Skip to main content

Google flings Android TV to the masses with its disc-shaped Nexus Player

Remember Google TV? Google hopes you don’t, or at least that you’ll be willing to forgive, forget, and give its new set-top box platform a try. Today, the Internet giant announced the Nexus Player, a little black box (or disc, really) that it hopes will give the likes of Roku, Apple TV, and Amazon’s Fire TV a run for their money.

We got our first glance at a prototype version of Android TV at Google’s I/O developer conference in June, and while far from fleshed out, the platform showed some promise. Where the beleaguered Google TV tried to blaze its own trail, Android TV takes cues from other over-the-top platforms we’ve become familiar with over the past few years, calling to mind Microsoft’s recent advancements with the Xbox One.

Nexus Player
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Android TV features big tiles for its apps, and its background changes to match whatever content the user lands on. Access to apps like Netflix and, of course, Google’s own YouTube are to be expected, but, much like Amazon’s Fire TV, the Nexus Player will reach beyond streaming movie and television services to offer streaming games as well. To underline that commitment to a better gaming experience, the Nexus player offers an available console-style controller for “fine-tuned control” of Android games. It will be sold separately at a price yet to be determined.

As for the specs, Google’s new device will be outfitted with a relatively powerful 1.8GHz quad-core Intel Atom processor, as well as an Imagination PowerVR Series 6 Graphics 2D/3D Engine for gaming. It offers 8GB of storage, and 1GB of RAM, half that of Amazon’s Fire TV. It also forgoes an Ethernet port for Wi-Fi only, and a digital optical port, harboring only micro USB 2.0 and HDMI connections at the back. It does, however, match Amazon’s Fire TV by offering Bluetooth 4.1. Like the Fire TV, the Nexus Player also offers a sleek and simple remote, with the option of voice commands.

No pricing has yet been announced for the sleek new player on the set-top seen, but you can bet your next paycheck it won’t break the $100 price point offered by all of its peers in the genre, save Google’s own Chromecast, which will no doubt keep its pole position as the cheapest streaming device on the block. However, the Nexus Player is also Cast-ready, meaning it will provide users with the same function of pitching content from a phone, tablet or PC, allowing for multiple ways to play.

The Nexus Player will be available for pre-order starting October 17, and is slated to land in stores November 3.

Editors' Recommendations

Caleb Denison
Digital Trends Editor at Large Caleb Denison is a sought-after writer, speaker, and television correspondent with unmatched…
What is Android TV? Google’s smart TV platform fully explained
Hisense 70A6G 70-inch 4K UHD Android Smart TV in living room on stand.

When it comes to smart TVs, these monolithic QLEDs and OLEDs require an internet connection to get you connected to services like Netflix and Disney+. But like any good computer or mobile phone, there’s an operating system taking care of apps, navigation, and all things user interface-oriented behind the scenes. For Samsung TVs, this OS is called Tizen, for LG TVs, it’s webOS, and for brands like Sony, TCL, and Hisense, it used to be called Android TV, but now (for the most part) it’s called Google TV. 

While Google TV is really just an evolutionary leap based on the building blocks of Android TV, you’ll still see the Android TV moniker on a modern TV or two. Many modern home theater projectors also use the Android TV OS. That being said, it’s a platform that’s still relevant. Here’s everything you need to know about Android TV.
An important note on Android TV and Google TV

Read more
Google TV vs. Roku TV: which is the better streaming OS?
Roku Streaming Stick 4K.

Whether you're looking for a new TV or streaming device, two of the leading smart TV platforms and user interfaces you'll be choosing from are Google TV and Roku TV. Both of these content and navigational platforms are excellent options, with many shared pros between them.

For years, Google has provided the building blocks to smart TV brands from Sony to Hisense under that Android TV banner. Presently, the structural framework of the Android TV system is giving way to an all-new Google operating system known as Google TV. You'll find Google's latest OS running on Sony, Hisense, and TCL TVs, as well as first-party Google devices like the Chromecast with Google TV 4K and Chromecast with Google TV (HD).

Read more
Google TV gives NFL Sunday Ticket top billing, adds FAST channels
Google TV free channels.

Google announced today that all Android TV and Google TV devices in the U.S. are getting more than 25 new free channels, baked right into the operating systems' Live tabs. That brings the total number of built-in FAST channels to more than 100, meaning that you'll be able to watch all kinds of free content without having to download a single thing. It's all built in.

FAST channels refer to free, ad-supported television and can be individual shows or entire channels of content. Google didn't immediately name the 25-plus channels, but said they include the BBC and Lionsgate. (You can see a big list of them here.) And that's on top of the others that were added in the spring, which brings a ridiculous 800 or so channels (more or less) to the platform. Whether they have what you want to watch? That's completely up to you. But it's free.

Read more