After using the new Google Chromecast for the last week I thought
I would share a few thoughts. The
Chromecast is a thumb drive like device that plugs into a TV’s HDMI slot. Once plugged in you can transmit videos or
music from your smartphone, tablet, or PC to your TV.
So what is the big deal?
I already have a ROKU box, Apple TV, or an HDMI cable that connects my
computer to my TV. Why do I care about
Chromecast?
The BIG DEAL is this:
Size
I love the Chromecast’s thumb drive shape and size. You can fit the device in your pocket and
take it with you on business trips, vacations, or to show off to your
neighbor. Plus you don’t have a box
sitting on, by, or even under your TV Chromecast is no larger than your average
thumb-drive.
Compatibility
Chromecast is not limited to working with just one computer
or phone. No, you can share this device
across an infinite number of devices.
And that is on both the sharing and the receiving end. You can take this device to a hotel and plug
it into the room’s TV and avoid the onslaught of local TV crap. You can take Chromecast to your friends
place, your girlfriend’s condo, your dad’s retirement home, or your kid’s
Sunday School class. What I am trying to
say is that you can take this device anywhere and run it off any smartphone,
tablet, or PC.
Price
The price is right for the Chromecast. The device is less expensive than most HDMI
cables, making it a no-brainer for someone simply looking to connect their
computer to their TV. When you then
consider the cost of similar Internet TV boxes like Apple TV, you save a lot of
money going with Chromecast.
Now not everything has been peaches and cream with
Chromecast. I being the Googley person
that I am was hoping to have this device cure cancer and bring my dog back from
her backyard grave. It turns out that
Chromecast is not really the cure-all I had hoped.
What I Do Not Like
Wall Plug Dependent
I wish Chromecast ran off a
battery. Why shackle such a powerfully
small device with a wall plugin. The
decision seems akin to a creating a cellphone that must be plugged into the
wall to turn on.
Cloud Only
It is time
to transfer your movies to the cloud, because Google’s Chromecast will only
allow you to play content that is on the online (small movie pun compliments of
The Internship). This means that you will have to find another
way to play all of those movies you downloaded off Torrent last year.
Wi-Fi Required
The biggest
con of Chromecast is that it requires Wi-Fi to function. Chromecast creates a secondary Wi-Fi network
after tapping into your current Wi-Fi network.
It then receives data through this new network. This means that you cannot use Chromecast if
there is no Wi-Fi network to join.
So what does Chromecast mean for Google? Is this Google’s initiation into a low-cost
cost small electronic device market? At
only $35 Chromecast is perfectly targeted to capture the 18-30 tech savvy demographic
that keeps Google in business. Will we
be seeing a Chromecast 2.0 soon? What
does this mean for cable? Are we one
step closer to slaying the major networks and living our lives on Netflix and
YouTube?