Roku launches revamped HD, XD, and XDS players, starting at $59

We’ve been wondering what Roku had up its sleeve after the FCC leaked the Roku XD and XDS following Apple’s $99 Apple TV announcement, and it looks like those earlier price cuts were just the beginning: the new Roku lineup starts at just $59 for the basic WiFi HD streamer with HDMI and composite outputs. That’s basically impulse-purchase territory if you’re looking for a quick way to get Netflix, Amazon Video on Demand or one of Roku’s 75 other channels on your TV. The $79 Roku XD adds in 1080p streaming support for channels with 1080p content, and the top-of-the-line $99 XDS adds in a USB port for future local playback support, component video and optical audio out, and dual-band 802.11n WiFi. All three boxes share the same new slimmer case, while the XD and XDS get a new sleeker remote with new instant-replay and info buttons. Definitely an intriguing set of upgrades — we’ve been playing with the XDS for a few days, so go check out our full review!

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Magic Leap teams with Lucasfilm for ‘Star Wars’ AR experiences

Magic Leap, the mysterious augmented reality company, is teaming up with Lucasfilm and its ILMxLAB to create immersive Star Wars experiences, the companies announced today at Wired’s Business Conference. As part of the news, they also revealed our closest look yet at Magic Leap’s technology in action with a demo video featuring everyone’s favorite droids, C-3PO and R2-D2, projected in a typical office environment. It was shot on actual Magic Leap hardware, according to ILMxLAB’s John Gaeta (best known for his work on the Matrix films), using a standard digital camera. One look, and you’ll see why Magic Leap has amassed an astounding $1.39 billion in funding without shipping an actual product.

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Roku adding Hulu Plus channel this fall

Oh boy, here we go: Hulu Plus is coming to Roku’s lineup of players, which now starts at $59 and goes up to $99 for the Roku XDS we just reviewed highly. That certainly makes the Roku / Apple TV comparison far more interesting — ten 99-cent Apple TV rentals or the $10 Hulu Plus monthly subscription fee? — and depending on what you watch, it could make cutting your cable subscription a no-brainer. We don’t know about resolution or bitrate yet, but we’re working to find out — and we’re definitely looking to get some hands-on time before the channel goes live this fall, so stay tuned. PR after the break.

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