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People have long been able to watch YouTube videos on their televisions through media centre PCs, Apple TV, and the web browsers of certain game consoles, but the experience is less than ideal. YouTube was designed for the 18-inch viewing experience of someone sitting at a desk; its text and video thumbnails are just too small and unwieldy for the couch-bound.

Hence YouTube for Television, a new interface for the popular video sharing site designed specifically for the ten-foot living room viewing experience and optimized for web browsers available for the Wii and PlayStation 3 (plans are in place to roll it out for browser-equipped set-top boxes in the future).

I powered up my Wii this morning and headed over to www.youtube.com/tv to try it out. After spending almost a minute waiting for the site to load, I found myself on a simplified version of the YouTube home page that consisted of three tabs across the top allowing users to search, sort videos, and access their YouTube accounts, and four large video thumbnails below that showed the most viewed, top rated, currently featured, and most recent YouTube clips. The few words present were giant and easy to read.

As far as browsing content goes, YouTube's new TV interface is just as powerful as its PC counterpart. Searching for videos was a snap, and all of the standard tools-including favourites, playlists, and subscriptions-were just a couple of clicks away. Plus, you can set video playback to auto-play, which starts up a new video the moment the current video stops playing, simulating to a degree the experience of watching one program after another on television.

However, there are a few missing features for which some avid YouTubers might pine, such as user comments and the ability to upload videos. It seems Google's goal in developing the TV interface was to facilitate a better viewing experience, even if it came at the expense of community and contribution.

On the topic of viewing experience, the videos don't appear to be of any higher resolution than what you'd find on your PC, which means when they're blown up on a TV several times the size of a computer monitor they look grainy and splotchy. I was sitting about two metres back from my 42-inch set and I found many of the videos difficult to watch. The image quality was a bit more palatable when I moved back an additional metre, but I'm not about to move my couch just so I can better appreciate YouTube videos.

And that's the crux of the streaming-web-video-on-television issue. It doesn't matter how smart or simple the interface; until YouTube video resolution gets bumped up a few notches I won't want to watch the site's clips on my high-definition set.

Still, I'm happy I took the time to check out YouTube for Television, if for no other reason than that I stumbled across the video below-a machinima dance-off between a group of Halo Spartans and characters from Unreal Tournament. Bless nerds with time on their hands.

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