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Ask HN: What Happened to Picture-in-Picture?

17 points by caseyf7 2 years ago · 24 comments · 1 min read

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20 years ago picture-in-picture was a common feature on TVs. Even the most expensive TVs now don't support PIP. Why isn't it easy to show all of my HDMI inputs on the screen at once?

Projectiboga 2 years ago

Those tuners cost money, due to unnecessary licencing for codecs, and with the cable boxes locked down there isn't an easy way to watch two stations anymore beyond having multiple TV's going or using a HTPC. It was mostly useful for sports and a related issue with Sunday evening broadcast TV occasionally getting delayed due to NFL bumping the schedule later. The only other use was neurotic channel surfing during commercial breaks, again obsolete with streaming and DVRs.

jasmes 2 years ago

IIRC it was mostly useful for letting you channel surf during commercial breaks and using the PIP to know when to flip back, or making sure your VCR was chugging along making your Sopranos bootlegs.

elzbardico 2 years ago

Most people now use their TVs to watch on-demand, streamed content. But even for the people who watches broadcasting stuff, their phones now fill the need to watch something else during commercials.

h2odragon 2 years ago

it complicated the display UI, when the trend was toward fewer and more virtualized controls. It wasn't really easy to use.

You just want the hard inputs? what about the built in tuner? where and how does the sound mix? Output ch2 sound to a different external speaker and use the internal for ch1? etc.

Nobody really wanted it to the point of figuring out how to use it, or coming up with a control convention that spread to other users. For so many uses where "PIP" is useful, a 2nd display is much more useful, easier to set up and use, and more likely to be replaceable.

Next question is "What about 3D TV?" ... Many mature industries go through these cycles of marketing bullshit.

toast0 2 years ago

Decoding two 4k HDMI streams is hard. Decoding two NTSC/PAL streams was easy.

  • DoesntMatter22 2 years ago

    Almost all TV in the US is 1080p or 720p.

    • solardev 2 years ago

      Really? On Costco, Target, Best Buy, etc., the overwhelming majority I can see (or filter by) are 4k. The 1080s are actually much rarer than I expected.

      (edit: or maybe you meant that most people bought their TVs a while ago and never upgraded?)

    • toast0 2 years ago

      Sure, but PIP only on some inputs is confusing and unsatisfying. Why can't you PIP between streaming box A and video game system B?

      • ragestorm 2 years ago

        Probably cost. The increase of including some hardware/software to do this would probably impact the overall sales. Not enough PIP demand.

paulryanrogers 2 years ago

My new LG TV can split in two much like "Back to the Future 2". I also use Firefox's PIP like video pop-out. So I'd say it evolved, yet remains as much a niche as the original feature always was.

nullpilot 2 years ago

The only times I clicked on the picture in picture button in the browser is when I mistook it for the full screen button. I have no idea what I might want to use it for.

ramikalai 2 years ago

This isn't PIP on TV but I use the PIP feature on MacOS ALL THE TIME! It's so handy with Youtube videos. Just open in Safari, two-finger click and then two-finger click again to open the OS menu and go into PIP.

Hope this helps someone!

  • solardev 2 years ago

    I don't understand... how does this work, and why is it better (or worse) than just opening YouTube in a different browser tab or window?

    • sphars 2 years ago

      For one thing (on Windows), the PiP window floats above all other windows, so you can always view it. Of course you can do this with a new browser window but not natively without some workarounds (perhaps on other OS's).

    • ramikalai 2 years ago

      It's better because you can keep that video floating on top of your other apps. It'll follow you as you switch between windows and you can even hide it to the side if it's blocking something.

ktosobcy 2 years ago

I didn't get the appeal of it in the first place - how can you concentrate on two things at once (watching one show and PIP with another one)?

  • nsonha 2 years ago

    why do you assume that one or both of the channels need concentration? TV is for entertainment, which is inherently unimportant things.

    • ktosobcy 2 years ago

      If they are unimportant why bother with any of them in the first place? And if we decided to watch one, why bother trying to be up to speed with the other?

      But I'm a weirdo and I don't even have the TV set so that's that ;-)

fortyseven 2 years ago

OP is specifically referring to television. A very different use case than browser-based PIP.

gjvc 2 years ago

Turned out to be far less useful in daily life than it was technologically impressive on the page.

themadturk 2 years ago

We used it to watch sports in PIP and more engaging fare on the big picture.

mhdhn 2 years ago

I miss it. I would love to have it back. Guess I'm a minority.

JumpinJack_Cash 2 years ago

The BskyB box which is given to users in the UK has it

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