TechTvsI’ve seen the future for Philips TVs and I love this one thing mostTitan OS is coming to Philips TVsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
TechTvsI’ve seen the future for Philips TVs and I love this one thing mostTitan OS is coming to Philips TVsWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Titan OS is coming to Philips TVs
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Rik Henderson / Future)
(Image credit: Rik Henderson / Future)
Over the last few years, high-end Philips’Smart TVshave run onAndroidorGoogleTV, with another operating system driving the app experience on sets lower down the range.
That has most often been a platform called Saphi which, with all due respect, has proved clunky, complicated and sluggish in comparison with rivals. It also misses out a fair few apps and services (depending on your location).
Well, that’s all about to change. TP Vision – the parent company of the Philips brand for AV products in Europe – has signed with Titan OS to drive its entry and mid-range TVs in future. And T3 got a chance to play with the new system ahead of launch.
The first thing that immediately strikes you about Titan OS is its speed – navigation is quick and simple, and getting into apps and services is extremely quick, especially on subsequent clicks.
That’s because, while the homepage shows a healthy list of apps from the very first time you switch on your TV, none of them are actually pre-installed. The icons are essentially placeholders and the app is therefore installed the first time you click on it.
The best part though is that you don’t see any installation options, and it takes just 5 to 8 seconds to do that in the background before the app loads and you can start to use it. I tested this withNetflixand it installed and was useable in around the same amount of time as my older Android TV set.
On top of that, it is far more intuitive and user friendly to not present an installation page between clicking on the icon and entering the app itself. The slight delay is perfectly acceptable without needing to show an installation notification too. Indeed, most users probably won’t know it’s even happening and will likely never care.
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And then, the next time you click on Netflix, for example, it opens in around 2 to 3 seconds. That applies whenever you use an app after installation.
Not only does this make the experience more simple for the viewer, it ensures the menu system is swift. It also works with updates – the user will never be prompted to update an app before watching to stream a show or movie, it’ll do it automatically.
I really do wish other operating systems operated in similar fashion.
Other features
Another neat feature of Titan OS is that it is customisable. You can move apps back and forth along the dedicated and prominent “Favourite Apps” rail and when you do, their own specific rails move up and down the homepage too.
For example, if you move Netflix to the farthest left on the apps row, its dedicated content rail with move to the first position on the homepage after the apps lineup (which always remains at the top).
The only exception is a “Watch TV” icon on the far left of Favourite Apps, that will always remain as it will jump into broadcast television.
And, although I didn’t get to see it personally, whenever you attach a source to one of a TV’s HDMI ports, that will also pop up next to Watch TV. Plus, if you have HDMI-CEC on the external device, you’ll even see its name pop up.
I was told that Titan OS will support the new British streaming platform Freely when that arrives in full, and it even has its own free-to-air IP channels baked into the system. And they’ll appear on the same EPG as radio and terrestrial channels too.
But the main takeaway I got from it is just how easy it was to get to and access content, and that’s really the point at the end of the day. While it looks nice too (similar to Google TV in some ways), it manages to remove unnecessary clicks during the content selection process and I applaud that.
I’m certainly looking forward to having a more thorough play with the system once it debuts on all Philips' 2024 Smart TVs up to and including the OLED 759 and OLED 769 in the coming months.
There are also plans to introduce it onto 2023 models before the end of this year, so your existing Philips set could be in for a great new upgrade too.
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