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K66AP
This is the Apple TV 2G.
Contents
Introduction
The second-generation Apple TV, a digital media receiver made and sold by Apple Inc., was unveiled during an Apple press conference on September 1, 2010. It is a small form factor network appliance designed to play digital content originating from the iTunes Store, Netflix, YouTube, Flickr, MobileMe, Online Radio or any Mac OS X or Windows computer running iTunes onto an enhanced-definition or high-definition widescreen television, and will accept music, video and photo streams from other iOS devices using AirPlay in 4.2. It sold 250,000 in its first two weeks available.
After being jailbroken it can stream music from Last.fm, browse the web, show RSS feeds, use the PLEX Client and run most previous iOS terminal applications via SSH until a local terminal application is created.
Application Processor
It uses the S5L8930 application processor.
Wireless
The Apple TV uses the dual-band BCM4329 for for Bluetooth and Wi-Fi communications; it supports 802.11 a/b/g/n on both frequencies (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz). Bluetooth is not enabled natively but can be used through BTStack to support the use of bluetooth keyboards.
Specifications
Size: 23 mm (0.9 inches) (h), 98 mm (3.9 inches) (w), 98 mm (3.9 inches) (d)
Weight: 0.6 pounds
I/O: HDMI, Optical audio, 10/100 Mbps Ethernet, IR receiver, Micro-USB port
Storage Capacity: 8 Gigabytes (Not directly usable)
- Samsung K9LCG08U1M 8GB NAND Flash chip
- 256 MB RAM
- Apple 343S0479 1005 005BB
- M430 F2350 TI E03K C0GP G4
- SMSC 8710A-EZK B1023-A2 (10/100 Ethernet Transceiver)
- TXC MUGT 27.000
- TXCPCUM3 50.000
- Apple 338S0891
Packaged iOS Software
Lowtide is the application running on the AppleTV. It is essentially an updated "FrontRow" system that handles all user interaction, video playback, streaming, etc. It has been shown to run on other iOS hardware such as the iPod Touch.
Dock Connector
Interestingly, the Apple TV 2G has a predetermined spot that is apparently for a 30-pin dock connector. This is most probably here for Apple's in-house developer units.
The default Apple TV hardware does not allow you to use the HDMI port and the micro-USB port at the same time. Adding a dock to the spot will bypass this hardware restriction, allowing both hacking and viewing.
Soldering to the dock terminals on pins 2 and 3 failed to get analog audio out. It is not know if this is because of a hardware or software limitation. Sound was able to be produced out of the HDMI port but no sound came out of the dock pins corresponding to audio out on other iOS devices.
Useful Links
- Complete Proper Headers for OS 4.1
- Sample frappliance template
- New and Improved Sample frappliance
- Dustin Howett's beigelist
- iFixit Teardown
- How to save SHSH blob
- dyldcache listing
- Buildable / linkable sample project for ATV-2 via NitoTV
3rd Party Apple TV iOS Software
- Fire Core, a software development group who have released software for the Apple TV (1st Gen), is actively working on a product aTV Flash black and a corresponding SDK.
- NitoTV, a popular application and standard set of tools to enhance the functionality for the original Apple TV. NitoTV is the first publicly disclosed Application running on the AppleTV 2.
Currently, the NitoTV Take 3 release for the current generation Apple TV provides a Weather Forecast and an RSS Reader application within it's own Frappliance wrapper. Its developer has stated that these first two applications were intended as Proof-of-Concepts, as well as serve as a testbed for further development for the iOS-Based Apple TV.
For more information regarding the state of development, as well as get an installation guide for installing NitoTV to your AppleTV 2, please see: http://wiki.awkwardtv.org/wiki/NitoTV_Take_3