Skip to main content

Apple TV has quietly been on board the FAST train all this time

Apple TV, insofar as the name is concerned, is a bit of a mess. It’s hardware — the Apple TV 4K box is still the best streaming hardware you can buy. It’s a streaming service unto itself — Apple TV+ is Apple’s take on HBO. And its software — tvOS technically is the name of the operating system, but there’s also a “TV” app … on Apple TV.

The Apple TV app itself also is, shall we say, a bit busy. It’s home not just to Apple TV+, but also to exclusive sports like MLS Season Pass and Friday Night Baseball. And if you’ve ever bought a movie or show from Apple, you’ll find them there, too. And if you’re signed in to another streaming app that plays nice with Apple’s TV app — and there are a lot of them — you’ll find that content in there, too.

The Apple TV app on Apple TV.
The Apple TV app is, shall we say, busy — trying to be the one place to find all the things. Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends

The idea is that the Apple TV app is the one app to rule them all. Whether that’s a good idea or threatens to cause seizures is another matter for another time. But it’s also fairly easy to envision a world in which the TV app gets even more complicated, by way of FAST services.

For the uninitiated — and there’s a pretty good chance you’ve actually already experienced FAST services, even if you didn’t realize it — FAST stands for free ad-supported television. In other words, you pay nothing for all kinds of shows and movies. Some are great and are names you know. Others may be more obscure and were born from the edges of internet video. Various companies and rights owners package them up, sell ads against them, and serve ’em up for you, for free. It’s not a bad deal, really, and it seems like every major company has a FAST service.

Where things have really started to get interesting is how those services and channels are provided. Apps (or services) like Tubi, Pluto, and the Roku Channel package individual channels quite nicely in one place, and that’s fine. But there’s still a barrier to entry there — you have to download the app in the first place.

A couple of platforms have cut out the middleman. Amazon Fire TV and Google TV have integrated hundreds of free channels into their live guides. You don’t have to download a thing. Same for Roku with The Roku Channel, which it also makes available on other platforms.

Streaming apps that can be connected to Apple TV.
Dozens of other apps can be integrated into the TV app on Apple TV. Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends

That brings us back to Apple TV. (The app. On the platform. Though not necessarily the hardware.) There are a lot of eyeballs on FAST services. Paramount’s Pluto, for example, has 80 million monthly active users as of the first quarter of 2023. Fox’s Tubi isn’t far behind. Roku says The Roku Channel “reached U.S. households with an estimated 100 million people.” Google and Amazon are doing their part to get a share of those eyeballs, in addition to just giving their customers more to watch.

And Apple already has a way to integrate dozens of services — including a number of FAST services — into the TV app. Pluto is one. Tubi is another. The same goes for Plex, which in addition to being a home server for streaming files locally also includes a lot of free channels. Integrate the apps and you’ll see show and movie results when you search the Apple TV app.

Connect other apps to Apple TV.
Pluto TV, Tubi, and Plex are just three FAST apps that can be integrated into Apple TV. Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends

That’s not quite the same as having live guides, though, putting the free content front and center the way Amazon and Google are doing. (That’s where lines blur between FAST and AVOD and linear-esque channels, which really just conflates things even further.)

Unknown is what Apple gets out of any of this. Does it get a cut of the ad revenue? (As presumably Google and Amazon are doing?) Or is it just getting more data about what folks are watching, and where they’re watching it?

So maybe the question is just a matter of how direct Apple wants to be in its presentation — and whether it can squeeze out a few more bucks in the process.

Editors' Recommendations

Phil Nickinson
Section Editor, Audio/Video
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
Go ahead and spend the extra $20 on the good Apple TV 4K
Apple TV 4K 2021.

Apple has announced two new versions of the Apple TV 4K. Both are good for all kinds of reasons. Better internals. New features. And prices that are much more likely to be competitive, even if they're still a good bit north of what folks are spending on the likes of Roku and Amazon Fire TV devices.

But two new Apple TV 4K boxes -- and the death of the lower-resolution Apple TV HD -- means you've got a decision to make. Which Apple TV 4K is right for you?

Read more
New Apple TV 4K tweaks the internals and the price
Apple TV 4K 2022.

Apple today announced a new version of Apple TV 4K. It's the third generation of what we consider to be the best streaming device you can buy, and Apple's not really messing with things too much. Same general design. Same general function. But the internals have been tweaked that allow this 2022 model (which follows the models released in September 2017 and May 2021) to work better with more TVs — and to allow for a little more flexibility in price.

Here are the big deals: There are now two versions of Apple TV 4K (or SKUs, for those of you who prefer inside-baseball terms). There's a model that's Wi-Fi only with 64GB of storage for $130, or a model with Wi-Fi and Ethernet with 128GB of storage for $150. For our money, we'd just go ahead and spend the extra $20.

Read more
Amazon’s third-gen Fire TV Cube has great features the Apple TV is missing
Fire TV Cube.

As part of its September 2022 devices event, Amazon has announced a new version of its Fire TV Cube streaming device, priced at $140. It's the first streamer we've seen that includes an HDMI input in addition to its HDMI output, letting it display content from devices like cable or satellite set-top boxes or Blu-ray players, while it controls those devices via Alexa or the included remote control. And speaking of remotes, Amazon has upgraded that device as well. The $35 Alexa Voice Remote Pro now includes backlighting and a remote control finder feature -- both of which are absent from the remote that Apple includes with its Apple TV 4K.

Oddly, Amazon decided the new Fire TV Cube will come with the standard Alexa Voice Remote -- not the Pro model -- for its $140 price, but you can add the $35 Voice Remote Pro when you order it.

Read more