Skip to main content

Logitech Revue sales totaled only $5 million

Logitech Revue
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Google TV platform debuted this year with considerable hype and anticipation that Google would somehow re-invent television with its Android+Chrome TV-surfing platform. The flagship product for Google TV was supposed to be the Logitech Revue, but—despite a clever ad campaign featuring Kevin Bacon—the product doesn’t seem to have lit a fire in consumers’ wallets. According to Logitech’s financial results for fiscal 2010, the Logitech Revue—and associated peripherals, like a camera—managed to ring up just $5 million in sales (PDF). That figure is a whopping $13 million lower than what Logitech indicated it expected just last quarter, meaning the Logitech Revue did less than one third of the business Logitech was expecting. The Revue’s sales didn’t help “disappointing” results for Logitech’s final fiscal quarter of the year.

In response, Logitech plans to lower the suggested retail price from $299 to $249, and “scale back” marketing activities for the time being—that likely means no more clever Kevin Bacon spots.

Logitech still seems committed to the Google TV platform, indicating the “next generation” of Google TV represents on the company’s “most promising growth opportunities.” However, the Google TV platform has failed to catch on with consumers, who have generally criticized the system as too complicated and awkward to use. Users have also been plagued with TV networks preventing Google TV from accessing streaming versions of their programming, which makes the Logitech Revue not only one of the priciest online video set-top boxes out there, but a platform with comparatively little top-flight content.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
The Beats Pill is back, baby!
A pair of Beats Pill speakers.

In what's been one of the worst-kept secrets of the year -- mostly because subtly putting a product into the hands of some of the biggest stars on the planet is no way to keep a secret -- the Beats Pill has returned. Just a couple of years after Apple and Beats unceremoniously killed off the stylish Bluetooth speaker, a new one has arrived.

Available for preorder today in either black, red, or gold, the $150 speaker (and speakerphone, for that matter) rounds out a 2024 release cycle for beats that includes the Solo Buds and Solo 4 headphones, and comes nearly a year after the Beats Studio Pro.

Read more
Ifi’s latest DAC is the first to add lossless Bluetooth audio
Ifi Audio Zen Blue 3 DAC (front).

Ifi Audio's new Zen Blue 3 wireless digital-to-analog converter (DAC) will officially be available to buy for $299 on July 9. When it is, it will be the first device of its kind to support a wide variety of Bluetooth codecs, including Qualcomm's aptX Lossless, the only codec that claims to deliver bit-perfect CD quality audio over a Bluetooth connection.

Admittedly, there are very few devices on the market that can receive aptX Lossless (and fewer that can transmit it), so it's a good thing that the Zen Blue 3 also works with the more widely supported aptX Adaptive, LDAC, and LDHC/HWA codecs (all of which are hi-res audio-capable), plus the three most common codecs: AAC, SBC, and aptX.

Read more
The new Beats Pill might replace Sonos on my back porch
The 2024 Beats Pill and an aging Sonos Play:1.

If I were to build an outdoor stereo in 2024, I'd do it with a pair of portable Beats Pills instead of Sonos speakers. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

In 2017, after more than a decade in our home, my wife and I added a pool. With it came a covered deck, making what basically was a new outdoor room. Not uncommon at all in Florida, but new to us.

Read more