Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Vudu web streams to iPads to avoid sharing cash with Apple

Add as a preferred source on Google
Toshiba 46SL417U display Vudu interface
Image used with permission by copyright holder

In a key move in its ongoing rumble with Netlflix, streaming-video service Vudu is now available on the iPad. Penetrating the Apple market is a big step for Vudu as it tries to keep up with the market leader.

Vudu announced the change in a statement with Wal-Mart, the service’s retail giant of a parent. Except, it’s not the usual iPad app announcement. In fact, Vudu doesn’t even have an app at all. Instead, Vudu reworked its own websites so that it can altogether avoid the legal wrangling and, more importantly, profit sharing of Apple’s App Store.

Recommended Videos

Vudu’s calling it a new “navigation experience” which seems to be a fancy way of saying its rebuilt its website to allow streaming video directly through a browser. After having previousy rolled out that tech for regular browsers along with TVs, game consoles and other web-connected devices, Vudu has launched a mobile-specific site that’s custome tailored for the iPad. The site used Apple’s HTTP Live Streaming, an adaptive bit rate streaming tech that guarantees video performance is at the maximum one’s network speed allows. Unfortunately, the streaming is only available in standard def.

Pointing users towards an iPad URL means Vudu was able to ditch the effort required to produce an App Store app and push it through Apple’s approval process. It also means that users don’t have to sort through Apple’s login interface when trying to access their Vudu account.

While that’s all a bit of hassle saved, it seems the number one reason Vudu didn’t come out with its own App is a reaction to Apple’s much-maligned iOS subscription rules. Under the rules implemented earlier this year, content publishers must offer subscriptions through the in-app purchasing system in iOS. The system forces publishers to sign new subscribers through Apple, who then takes a 30 percent cut off the top.

Vudu’s plan is to avoid the App Store altogether, which is a much cheaper way to get itself onto iPads. What will be interesting to see is if Apple customers embrace the browser-streaming experience or if the lack of an app will make the excursion a failure.

Derek Mead
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Amazon quietly upgrades its Fire HD 10 tablet with a whopping 1GB of RAM
Amazon really said, "Here's 1GB. You're welcome."
Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet

Amazon has quietly refreshed one of its most popular tablets, but not in the way many expected. Instead of launching a brand-new Fire tablet after its longest product drought in years, the company has introduced a slightly upgraded version of the existing Fire HD 10 with an extra gigabyte of RAM.

The update is modest on paper, yet it arrives at an interesting time. Amazon hasn't introduced a new Fire tablet since the Fire HD 8 refresh in 2024, while products like the Fire 7 and Fire Max 11 have yet to receive successors. Rather than expanding its lineup, Amazon appears to be extending the life of an aging device with a minor hardware tweak.

Read more
You’ll soon be able to use WhatsApp on your iPad without touching your iPhone
Companion mode stays. Primary mode arrives. WhatsApp on iPad just became a lot more useful.
Computer, Electronics, Pc

If you’ve ever used WhatsApp on your iPad, you already know its limitations. You can’t set it up without a primary device, can’t share live location, and can't use the broadcast lists feature. 

That’s finally changing. WhatsApp’s latest update gives iPad users a long-due promotion. Rather than serving as an extension of your iPhone, it will soon become your main device. 

Read more
iPad Pro refresh could land in 2027 with a cooling boost, but no design change
Apple may bring vapor chamber cooling to the iPad Pro in 2027
Apple iPad Pro 2025 on a table

Apple’s next iPad Pro may not look dramatically different, but it could get one upgrade that makes a lot of sense for an ultra-thin tablet. Better cooling.

According to Bloomberg, Apple is testing four new iPad Pro models planned for spring 2027. The tablets are expected to keep the current 11-inch and 13-inch display sizes, while focusing mostly on internal improvements, including faster chips. Apple has also reportedly tested a vapor chamber cooling system for the iPad Pro, which could help improve sustained performance and reduce overheating.

Read more