed a tv. My computer monitors look so great, that I just play everything on my computer. Since I download all my favorite shows, I have no need for tv service so I canceled my cable subscription. If torrents continue to grow in popularity, I’m afraid boxes like these will become obsolete.

41 Mar 22, 2008 at 19:32 by cc

how the speed when playback . will it lag

42 Mar 22, 2008 at 20:35 by asscore

in response to norm, no a monitor does not look great, and I dont know about you but i dont have a couch or recliner in front of my computer. Also there are those of us with nice stereos and movie projectors, and we hate watching movies on little ass computer monitors

43 Mar 22, 2008 at 23:31 by p2p

On private trackers you don’t hit and run, you keep seeding, which most likely you can’t do from desktop. Check this out - http://www.vuzebox.com

44 Mar 23, 2008 at 02:59 by Anonymous

[quote comment="315692"]
[quote]What happens when the videos it finds are in Rar format?[/quote]

It either unrars them or can’t.

[quote]Or the torrent is stuck at 97% because there are no seeders?[/quote]

The same thing happens as to anyone who downloads torrents - it doesn’t complete. Simple.
[/quote]

To me, a box like this seems aimed at people who aren’t well versed in the use of things like BitTorrent. I mean, it’s a box that you plug in and it lets you download TV shows and movies, then play them on a TV. Anyone who is knowledgable about BT will already be using a computer to download this stuff.

When a novice buys something like this, they expect it to work. Judging by my own experiences with BT, I’d expect this to have about a 50% success rate, if that.

45 Mar 23, 2008 at 03:24 by mierda media

A card reader/ext. hard drive adapter for a t.v. would be awesome.

46 Mar 23, 2008 at 03:38 by chris

seems overpriced 2 me i bought a 50 dollar hdmi upconrting divx dvd player with usb slot on just put xvids avi’s mpeg;s etc. on the flash drive and use it with my dvd player.

47 Mar 23, 2008 at 07:41 by adithya

check out my blog its a technology portal with loadsa fun
http://radonadi.blogspot.com

48 Mar 24, 2008 at 15:38 by 123Kid

Nice.

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