TiVo Gets In Deeper With Sony 187
mickeyreznor writes: "TiVo and Sony have entered into a seven year deal. The deal will result in TiVo's software being incorporated into Sony's electronic products. This deal might be good for TiVo, who've seemed to have been struggling financially to date. I'll just have to see how much more sony products cost with TiVo included." This is good news for anyone with a TiVo.
TiVo (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:TiVo (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:TiVo (Score:2)
New product idea.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:New product idea.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:New product idea.. (Score:1)
Re:New product idea.. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:New product idea.. (Score:2)
An internet-enabled TiVo/PlayStation would open new doors for market research and customer tracking...
They should almost just put a mic+camera on the thing so it can tell what else is going on in your house!
Re:New product idea.. (Score:1)
But you are right I guess, sooner or later someone will combine it. I can't wait to get my combined digital refrigirator/blender/organizer web enabled sink.
Re:New product idea.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:New product idea.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I understand the hack value of pulling something like this off on your pc, and that's cool. It might work in your dorm room or in your bedroom at your parents house, but as a component in the home entertainment system of the average family, there is just no way to make this work. They won't put up with the headaches.
People make money to spend it on things that they enjoy and make their lives easier. This is hard for a student or someone just starting out to understand. Sometimes it's just better to get the right tool for the job and don't sweat it.
Re:New product idea.. (Score:2, Insightful)
If they do end up combining something like this, I hope they take into account that people may want to be able to multitask it. Otherwise, it wouldn't be particularly useful... for me at least.....
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....
FP (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:FP (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:FP (Score:2)
Am I wrong? How could they get away with it? Now if they had a monopoly (like some people) they probably could, but they don't.
Re:FP (Score:5, Insightful)
For one thing, it means that TiVo is likely to stay in business for quite sometime. A TiVo recorder would be lot less useful if there no company providing the update service that TiVo provides. The updates give you schedule listings and software upgrades. Without the update service, a TiVo recorder is only slightly more useful than a VCR - with the update service a TiVo recorder becomes indespensible to most people who have used one.
Re:FP (Score:1)
Re:FP (Score:3, Interesting)
So get a DirectTV unit. It requires almost zero interaction with TiVo to function. With a few minor modifications, it never needs to call tivo. Sure, you'll stop getting "TiVolution Magazine" and "Showcases", but how often does anyone use those?
TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:3, Interesting)
If tivo added a second tuner, it would rock my world.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:1, Informative)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:1)
Someone needs to make a dual cable tuner PVR.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:1)
dp
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:4, Informative)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2, Informative)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:1)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
And I believe it's a GemStar (stupid) patent.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:1)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
One enormous difference... (Score:2)
So, Ultimate TV is positively worthless to me. Also, the capability to record two shows at once requires two drops from the satellite, something which a lot of people didn't think to pull behind their televisions.
The only other feature Ultimate TV boasts is a WebTV add-on, something which no serious
Re:One enormous difference... (Score:1)
For one thing at least in the two areas I have had digital cable (Austin Tx, Kansas City) the quality isn't even comparable. DirectTv is probably 5 times clearer. The quality of local channels is even higher... go figure.
Just because you have a cable modem doesn't mean you are tied to cable service.
Re:One enormous difference... (Score:1)
1) I have to have basic cable (~$10) in order to have a Cable Modem. So, I'm already devoting $10 plus the $40 for my cable modem. Once I calculate adding a DirecTV box to even 3 televisions, it becomes prohibitively expensive.
2) Until very recently, DirecTV didn't offer Fox Sports World. I love watching soccer.
3) DirecTV still doesn't provide WB or UPN in my area (I don't think they provide them anywhere). No WB means I can't watch my Friends and Seinfeld reruns in the evenings. No UPN means no Buffy (I'm not into Star Trek, but that's a motivating factor for quite a few people). I'm far enough out in the burbs that off-air reception is horrible.
Re:One enormous difference... (Score:2)
So far, Enterprise is the only thing I've not been able to find. WGN carries some stuff, albeit a week behind the antenna.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:5, Interesting)
I only have a TiVo, and I'm not positive I'm talking about TiVo vs. UTV here, or mixing some of these up with TiVo vs. ReplayTV. Sorry.
Yes, he posts on a lame non-slash web BBS type thing [avsforum.com] once in a while. I think he is DrStrange. He has three TiVos, a Replay, and a UTV. He does balanced reviews (tells you what each unit is best for, not just what TiVo does well). I looked for the exact post, but couldn't find it. If I had I would have skipped doing my own list.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2, Interesting)
As might be expected, the reviews I have read confirm that TiVo is fast and responsive and stable compared to the UTV. This even tho TiVo runs on a 54MHz PowerPC chip! The UTV's apparent advantage of 2 simultaneous recordings will soon not be when the DirectTiVo software is updated to 2.5 I am not such a TV fanatic that I have to record to shows at the same time. I can watch one on TV while TiVo records another. Big deal.
Re:TiVo vs UltimateTV (Score:2)
The UTV's apparent advantage of 2 simultaneous recordings will soon not be when the DirectTiVo software is updated to 2.5 I am not such a TV fanatic that I have to record to shows at the same time. I can watch one on TV while TiVo records another. Big deal.
The 2.5 update should be just about completely rolled out by now for the DirecTV with TiVo owners. I gave my parents a Philips DSR6000 DirecTV with TiVo about a month and a half ago. They've had the 2.5 update for a while.
Recording two things at once can be an advantage. If there are enough people in the house that there are frequent conflicts about what to record, dual tuners is a big advantage.
Re:What happens when The Prez intterupts TiVo? (Score:3, Informative)
TiVo has pretty much zero idea this is happening unless it is announced ahead of time soon enough to get into the guide data.
One of the things TiVo normally does is not re-record things that it has recorded in the last 28 days -- some exceptions apply, the big two are if you ask it to record an episode ("The Red Badge Of Gayness") rather then all episodes of a show ("South Park"), and suggestions don't count as recorded (except maybe if you watch them).
After the 9/11 thing TiVo sent out a patch that basically said that anything recorded that week can be re-recorded even within the 28-day rule. That let most of the stuff that was bumped a week or two get recorded anyway (that was nice because I just made a low priority wish list for first-run-only "Pilot" and caught the first episode of most shows that I could work into my schedule).
It is far from perfect here, the address this week threw everything off, I "fixed it" by setting a manual recording for a big block of time. Fortunitly I knew that one ahead of time and could plan for it.
It turns out that Seinfeld on some random channel that TiVo finds it on for me is now getting preempted by baseball, and worse yet the same episode is on another channel a few hours later, and is not being recorded because of the 28 day rule (which I swear is normally a really useful thing!). I ended up using the Recording History to find another show that is on at the same time that I would like to record (but less then Seinfeld), and bumped it's priority up. So now I get Northern Exposure, and a real Seinfeld later.
Apparently TiVo is working on a thing that can be slapped in the VBI that says "this show is running late" and some other stuff. If the networks choose to use it, and use it correctly that could help a lot. The UK apparently has one of these, and some stations don't use it right, so I'm not sure how it will work out here.
Of corse without TiVo I wouldn't even get Seinfeld, or Northern Exposure. They are on at bad times, plus I'm not always in the mood to watch them. So now TiVo gets them, and if I feel like watching them before they roll off my buffer (about a week) I get too.
Things like the presidents address are uncommon, but somewhat worse with TiVo since you get into the habit of ignoring schedules (since TiVo really does handle 99.8% of things well!).
Upgrade (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Upgrade (Score:1)
Does anyone have a feature list for 2.5 yet? It hasn't pushed down to my SA yet! Thanks!
(Oh, and yay for anything that keeps TiVo alive! Thanks Sony!)
Re:Upgrade (Score:2)
Re:Upgrade (Score:2, Interesting)
Woohoo! 30-second skip is back!!
Pressing Select-Play-Select-3-0-Select on 2.5 will turn your ->| key into a 30 second skip button (no backdoor mode needed). Of course it seems to disable the other uses for that button, but not a bad tradeoff...
Re:Upgrade (Score:2)
Could somebody out there who has already received this upgrade post a comment on how well this works? I found the following at TiVo's website, but it was very scant on details:
I have one of the original 14 hour TiVos, so anything that will give me more recording time will be greatly appreciated. I wouldn't mind buying a new box if they ever end up making an ethernet version, but until then I will continue contemplating adding a second hard drive and I will hope that the VBR recording will substantially help once I get the update.Re:Upgrade (Score:2)
http://www.tivo.com/support/updateguide_philips
And here for Sony models:
http://www.tivo.com/support/updateguide_sony_2_
Re:Upgrade (Score:2)
Re:Upgrade (Score:5, Interesting)
These upgrades disrupt some of the hacks that can be done. The system has two 'duplicate' root partitions which are used to switch over the machine to new software versions. Any hacks you have applied (as in daily call over Cable via PPP, in my case) have to be re-applied.
I found this out when my recorder went from 1.3 to 2.01 shortly after I got it to work in the first place. I had been eyeing TiVo for a long time and finally decided to get a Sony unit last month and to put a 75GB second drive in it right away.
I ran the unit through enough of the setup to test the modem, as was suggested in the FAQ; but I found that my TiVo was totally unable to perform the second setup call after I had installed the second drive. I looked around to see what I could do to troubleshoot the modem, but nothing worked and it started to look like the thing was just fscked.
I thought I was screwed (can't return it for a new one after voiding the warranty) until I found mention of the PPP hack in the FAQ and gave that a try. It worked great... for about 2 days until the thing upgraded itself to 2.01 and all the things I'd done like getting bash to run and doing the daily call through my Cable were gone.
Apparently, the TiVo had two root partitions that are used to switch software versions. I had to open the machine up again, attach the A drive to my PC and go through the setup again.
I guess I'll be doing that again as soon as this upgrade gets delivered.
Uh oh. (Score:2, Interesting)
While I think the competition will be good (Microsoft is competing in this realm, etc.) I'm not sure I'm going to like the influence Sony will have from a copyright perspective.
Re:Uh oh. (Score:2)
Stop being so paranoid. Geez.
sony profiting off of linux (Score:1)
Hackability? (Score:1)
Re:Hackability? (Score:2)
This is nothing really new (Score:1)
Re:Ah, slashdotters. They're so funny... (Score:1)
I was simply pointing out the fact that most of the other posters missed. Sony has been using TiVo technology for a while now. The posts I read appeared to be from readers who did not know that Sony has been working with TiVo in the past.
TiVo and software... (Score:2)
I'm hoping this agreement will let manufacturers do things (recording to digital media) that TiVo wouldn't do for itself otherwise.
Re:TiVo and software... (Score:1)
The difference was that the hardware manufacturers mostly took TiVo's reference design and implemented it (much like video card manufacturers do with nVidia's graphics chips). This new deal will mean that Sony will have free reign to implement the TiVo service in any device they like.
It had to happen... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It had to happen... (Score:1)
Re:It had to happen... (Score:1)
Re:It had to happen... (Score:1)
I want a PVR (Score:2)
When I want to archive things (like movies or The Family Guy) I'll stick to VHS because I can share those with friends, and there's that whole backwards compatibility thing.
TiVo works standalone (Score:3)
Re:TiVo works standalone (Score:4, Informative)
Old Tivos work fine, unless you plug them into the phone, at which point they download the upgrade and start functioning as the new Tivos. But, you have to plug them in because the time drifts fairly badly if you don't.
Tivo's rep called users of the Tivo who didn't subscribe "freeloaders" and said that they *might* fix this "accidental" upgrade in v2.5.
The old hardware used to sell with a notice saying it would work without the service but would be so much more with it. Now they say it won't work without (and boy are they right). The only problem is that they broke old machines without telling the owners and are now blaming the owners for expecting the device to function as it claimed on the box.
Don't buy a Tivo, they're essentially crooks because they defraud their customers like this.
Re:TiVo works standalone (Score:2, Informative)
First of all, the functionality of a non-subscribed TiVo is now the same in 2.5 as it was in 1.3. It has been fixed.
Of course, they want you to subscribe, it's thier source of revenue, hence the nag screens. After all, they do take a loss on every box they sell. But to say they are crooks is seriously unjustified.
Re:TiVo works standalone (Score:2)
When presented with ways to make this up to the users, such as providing free service until the patch was made, they blatantly refused.
Many of the people who bought Tivo were in countries where the service wasn't available (no locla listings) so buying the service would have simply been a way to get around the nag screens.
I don't care at all if they lost money on each unit. I simply care about the product description on the back of the earlier units that described their functionality (without service) and how the company later decided that they wouldn't honor it.
Why is it companies can decide not to honor contracts and people support them? Would you support someone on here who said they decided not to continue their car payments, but kept the car anyways? You probably own stock like most of the people on the Tivo forum. The ones who were calling the owners of unsubscribes units thieves and cheats, and demanding that they pay for the monthly service, regardless of the product (at time of purchase) saying it wasn't necessary.
I understand that the current situation might have gotten better, but I see no reason to encourage someone to go to a company that treats their customers like that. How long until they intentionally break something again?
Re:I want a PVR (Score:2)
I'd buy one (Score:2)
Re:I want a PVR (Score:2)
As far as I understand TiVo service, you can tell to tape "Family Guy", and it'll tape it whenever it is. Right?
Re:I want a PVR (Score:2)
Even if they change where "Family Guy" is in the schedule it will be recorded.
Season passes can be prioritized for dealing with conflicts so if "Family Guy" moves from 7:30 to 7:00, but you already have a show scheduled to be recorded at 7:00, the show with the highest priority gets recorded.
You can also set up wishlists. Basically keywords that appear in different fields in the program description (ie, director, actor, description). I have a wishlist item with the word "slashdot". It hasn't had a hit yet, but I'm waiting! I have had it record many shows that I normally would never have seen based on wishlists. Once again, all wishlists are included in the main priority setup to arbitrate conflicts.
It's really pretty elegant.
Good move (Score:3, Interesting)
As for price increases in Sony products, I do not think you'll see much (if any). The kicker is the subscription fee. But the point of this kind of relationship is that Sony has the market base for TV's, DVD's, etc... and once people have these devices in their home which are "TiVo ready" then it makes it realy easy for them to dial the 800 number to subscribe. Buying an extra "box" (at $300 a pop) is not worth it to some people. Having the "extra features" in a box they are already buying is a good thing!
but I don't see the subscription as useful (Score:2)
I'd be perfectly happy to continue clicking on the programs I want from my regular listing, and to have the ability to set it to recortd the same time & station each week. I suppose this deal is a step in that direction, but unless sony makes boxes that let you do that, it doesn't help much.
hawk
Re:but I don't see the subscription as useful (Score:1)
- Sawbones
but from everything I've seen (Score:2)
hawk
Re:but I don't see the subscription as useful (Score:2, Informative)
Plus it's nice not having to even guess which channel your shows are on. I get Law and Order on two different channels at least, but it doesn't even matter to me which channel it's on - I skip the commercials anyways.
Also, TiVo's listings are far more than just a step above the regular listings. They're interactive, meaning you can select shows from the list and set them to record in just a few clicks. You can also look backwards to see what was on yesterday - I'm sure I'm not the only person to use this feature.
Btw: You can set up manual recordings. I do that for Adult Swim on Cartoon Network because their clocks are a few minutes off there. TiVo can handle this if you tell it to record a few minutes early or late, but I've found it to be a lot of trouble to set that up for 6 shows in a row - personal preference.
Building a bare-bones DVR with Linux? (Score:3, Interesting)
Are there better resources out there than http://linuxvideo.org?
I like the functionality of the TiVo, but I don't want to spend the money on one - I don't need anything but a way to decode & record a cable TV signal.
Why? Because the TiVo can't be programmed from the office, and I can't move anything off the TiVo to store for later viewing. I've already got 150+ GB of available storage, I need to use it for something.
Re:Building a bare-bones DVR with Linux? (Score:1)
However it isnt a PITA, because tivo can control the cable box automatically, so it can change the channel on demand. Thus you can record a show at 7 on channel 1, and 7:30 on channel 2 with no user intervention.
Re:Building a bare-bones DVR with Linux? (Score:1, Informative)
TiVo can be programmed from the office - it just isn't easy or supported. People have come up with an Ehternet card hack and web interface for TiVo.
I believe that there is a hack that will (for the time being) let you remove programming from the TiVo. Be aware that even a lot of people in the TiVo Underground don't support this on the grounds that it may get TiVo sued out of business.
Re:Building a bare-bones DVR with Linux? (Score:1)
I'm starting to put together a linux based digital VCR, there's not a lot of complete information out there, but I can answer some of your questions.
All of the capture boards I've seen are purely tuner/capture boards, they don't have S-video output. Some AGP video cards do have S-video output, and some of them are supported in linux.
The main problem I'm having now is noise from my Soundblaster Live. After hooking up the capture board I seem to have created a ground loop, making for really poor sound quality.
I haven't worked with the S-video output on my board yet, I'm not sure its supported, but my eventual intention is to build a tiny computer similar to the one posted on slashdot today that can sit on my home LAN and be a part of my entertainment system.
But that's more expensive (Score:2)
And you'll end up with a much less useful software and fewer features. I know they seem like sillt luxuries untill you've tried them, but they become indispensible very soon.
bug trackin (Score:1)
Trying to send a message after moderation.
Please, do not moderate this down. If possible remove this message.
Mixed (Score:2)
I am surprised though that Sony just didn't buy out TiVo. Maybe that is a good sign.
Re:Mixed (Score:2, Insightful)
You can always plug in an external unit.
And since all the networks and whatnot are already tivo's main financial backing, any content control incentives are already in place.
This is why Tivo doesnt have skip commercials. Because networks make their money on commercials, and therefore won't let tivo skip em.
Ultimate TV and ReplayTV dont have that restriction.
Containers and content (Score:3, Interesting)
Sony offfers $200 rebate (Score:1, Informative)
See most any dealer or go to Sony's site.
Could be a "Digital Switch". (Score:5, Interesting)
Give it some serious thought for a second. If Sony could take ILink/Firewire and ethernet, then add it to a Tivo, or Tivo-like device, it would make a killing, IMO.
A rather nebulous idea, to be sure, but one time I was being rather lazy and needed some images I had snagged...for lack of a zip disk, and rather than emailing them to myself or ftp'ing I simply dragged the images to a digital camera and it had put them on the memory card inside.
Very neat and simple. A device that does what you want w/o any restrictions, encryption, access denied, backdoors, product activation.
Drag, Drop, copy, done. (I hesitate to say I was on a mac, so no flames, pls)
Imagine this applied to a PVR. You've got a dvd/SVCD/VCD/mpg/avi/mov or heck maybe even mp3's for good measure. You drag, drop or pipe it over a wire and it plays by either decoding it or accepting a straight DV stream.
Not only would the coolness factor be a driving force, but the MP|RI-AA "FSCK OFF" factor would make them fly off the shelves.
It could be done by SONY and very few others because SONY, unlike most corporations can, have "someone to point a finger at".
MSFT == gates/ballmer
APPL == jobs
SONY == (I have no idea).
This is what most corps are aiming for, mind you.
Yeah there would be other corps screaming bloody murder, maybe suing, but (IIRC) Sony or a Sony like company would defend itself from the likes of Rambus/MSFT/MPAA. (Was it Sony?...don't remember and too dang tired to look it up, anywho..).
I think, it is a possibility...some corps "get it" when they 'give ppl what they want' *not* "give ppl what they think we want'".
One Moose's opinion.
Moose
Re:Could be a "Digital Switch". (Score:2, Interesting)
You can bet any product will have just as much "content control" as any product out there.
Re:Could be a "Digital Switch". (Score:2)
You can bet any product will have just as much "content control" as any product out there.
No I had not, and thanks for calling me on it, but the point I was driving at was a "Sony-like" company. One that is "ubiquitous", I think is the word I was searching for.
Rambus is/was/will continue to be a IP, and not a technology, bully. One memory mfg stood up and said "enough" and took them to court/countersued.
I don't recall the exact results, but, it came to a draw in court but a win in the court of public opinion. Before anyone stood up, mfg's knew they were being defrauded/flim-flamed or cowed by Rambus' lawyers...all it took was *one* to stand up and fight.
In the game of "j'accuse!" the defendant has the hardest job...win or draw/no contest essentailly gives you 2 out of 3 odds of "success".
Keep in mind the jist of what I said previously because the parallels to Microsoft, RI|MP-AA, Rambus, and yes, even Sony (depending on how this Tivo aquisition goes) are astounding.
(as an aside my thinking on matters such as these are, admittadly, esoteric. I make connections at times so "out there", and get slammed (rightfully so) until I can put the subject into the proper context. I'm trying, so, work with me a little)
IMO, Microsoft has done everything possible *except* publish a proclamation similar to the "Manifest Destiny". I think there will be major battles in the future (DOJ's 'emasculation by administration' aside) but the war is already lost and any victory will be a Pyrric Victory.
The MP|RI-AA's? (and I'm not going to discount Sony or a "Sony-like-company")
More of the same quite possibly.
Kind of gloomy-sounding? yeah.
Have I given up? NOT ON YOUR FREAKING LIFE!!!
I for one *UNDERMINE* if downright *DEFY* these corporations every chance I get, because I am an American after all.
I got an MPAA bitch message once...ok, you can control me on the internet, fine..but not off the internet. When you start using fear tactics on Americans/me, you only piss "us" off even more.
Now, I've always wanted to get a tatoo, but never could find anything appropriate...and it just came to me a second ago. Mickey Mouse's siloette tatooed on the end of my penis. Disney wants me to remove it? Ok, on your knees and suck it off!
Ok, I'm trying to lose the "rant'ish" tone.
Summation:
Sony has the potential to do a lot of good with Tivo by expanding, enrichening and enlightening others "Digital Lifestyle" (apologies to SJ, again and ppl with buzzword intolerance).
If they "Embrace, extend and extinguish" a viable alternative, IMO, they will "piss a lot of us off".
Will it be hacked, reguardless? Yes.
Will doing so be illegal? Remains to be seen.
Keeping this in perspective, the device ain't that important. The implications (dmca/ssca/current events/etc) for and of the future are.
At the risk of sounding trite, we are the revolution(aries).
The question is who/when is going to stand up and say "Just a FSCK'ing minute" on a grand scale.
Yes, we encrypt communications to military vessels. It makes sense.
Why are we allowing it with DVD's/HDTV's/whatever.
IMOFWIW (In Moose's Opinion, For What It Is Worth)
Moose.
(whack) "Shutting Up!" -Molt, In a Bugs Life.
Re:Could be a "Digital Switch". (Score:2)
Television lock in is why Sony/TiVo match well. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is TiVo so delicious? Especially for a game console manufacturer who wants to adopt services? The answer is simple. The DVR locks itself into your television experience as a layer between your remote and your programming. How so?
Once you have a TiVo/UltimateTV/ReplayTV, you are always working within the software environment. That is, it is not like a game console where you say, "Now I am going to play video games. Okay. Now I am done. I am going to switch it off and watch TV." The DVR is an always-on computer television appliance. It does a good job of integrating itself into the television... people without TiVos don't think about turning their TiVo off to do something else. [How? The primary reason is that it takes over the remote control. If you can get people to use YOUR remote control to operate their home television with YOUR appliance, you can put anything in between that you want.]
Match that with a game console, and online services, and you see why it is so attractive. An online service that is "always on" makes itself far more easier to adopt than something you turn off and on.
This is the future and, for this reason, television computing will become pervasive. WebTV isn't it. Game consoles aren't it. It is the DVR which will allow companies to sink their services into the "home television computer".
Does this mean we're winning a new market? (Score:2)
Sony commits to a seven year deal with the Linux Based Tivo.
I suspect Sony will start shipping Dual boot Laptops and PCs soon where the user will have to buy windows or it gets wiped off.
I suspect the Playstation 3 will run linux! You scoff, but with Sony's experience.... It would probably be a seriously modified kernel with many patches that would never see an AC let alone LT release but....
Imagine a PS3 with DVD-R(W), TIVO, FIREWIRE, USB, KDE/OpenOffice and Mozilla (use debs please sony and make it deb compatible as far as possible), do you want all those idiots who want a computer to go out and get one of them or a Dell box with Win9x/Me/XP/BS and then ask you how to
I think Sony are just plain ahead of the game here , and the consumer computer market is about to be redefined (finally) for the first time since win3.x.
How Sony makes money out of PS (Score:2, Informative)
In 1998, an astonishing 40% of Sony's profits came from its PSX division. And they made next to no money on the hardware. The company makes money because publishing a PSX game requires Sony's approval. Oh, that and a $5-7 fee (per unit) to Sony.
Going to a Linux distribution with a DVD player would mean ANYONE could make a PS3 game. Good news for PS3 owners, bad news for Sony. Why would anyone pay Sony money when they could sell the games for 'free'.
While Sony would love to be 'free' of Microsoft, that does not mean they would like to make the creation of games free. Going to an open-source/Linux architecture would mean ANYONE could write games.
I can't imagine Sony senior management would go for that.
Just my ha'penny's worth.
Re:How Sony makes money out of PS (Score:2)
Re:How is this good? (Score:2)
Re:How is this good? (Score:1)
I'll have you know I'm 32, and rather attatched to my playstation. (And my blue blankie, but it's not related).
Re:How is this good? (Score:2)
Anyway, the market seems to think it's a good thing for TiVo... stock is up about 23% today.
-S
Re:You know, the tivo would be a nice product (Score:1)
pray tell, how would freebsd improve TiVo? the TiVo UI is proprietary and rather independent of the underlying OS. in fact, the user is completely shielded from the OS.
Re:sounds suspicous (Score:1)
so, if i read you correctly, you have no internet, eletricity, telephone, nor cable/satellite connection to your house.
Re:sounds suspicous (Score:1)
- Tim
Re:TIVO Included Televisions... (Score:2)
What if you where to add $300 to the price of your TV with a built in Tivo and a new version (with 12 tuners
I like the idea of seperate components. If my DVD player dies and I have to do without it for awhile or send it to the shop, I can still watch my TV.