£60ish
But I'm puzzled as to the market.
A streaming box a few years back, before smart TVs were commonplace, would have seemed sensible, but this seems late to the game.
And I'd think most TVs capable of UHD would already have streaming capabilities.
What am I missing?
Both Smart TVs and Android TVs have Apps but that's where the similarities end.
Both Android TV and the newer Google TV (also based on Android TV) are closer to an Android. You can do a tonne more with Android TV you can't on a Smart TV. For one the interface is better, secondly Google Assistant, thirdly a lot more apps.
The Xiaomi Mi Box S is £80 so £60 is fair.
Just stumbled on a review of this box. Praises were sung but toward the end came:
Curiously, Humax tells us that the UK broadcasters’ apps – BBC iPlayer, ITVX, Channel 4 and My5 are NOT currently compatible with the A1, which makes it a tough sell in the UK. However, they may be added in the future (as they’re certainly supported on other Android TV devices).
The Xiaomi Mi Box S also ships without these apps.
To be fair, I understand BBC must certify every device and this takes time/cost. Not saying it's right but often it's not the ODMs fault.
It might be useful. If there were not other, possibly more competent, devices out there at not dissimilar price points. Fire TV sticks. Chromecast TV. Roku. etc.,.
Amazon Fire isn't more competent. It has the hobbled Amazon App Store. Roku doesn't even run Android.
Chromecast with Google TV is a fair comparison but Google TV doesn't support all the apps Android TV does, although possibly most.
But yes the Chromecast with Google TV is better than most Android TV boxes.
It's Android TV v11 and there is now v12 out there (with v13 for Developers). So that's now a tad behind, too?
You'd think so but actually no not really. Android TV isn't like Android on Phones/Tablets, it's all just maintenance updates. New versions bring very little indeed.
Besides it's 1 version behind :/.