![]() If you want to watch your DVR or video on demand, you’ll have to use your cable remote. When you pull up live TV, what you see is whatever channel your cable box is on. ![]() Saying “Xbox on” can fire up your TV, audio receiver and whatever else you’ve got hooked up, provided you previously set that up, and specified what brands of electronics you have. ![]() Know what’s even more freaky? You can walk into a dark room and say “Xbox on,” and the console will power up - it’s listening even when it’s not “on.” Xbox (using the new Kinect) is also capable of blasting infrared commands to any of your home theater gear, too. I predict some fights ahead between my kids, but in the meantime, it’s just cool, and a bit freaky. “Xbox, show me my stuff” brings you back to your home page, but if someone else in the room says it, Xbox will figure out where the voice is coming from, facially recognize the speaker, and bring up that person’s stuff instead (assuming they have a profile inside your Xbox). Say “Xbox, watch TV” and live TV pops up. Xbox is listening, so even though you could wave your arms around like some kind of exercise nut, all you really have to do is mutter stuff, practically under your breath. It’s very much like Windows 8 in that sense: You can pin apps, games, SkyDrive folders - lots of different kinds of things.Īlso read: What can you do with the Xbox One if you don't download the Day One update? Not much Slide to the left, and you see a pinboard with everything you want, where you want it. The preferences that first appear on the screen are yours, but the other people's avatars appear in the top left corner of the TV, and are available when you enter games.Īt log-in, the home screen shows what you’ve been up to - your last game played (frozen in time and ready to restart just where you left it) and your most recent apps. And if your husband or wife or kid sister or annoying cousin sits down on the couch with you, well, Xbox greets that person in, too, assuming it knows who he or she is. I know, it’s kinda creepy: Xbox sees you, and logs you in automatically. To log in, you don’t type anything, you don’t say anything, you just show up. Taken together, this bundle of near-future tech makes for a very different kind of home-entertainment situation, one that I got to explore briefly this week. 22 - you know that while Microsoft’s next-gen console may be a little less powerful than the equally fresh PlayStation 4, it’s got a couple of features that Sony’s box doesn’t: It can see who you are and when you’re on the couch it listens for the voice commands of you and others in the room and it has an HDMI input so that you can route your cable box through it for live TV. “But I may be most partial to the cover that hits this week-featuring Olympian Simone Biles, the Cubs’ David Ross, and the Cavs’ JR Smith-because it so perfectly captures everything about the issue, our cover motto, and the year itself.If you’ve done your homework on the upcoming Xbox One - due to sell out of stores when it appears Nov. “We hit our mark several times this year, with the WNBA20 gatefold ‘evolution’ cover, showing 20 years of stars driving in progression toward Maya Moore with the final shot into the hoop with Muhammad Ali’s smiling face on our “I Shook Up The World!” tribute cover with Carmelo Anthony’s meditative activist pose on our NBA Preview issue. Make it so that when we look back on each year, our covers look like a string of the year’s biggest sports moments, worthy of a gallery exhibit. Make fans feel like they want to hang them on their walls, share them on social, talk about them with their friends. “Make every cover a poster” became our motto. “So this year at The Mag, we decided we wanted to raise the stakes on our covers. Every time someone gets our ‘book’ in the mail or walks past a newsstand, the cover either makes them want to rip it open and read. “They say you should never judge a book by its cover, but let’s be real: In the magazine business, that’s exactly what people do.
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