• On The Insider: EXCLUSIVE: Britney's Birthday Cake
May 20, 2008 11:43 AM PDT

Panasonic plasma TV streams YouTube, accesses Picasa photos

Posted by David Katzmaier
  • Font size
  • Print

YouTube and Picasa services are available right from the TV in Panasonic's flagship TH-PZ850U.

(Credit: Masa Fukata, Panasonic)

We detailed Panasonic's full plasma lineup earlier this year, but having just returned from a press event devoted to the flagship TH-PZ850U series, it feels incumbent to reiterate some of the cool new features of these expensive sets.

The coolest? A demo at the event proved that the 850Us can stream YouTube videos, right on the TV screen with no PC required. The TV's "Viera Cast" interface allows you to search YouTube by keyword, sort videos by popularity, or access your own list of favorite videos, for example. During the demo we were treated to a video of a laughing baby, the (no-surprise) current champ of the popularity list. According to Panasonic, the entire catalog of YouTube videos is available on the TV, although it may take a day or two for a new one on the site to appear on Viera Cast. The TV can also access Picasa, Google's photo sharing site, so you can view digital photos stored at your (or someone else's) Picasa account directly on the big screen.

Panasonic TH-PX850U series

The 46- and 50-inch versions of the 850U series will be available in June.

(Credit: Panasonic)

The 850U series will also ship with a stock ticker widget that will allow you to track favorite stocks, courtesy of Bloomberg, as well as local and national weather information provided by The Weather Channel. The only other Internet-connected HDTV we've reviewed is Samsung's LN52A650, which offers stocks and video along with a text-based news feed. The IPTV functionality of Viera Cast was altogether more impressive since it can actually stream video and access online photos. For its part, Panasonic is not planning to add an RSS-style feed as seen on the Samsung models.

I asked whether the Panasonic 850U was compatible with NetFlix's Watch Now service for example, which as of Tuesday is available on a Roku set-top box, and Panasonic's rep said that, as a streaming video service similar to YouTube, it was. Of course, the company did not confirm any additional partners at this time, but promised more to come. The ability to add new services to Viera Cast is a big draw, highlighted by the enticing "coming soon" sections in the main interface.

I also asked whether the 850U models, which connect to the Internet via an Ethernet jack, can work with a wireless network, and was told that while there's no "official" wireless solution available from the company, a number of third-party adapters will work.

Other features of the 850U series include an expanded color gamut over the 800U series. According to the company, the Digital Cinema Color Re-Mastering technology can reproduce the same color points used in digital cinema, which are wider than those used in the HDTV standard (aka Rec 709). When we asked the company why its flagship models didn't receive the same THX Display Certification found on the step-down TH-PZ800U series, we were told that rigorous adherence to the HDTV color standard was a prerequisite for THX. We're certain that's not the whole story--THX certification also costs money, and the 850U series is expensive enough already.

The 46-inch TH-45PZ850U ($3,099) and the 50-inch TH-50PZ850U ($3,499) will be available in June, while the 58-inch TH-58PZ850U and the 65-inch TH-65PZ850U (prices for both to be determined) will ship in the fall of this year. We expect to have a review of the 50-inch 850U model by the beginning of June, when we'll flesh out the details and evaluate the flesh tones of laughing babies for ourselves.

On Sale Now: $1,795.00 - $2,499.99
View the latest prices for Panasonic Viera TH-46PZ850U

On Sale Now: $2,004.95 - $2,995.00
View the latest prices for Panasonic Viera TH-50PZ850U

On Sale Now: $2,699.00 - $3,999.99
View the latest prices for Panasonic Viera TH-58PZ850U

On Sale Now: $4,927.00 - $6,999.98
View the latest prices for Panasonic Viera TH-65PZ850U

David Katzmaier reviews HDTVs for CNET. E-mail David.
Recent posts from Crave
Rare flying care listed for sale on eBay
On Call: Finding 3G
A flying toy safe to play with in the house
Could nanotech create speech-powered phones?
'Brothers in Arms: Hour of Heroes' storms App Store
JVC's Time Square display finally on...display
Presents for the Apple iPod Classic
Magnetic headphone organizer prevents accidental death
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
by sinerasis May 20, 2008 12:32 PM PDT
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not a huge YouTube junky, but seriously... are there movies and full tv shows on there that I'm just unable to find? I've seen a couple yeah, but enough to warrant having it built into the tv? Is the software thats driving that thing upgradeable at all? Maybe if you could get an update that would allow Netflix, or if Google decides to start putting YouTube movie rentals or something... I just don't think something like this would ever get used by me, so it would not be seen as a feature that justified the cost when shopping.
Reply to this comment
by Tec Consumer May 20, 2008 5:50 PM PDT
Yeah, and I doubt that the youtube set is the group that'll be dropping $3,000 on a TV, either. You could furnish a whole frathouse for that -- PC and 360 included!!!
Reply to this comment
by squinney October 22, 2008 11:08 AM PDT
I have the same questions regarding the upgrade ability in these high end TVs. Personally, I'll stick with the $99 Kiwi I got from Behind The Set (www.behindtheset.com). It is a VERY small device that plugs into any TV, can work wired or wirelessly, has everything these TVs have and much more, software updates are regularly available and its only $99.
Reply to this comment
advertisement

About Crave

The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Crave topics

In the news now

Confessions of a man who does the layoffs

It's easy to vilify the guy who hands out the pink slips. But contrary to popular notions, these aren't decisions that are taken lightly, at least with the executive we interviewed.


Dell racks up Microsoft as data center customer

After finding itself on the losing end of a number of deals, Dell creates a special unit aimed at getting its gear inside the world's largest data centers.


advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right