

Linux TV 126
Stealth Dave writes "ZDNet has an article about a new television from Sylvania which is basically a Linux box with a 27" monitor and TV tuner (800x600 resolution, even)! It runs a Geode single-chip solution and is broadband capable. Lots of cool features, and is designed to support a hard drive as well. The ZDNet article has a surprising amount of details without being too technical to lose their broader audience." This "news story" reads a lot more like an advertisement, but take it for what it's worth.
Re:CmdrTaco says: (Score:1)
No Firewire port? (Score:1)
That remote is nice, though. (Score:1)
How much for just the remote? I want one.
Re:Tivo Functions (Score:1)
what about the screen? (Score:2)
TV screens usually have longer persistence phosphors, brighter, non-interlaced, slower refresh, and lower resolution. Computers screens have shorter persistence, dimmer, interlaced, faster refresh, and higher resolution.
That's because a computer user typically sits two feet away from the screen and a tv watcher sits twelve feet away. Computer users need to read very small text, tv watchers don't read lots of info off the screen. Using the wrong kind of screen for the job would be annoying for any one of the reasons listed above. Try to compromise at a point in between, and you end up with an image that's too dim or bright, too flickery or with trails behind moving objects, or too blurry.
The requirements for the two types of screens are very different, and each has specially designed displays. It's certainly true that it's not economical to make a CRT screen that does both of these jobs well. Are there flat LCD (or other technology) screens that do both well? Maybe some day, but not yet in the mass market price range.
rm -rf /Family Feud (Score:4)
Companies should analyze whether putting Linux in their products will actually be useful after the excitement is over. I think there are too many paper pushers out there that read an article on Linux and wet themselves, convinced that putting it in everything will be a great idea.
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Re:Good Idea for multistandard TV (Score:1)
I already have a PAL compliant TV. Oh, wait, now I don't have to buy a NTSC compliant TV if I enter the states. Still no solution for the NTSC vhs tapes I get all the time..
Self refering? (Score:1)
Errr, if you go to linux pages looking for linux info...that is what you will see.
BSD has all the benefits for the embedded world but doesn't have the FORCED 'sharing' of the GPL.
Just what I need... (Score:2)
Kiddie 1: "D00d! 1 r00t3d tH1s pH@t t3l3v1s10n!!"
Kiddie 2: "L33t! J00 0wnZ!"
I better go firm up my firewall...
--jwriney
Re:Self refering? (Score:1)
Note that they need not release anything else, including the "family jewels".
You are indulging in the sort of FUD on only worthy of a WinDOS lemming.
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:2)
Recording involves a *lot* more then plugging in a HD; it means hardware built to suport this this (a fast processor / hw assist video system / sound generations / etc.) If it was trivial every linux box out there would be happly DVCRing away.
Since possible DVCR not in the announcement then I don't expect it in this model.
Indeed I wouldn't be suprised if the IDE port is simply a leftover from whatever design they licensed. Perhaps they have an internal goal of a DVCR in v.2 or something but dollars to donuts it won't be possible in what they've got listed now.
COOL!!!! (Score:1)
We are famouse!!!!
Face it guys, This IS world domination (Score:5)
The answer to the "why Linux?" questions typical of mainstream media was telling and amounted to "Because it was there, and we didn't have to license it!" Once the reporters begin to understand what the GPL REALLY means, the lid will be off and we will all be mainstream.
REPORTER: Why Linux?
SAVVY ENTREPRENEUR: Because we already owned it and held the license for it. So do you. So does everybody. We DID contribute to the Linux International organization, but we didn't have to. We already owned the software and system. So do you.
REPORTER: Huh???!!!
SE: (continuing) Yeah. The GPL meant that we could build on work already done by others, take that work for free, extend it and give the stuff we paid people to do back to the community/source. For free. We the spent our investors' money in making the idea consumer-friendly and affordable. Because we didn't HAVE to take on or license a partner or partners' technology, we have a better chance of survival. Our business model works BECAUSE OF THE GPL. We can be assured that, from the standpoint of the operating system and hardware drivers, at least, we don't have exposure to intellectual-property or copyright issues...There may be patent issues on the terms of the interface, or the functions of the system, but we wrote that into the business plan and are funded to either license or defend against Gemstar. We were prepared for that when we made the decision to enter the space.
REPORTER: But...but...but...you didin't pay for the software......!!!!!!!! That's STEEEEEALING!!!! (begins to swoon)
SE: No, it's not. You can't steal something you already own. More importantly, we paid people to extend the work others did and then gave that work back to the community to be further extended by those same people...That gave us another tremendous advantage. Because we set the project up on a publicly accessible project hosting platform, we can look at those people continuing to volunteer to improve the project and extend it's functionality and get to know them and perhaps hire the best of them based on work they have already done and that has proved a valuable extension and great fit for our business. It makes the problem of finding the personnel resources necessary to grow our business faster than the competition that much easier; thereby further ensuring the success of our business. We concentrate on the consumer. We made a TV behave and receive data like a computer...It's still a TV...simple to operate. Inexpensive. That's our business: to extend the TV as an appliance and add some computer functionality to it. Because we own the base platform the technology is built on, we're free to extend it or allow the community to do so while we continue to make it cheaper and easier to use. Understand?
REPORTER: BUT YOU DIDN'T PAY FOR THE SOFTWARE!!! YOU DON'T HAVE A PLATFORM PARTNER!!! HOW WILL YOU SUCCEED? WHO WILL PAY FOR YOUR SUPPERBOWL ADS?
SE: Ummmm...I think maybe you better read the first paragraph of the GPL. I think that concludes the interview. Thanks.
Questions from the audience:
1. How long befor Gemstar goes after these guys?
2. What's the next great embedded Linux platform/idea?
3. How long befor CE REALLY is dead?
4. Does J2ME have a chance without Sun GPL'ing the whole J2 package?
I want my, I want my, I want my TuxTV (Score:1)
That ain't crashin'; no, that's the way you do it. Money is for nothing, Linux for free.
Re:Other uses for this? (Score:2)
Re:Why Linux? (Score:1)
There's quite a bit they can add without any need to publish their source. You're just spreading misinformation.
OTOH, by pointing out Microsoft as the prime example of the BSDl you demonstrate the key failing of that licence.
A Microsoft is free to use public sweat as corporate welfare in order to quickly deploy "embrace and extend" like Winsock.
Winsock: The ultimate counter-argument to the BSDl.
OTOH, Copyleft only requires you to provide source for what you CHANGE and then distribute. This is why suitable counterarguments to your rant can be found in abundance. These include the Linux versions of Oracle 8i, Maya, Bentley Microstation, Quake 3 and Corel Draw.
All of those are built on top of GNU software.
Re:Why? (Score:1)
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Re:CmdrTaco says: (Score:1)
Re:Why Linux? (Score:1)
Oh, I don't know. ever hear of video4linux?
There is no BSD counterpart to video4linux.
Ok, time to dispell BSD vs. GPL myths.
1. You can write proprietary applications on top of linux. TiVO seems to be doing pretty well. I don't think they're too bothered about the GPL... Hmm....
2. It costs nothing to distribute source code in the internet age. Face it. This is not a burden to GPL anymore.
3. BSD software is only free software when you get it from the developer. Saying "why dont they use FreeBSD" is equivelent to saying "why dont they just roll their own OS and never let anyone get close to the source". BSD license doesnt protect software from proprietization.
4. The BSD license seems to encourage fragmentation, which is bad for the community, and dare I say, bad for BSD businesses. this is just my observation, I can't back this up theoretically.
So summing up, I would encourage GPL usage over BSDl usage, but that's all I can do. The choice is yours. But as linux is showing, the GPL might in the end be better for business than the BSDl.
Re:Do it yourself Linux TV (Score:3)
I would reccommend capturing at 640x480 or 320x240 if you are going to playback on a TV, you'll save a lot of space/cpu without losing anything. Use xawtv for tuning your card, v4lctl or plain xawtv. Then you do something like this:
$ mp1e -G 640x480 -b 4.0 > some_file.mpeg
Experiment with the bitrate and picture size for best results. I haven't tried playing back these captured streams on the DXR3 but I'm sure it's possible. Something to try over the weekend
Good luck...
-adnans
Re:Other uses for this? (Score:1)
I wish these guys the best of luck with their new product. Gateway apparently had trouble selling their Destination computers because I don't think consumers were ready back in early 1997. But now with DVD players, broadband access, cheap hardware, and better software, I think the time for a product like this has finally come.
Re:rm -rf /Family Feud (Score:3)
Maybe I'm missing something very obvious here,
So I'll ask, What would you do differently?
I'm no expert, but IMHO, Joe Consumer will likely pick the linux television over the windows version just due to the fact that it's going to be roughly $100 less. If they plan on hiding the OS from the consumer anyway, what difference does it make besides the price?
It's difficult to shave off $100 worth of hardware,
but it's a lot easier to shave off $100 worth of licence agreements.
See, I told ya..... (Score:1)
Interactive Television is the "Next Big Thing! (tm)
(Bill, 5:108 - "From Internet to Highway")
Re:rm -rf /Family Feud (Score:2)
This could be cool (Score:1)
Finally! A reason to hack my tivos to have Ethernet! Can you imagine, a tivo or two connected to your home ethernet, then a few of these PC's around your house? YOU COULD WATCH YOUR TIVO FROM ANYWHERE!
At least, that's what I want to do...
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:2)
As for Ch.1, yeah, no guarantees it'll stay around.
which isn't a guarantee, but I can't imagine including hard drive support without plans for using it for recording.Regarding Tivo functionality,
Also, my personal experience is that standard 27" TV's aren't generally capable of displaying 800*600 resolution without looking like fuzzy ass, and I wasn't aware of a WebTV that supported Ethernet (I didn't say it doesn't exist, just that I wasn't aware of it).
Re:CmdrTaco says: (Score:1)
I submitted this weeks ago... (Score:2)
Re:Sylvania is bad beans (Score:1)
Wow! (Score:1)
Oh wow! (Score:1)
The real market. (Score:2)
In fact, there's a simple, obvious market. TV with pause. Forget the "record a specific show" feature, which nobody uses on VCRs anyway. Just concentrate on offering pause/fast forward/rewind for whatever you're watching. This requires a modest hard drive, and a trivial user interface. And you can sell it to Joe Sixpack.
How Open/Closed will it be? (Score:2)
Wow! (Score:1)
Do it yourself Linux TV (Score:5)
Hardware:
Software:
The TV..erh..Linux box automatically boots up in KDM so logging in is as simply as switching to the "X Win" channel and typing your user/login
Latest addition to the software list is MP3sb [mp3sb.org] which catalogs all your MP3's and has provides you with multiple views of your colection. Konqueror displaying the PHP3 client [alsaplayer.org]. Anyway, lots of fun hacking this stuff...
-adnans
Re:No Firewire port? (Score:1)
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Re:It's not new! (was Re:Tivo Functions) (Score:2)
I had an old Zentith television that had a capacitor go bad and did the same thing. It was the only thing that ever broke on a television that I really appreciated. To bad it didn't blank the sound --the most annoying part of commercials.
Article looks like a big ad? (Score:4)
r00t yer tv d00d (Score:1)
n0w EyE can r00t yer tv and watch yer pr0n
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Why? (Score:2)
Re:copyright-protected linux tv? (Score:1)
More to the point, even if there were some sort of copy protection built in, consider how easy it would be to undermine. Software can be played with (especially LINUX), and hardware can be re placed/moved.
Re:copyright-protected linux tv? (Score:1)
AYBABTU (Score:3)
e.
www.randomdrivel.com [randomdrivel.com] -- All that is NOT fit to link to
Re:Good Idea for multistandard TV (Score:1)
Re:Self refering? (Score:1)
(points to the Virgin Webplayer)
See that? It was shipped with Linux, YET the license it came with said I can't even disassemble the source.
And they won't give up the code.
No FUD at all. I just don't have the same blind faith you seem to have is all.
Re:Why? (Score:1)
- 36" TV . $1200
- p800 laptop . $3000
- DSL . $50/month
- Ch.1 WebTV . $899
perhaps that's why?
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Re:Self refering? (Score:1)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:2)
I agree though, that thats probably not the hard drives idea. I think they might be planning to use it to cache the program guide, so they only need to send updates, and would allow you to scan as far ahead as they have data. Although a DVCR does seem like something they are probably pursuing.
Re:And Cisco (Score:1)
Re:Tivo Functions (Score:1)
I know that the Tivo drive hack is very quick, so it's not that bnig a waste of time. In fact for the OS, I would try to go with Windows 2000 if I could, so make it $350.
By all means, post an alternative, if you like. That's what discussion forums are for. Heck, you might even convince me into building one and not going for the Tivo.
Don't take it personally, it's not your fault (Score:2)
Re:It's not new! (was Re:Tivo Functions) (Score:2)
Zenith. The penguin goes in before the name goes on.
Two obvious questions: (Score:2)
__________________
I can spare the Karma to say.... (Score:2)
__________________
Re:copyright-protected linux tv? (Score:1)
The really sad part of this is that you can put together a nice TV/computer/DVD player/Digital VCR box using something like ATI's Radeon All-in-Wonder, with really high-res monitors - but the software drivers that are needed to perform these functions are all available for MS Windows but not Linux...
copyright-protected linux tv? (Score:2)
Re:And Cisco (Score:1)
Re:Two obvious questions: (Score:1)
Re:what about the screen? (Score:1)
Re:How will they market it? (Score:1)
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:1)
How will they market it? (Score:2)
Why Linux? (Score:1)
Ever hear of a company called MicroSoft? They use tons of BSD code, and they don't have to show it to you.
yeah, will someone hack it to run win2000 ? (Score:1)
Re:Sylvania, Maytag, Kenmore (Score:2)
In all seriousness, I wouldn't worry about it.
CmdrTaco says: (Score:3)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Re:The real market. (Score:1)
It's not new! (was Re:Tivo Functions) (Score:1)
I'm sorry but I already got a VCR with that function. At the end of the show it's recording, the VCR rewinds at the beginning of the program and mark all the commercials.
What would be the new feature here, is that we could watch the show without the commercial even before the show is over
Re:copyright-protected linux tv? (Score:2)
The extent of the 'HDTV-ready'-ness of this television is the VGA input on the back. It is no more susceptable to copy protection than the monitor at which you're staring.
Please understand at least a -hint- of what you're talking about, before spreading FUD. Thanks.
deja vu. (Score:2)
hmm, i'm not sure why, but this sounds a little familiar [lowendmac.com] to me... let's hope that the marketing is a little better this time around.
--saint----
Re:Good Idea for multistandard TV (Score:1)
No one's replied to my post. All the other posts have repliers. What's wrong? Is it something I did. I feel so lonely and unloved.
A far more novel idea: Our own cable channel (Score:1)
Why not have our own? PNP! You can see it now: Open Magazine Daily Edition. Think Geek Sunday Auction. Linux Newbies Morning Edition. The Six O'Clock World According To Slashdot.
I'm willing to be five dollars says Ted Turner, who, by the way, is a dothead, though not quite an addict, yet, might find that to be an intriguing concept.
Hmm...FIRST COPYRIGHT!
see Harlan Ellison for more details;-)
Just putting it out there, dotheads welcome to sound off. I like this idea. I don't think much of the box, but this...this I like.
Technical Specs (Score:3)
Re:Speaking of one big Advertisment... (Score:1)
Freakin hideous, isn't it? I already complained to ZDNet a week ago about this new "in your face" advertising tactic. Revolting.
Forget banners, here's the future of e-commerce! (Score:3)
Re:Do it yourself Linux TV (Score:2)
-adnans
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:1)
No component video inputs (Score:1)
Re:Do it yourself Linux TV (Score:2)
--
A few reasons... (Score:3)
But they don't WANT to close it up. They're licensing the hardware to other manufacturers, so there's nothing to be gained (and a lot to be lost - like willingness of other manufacturers to buy) by closing the software.
Also: They apparently want to sell to early-adopters, who have been asking for Linux.
If nothing else, I bet the customers don't want their TV crashing constantly, script-kiddies changing their channels or turning it on at 3 AM, the boss finding out what porn they're watching, and the movie companies showing up to bust them for viewing homemade copies of rented movies.
If your TV's on the net with closed-source appware how do you know it's not open to all of the above?
Good Idea for multistandard TV (Score:2)
The good thing about this is that most video cards adjust automatically for ntsc and pal format. This way you won't have to buy a pal compliant TV if you leave the states. At least if they did it right.
Actually, I CAN imagine... (Score:2)
Actually, I can.
I imagine it doing a wall-of-monitors bigscreen, in software, in real-time.
B-)
Re:See, I told ya..... (Score:2)
Actually (proprietary) interactive television has been the "Next Big Thing!"(tm) almost as long as the videophone.
Tivo Functions (Score:3)
Even better would be an API, so that I could make applets for them and load them into flash. I could imagine trading these online.
First killer app: commercial skipper. Record a show beforehand, or start watching it late and it automatically trims commercials from the show. People might be surprised how short their favorite shows really are.
Of course advertisers would become more wary, and we may need to patch our video-spam killers now and then...
Re:Two obvious questions: (Score:2)
But Konqueror runs fine under other desktops and window managers. You just need to have the KDE libraries installed. So you can also use the ROX desktop (which I will have to give a spin when I have time). Or if you want a real TVesque desktop, there's Englightenment...
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Revolutionary! (Score:5)
Re:How will they market it? (Score:2)
purty kewl! (Score:2)
I'd like to see what sort of price for similar features but on a 60" model.
BTW... ain't Linux just *cuuuuuuuuuuute* all dolled up like that? :-)
Other uses for this? (Score:3)
Seems like this would be a great tool for people whose vision is impaired. Let's face it, 800x600 on a 27-inch monitor provides large fonts, and enough space to be useful.
One downside, though. There would not be much space left over if you had one of these on your desk. I mean, really, wouldn't you just HAVE to hook it up to a PSX2, too? ;)
Fantastic! (Score:2)
Re:CmdrTaco says: (Score:2)
--
Re:Do it yourself Linux TV (Score:2)
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Re:Tivo Functions (Score:2)
Tivo
A Tivo costs about $399 for the cheap model, into which you put a $100 drive to hack the Tivo into using and then buy a $200 lifetime subscription.
Computer equivalent
$100 Soundblaster Live (need the SPDIF)
$200 PIII 700
$25 Linksys ethernet card
$100 mobo for it
$30 case
$15 floppy
$100 hard drive
$300 ATI All In Wonder Radeon
no TV Guide show directory
Geekfactor - priceless
- And you're inevitably going to want to add a wireless keyboard and mouse, a DVD drive, CDROM drive etc etc
Seriously, the Tivo above is cheaper and I won't have to throw it into the project box after getting sick of it continually crashing. You might cheap out on a few of these parts, but then your just fudging the numbers, and not really by all that much. My time is worth too freaking much to play with these parts anymore. I want to watch the shows, not do work to get to watching them. I have stuff to do! Buy the Tivo and sit down. You'll be able to use the spare time to think about some real ground breaking projects instead of reinventing the wheel.
Sylvania, Maytag, Kenmore (Score:2)
Integration of the Ch.1 Appliance (Score:2)
The concept is very cool. Execution looks fine, too, to me.
But hey now, I'm going to spend $8.95 per month for what exactly? Do I really need to access the TV station's web site in PIP while I watch the program? I do not.
This is the way of things, and I guess I understand. If you got the bare-bones Ch.1 service at $8.95 per month, you'd have to use the TV for more than 8 years to have the service cost overtake the hardware cost. Lucky if the hardware lasts that long (let alone Ch.1).
Still, given that they're using a free operating system I can obtain elsewhere, and a Web connection I can maintain (and must pay for) elsewhere, I'm not that excited to have an online TV guide for nine bucks a month. At least with OnStar in the car, I'm getting service I can't duplicate on my own.
Of course, I may not be the target audience. I don't own a television. I watch movies on the monitor that came with my first IBM PC: An Amdek with RCA in (only)...
Whadda Deal (Score:3)
So why not just buy any other 27" TV with line-doubling and plug in a cheapie home PC? It'll do more and be easier to upgrade in the future. I dunno 'bout you but I expect my TV sets to last at least 10 years, anyone here expect Ch.1 Inc. to last that long or to coninue supporting this product?
Indeed it apparently can't even do Digital-VCR functions. Give me TiVo + router + firewall + webcaching + light fileserving + telephone + HDTV (& not via some damn 3rd-party add-on but integrated & used throughout) + in-house streaming and I'll buy. Otherwise it's just another TV with yet-another fancy channel guide & some pre-set "portal" crap.
Re:Whadda Deal (Score:2)
If it was somehow different / more / groundbreaking (like any of the items I listed) then it might be worth attention. Without that it's just a TV with WebTV built in (and just 'cause it's Linux-based doesn't make it any less a yawner.)
So would you let a friend buy something that's so clearly going to outlive it's usefulness?