Article 6C6VA Comcast and Charter are making a streaming box for self-loathing cord-cutters

Comcast and Charter are making a streaming box for self-loathing cord-cutters

by
Kevin Purdy
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6C6VA)
flex-april-2022-2523.jpg

Enlarge / Xfinity's Flex box is likely the model for the Xumo Box, a streaming device to be sold at Walmart later this year. (credit: Xfinity/Comcast/Charter)

Consumers right now are faced with an overwhelming number of choices for watching streaming media on a TV. Most TVs have a system built in, often Roku, Google, or Samsung. Standalone boxes from Roku, Apple, Google, and Amazon rule the third-party market, and smaller vendors offer remarkably cheap Android-based boxes online and at discount retailers.

But-wait-that's not all. Now Comcast and Charter, the largest and second-largest cable companies in the US, have their own HDMI-box offering. If you've always wanted a box full of "free" ad-stuffed, pseudo-streaming channels that doesn't have the app stores or mirroring capabilities of the major brands and helps major cable companies regain market position and recoup revenue lost to cord-cutters like you, say hello to the Xumo Box.

Xumo is the name of Comcast's free streaming service, purchased by the company in 2020. It's the kind that looks like a cable channel guide and has an endless loop of pre-selected game shows, reality TV, crime procedurals, and other ready-to-license material akin to Pluto and Freevee. Xumo is a big part of Flex, the streaming box Comcast's Xfinity service offers to customers who don't want a traditional TV plan.

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