Roku Finally Gets a 2D Menu System 80
DeviceGuru writes "Many of us have griped for years about Roku's retro one-dimensional user interface. Finally, in conjunction with the release of the new Roku 3 model, the Linux-based media streaming player is getting a two-dimensional facelift, making it quicker and easier to access favorite channels and find new ones. Current Roku users, who will now begin suffering from UI-envy, will be glad to learn that Roku plans to push out a firmware update next month to many earlier models, including the Roku LT, Roku HD (model 2500R), Roku 2 HD, Roku 2 XD, Roku 2 XS, and Roku Streaming Stick. A short demo of the new 2D Roku menu system is available in this YouTube video."
I believe we already crashed linuxgizmos.com (Score:1)
I believe we already crashed linuxgizmos.com because it's incredibly slow.
It's only been four minutes!
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Re:I believe we already crashed linuxgizmos.com (Score:4)
It's running off of a Roku.
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But what firmware?
Roku 3 (Score:5, Interesting)
Sadly, although the new Roku has the new interface and a fast CPU, it's lost a lot of the connectivity that made the original Roku such a great device; the optical audio is gone, and so is the component video. The 3 is composite video + analog audio, or HDMI+audio, or nothing. I made great use of that connectivity with a high end, but older, Denon receiver for one unit, and a toshiba flatscreen 720p CRT display. Both still work perfectly, but will have to stay with the original roku, which is very slow. So no new interface for me, sigh.
I'm thinking there's still a lot of similar hardware out there, too.
Maybe you need an HDMI switch with TOSLink? (Score:3)
TOSLink is only 2 channels (Score:4, Informative)
You'd be better off with high quality analog outputs. TOSLink is limited 2 channels, so any conversion with more channels (assuming the Roku even supports that) requires some sort of encoding scheme and a loss of quality.
TOSLink is not 2 channel only (Score:2)
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The 3 is composite video + analog audio, or HDMI+audio, or nothing.
So, it's a Raspberry Pi.
For all I rag on Pi, it makes an adequate thing on which to run XBMC...
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So buy an old one. I have both an old and a new Roku (the new one was $50 on sale around Christmas and we plan to use it at our vacation home).
I mean, do you really expect them to support devices which few people use anymore? I didn't have a HDTV until a few months ago but most people haven't had a need for component input for a VERY long time.
Are companies really supposed to support dying technologies just to make a handful of geeks happy? The device is tiny and cheap as it is, continuing to hold out on th
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I *have* an old one. Reading comprehension fail much?
No. I expect them to support optical audio, which is a standard connection even today; and I expect them to support component, which is *also* a standard connection, even today. They can of course choose not to include such support, just as they have done, but then I will choose not to buy the new device to replace my old device, just as I have done. Unde
One-dimensional Interface? (Score:5, Funny)
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Dimension of a vector space is the number of linearly independent vectors in its spanning set of vectors. And I don't know how this applies to user interfaces.
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> The day someone makes the natural Excel of programming will be glorious. But every way I can
> think of such a style, it just feels obtuse in so many ways.
So you want Befunge? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Befunge [wikipedia.org]
Re:One-dimensional Interface? (Score:5, Insightful)
Its still a retarded way to describe the problem.
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If you can only move in one dimension, like LCD (Score:4, Informative)
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1D is a line.
2D is a plane.
and you can only move in a line (Score:2)
1D is a line. 2D is a plane.
and you can only move in a line, not all around a plane.
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Not Trolling here....
Isn't 1D a single point on a plane and 2D is 2 points on a plane connected by a line?
It's no wonder geeks get shit all the time (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, actually it did look like this - - - - -
And now, it looks like this:
- - - - -
- - - - -
Where each - represents an icon. Notice how the icons may be addressed by a single value, or a single dimension. Now, they are addressed by two values - sometimes known as 2 dimensions.
I'm guessing that you're the guy who, when he walks into a lab with lots of critical equipment and the lab manager says "don't touch anything," you are the one who asks "Can I touch the air? Can I touch the floor?" Grow the fuck up.
whoosh (Score:1)
Settle down, Francis, he was joking.
Too bad the mods couldn't get past your first few lines.
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It would have been better described as an interface with one-dimensional navigation. If you think about it, a lot of UI's could be described this way. Throwing in that extra dimension so that items could be laid out into a grid instead of a line makes it quicker to navigate through a long list of items.
One Dimensional ???? (Score:2)
I am thinking in terms of a thermometer-type slider, like those 1960's radio tuners; am I right? But with no room even for markings by the side, just a thin line that changes colour as you slide?
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A single row of application icons that require a lot of left and right scrolling. http://www.showstoppers.com/wp-content/uploads/gallery/2010/10/new-roku-home-screen-300x214.png [showstoppers.com]
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beyond humor, the current roku setup is exactly like above posts had mentioned:
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that is your menu. you scroll left to right, and that's it. It functions and you can rearrange things, but roku is really set up like that.
Thankfully Plex on roku has a better interface than roku, I suppose you can call it a 2 dimension interface as you have horizontal and vertical aspects, better arranged.I would never even use a roku if it wasn't for plex.
seriously? (Score:1)
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A lot more people will understand "multiple row" than "2-D".
The best you could come up with was "pane". Terrible analogy, but you probably didn't put too much time into it so that's okay. It's also not your job.
Terrible journalism written by and for simpletons.
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They should have said "switched from an interface that only allowed movement in one dimension to allowing movement in two dimensions".
But then what would all the pedants have done for entertainment? In my book, having all the selections laid out along a line is one-dimensional. That it has a meaningful two-dimensional representation shouldn't prevent any slashdotters from comprehending what was meant.
One-dimensional user interface (Score:4, Funny)
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How are you able to see the letters if they have width but no height or depth?
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The dimensionality has to do with the number of directions the interface can be navigated in. Left and right, which is one dimension. Up and down the screen would be a 2nd dimension, then 3D would be in and out of the screen.
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$90 for a Netflix device IS no good - especially since Roku sells their baseline 720p devices for $50 direct. What seller was gouging you for $90?
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But still rife with useless advertising? (Score:2)
So, will we still get adds for the PPV fight as the first 5 items in the list on the TV in the toddler's playroom? That's why I ditched the Roku to begin with - the first screen of items was stuff I didn't want, and couldn't rearrange. Maybe now I only have to scroll through one 2D page of ads instead of three screens of useless icons?
Finally? (Score:2)
Just started getting into Roku programming in the last month, and I kind of like the ifPosterScreen's [roku.com] "arc-landscape" 1-D metaphor — for small numbers of objects, it's easier to see the selection when it's placed front and center (as a result of your right-left arrowing) than to just put a little highlight box around it like AppleTV does. CoverFlow does nothing for me on iOS or (especially) Mac, but on Roku it seemed to work pretty nicely.
And it's not like this is the only menuing system available on
Menu 'dimensioniality' aside (Score:2)
The Roku however runs Linux and handles Netflix, TV's that run Linux internally handle Netflix. How does they accomplish this? Closed source code certainly, but Netflix is just a streaming service.
If you were trying to build a 'renegade' Netflix app for Linux, where does the problem lie? In conv
Re:Menu 'dimensioniality' aside (Score:5, Funny)
Is that where you set two IDE hard drives both to Master and see which one wins?
Who runs PATA-town? (Score:2)
Is that where you set two IDE hard drives both to Master and see which one wins?
Two Drives Enter! One Drive Leaves!
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If you were trying to build a 'renegade' Netflix app for Linux, where does the problem lie?
The problem is that they can change the server around endlessly to crap on your app.
I have a custom HTPC/ media server in the closet in my living room. It does quite a few nice things. However, I want to ditch my windows license on it, rebuild it in Linux and Netflix is the main reason that I cannot.
You mean, you will not. In any case, if someone were going to spend effort on integrating Netflix with a Linux HTPC it would be a much shorter trip to use vmware player and script launching iexplore. Since you already have a Windows license (as do most PC owners) this is not really a problem for you except perhaps on an ideological level.
You could always switch to using an Android-based device to display to your TV. That wou
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The Roku however runs Linux and handles Netflix, TV's that run Linux internally handle Netflix. How does they accomplish this?
The same way Android, Boxee Box, and WDTV accomplish it: by being a closed system that allows DRM. It's not that Netflix doesn't want to support Linux, it's that the content providers for Netflix don't want them to support a system where they can't control what happens with the stream.
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That's nonsense.
Linux is no less of a "closed system" than Windows or MacOS is yet those platforms support Netflix. Anyone can run a debugger or a memory monitor on those platforms and start chipping away at Netflix and their little stronghold.
A proprietary binary enforces the DRM. Doesn't matter if you are talking about Netflix or Amazon. Doesn't matter what platform you are talking about.
Linux happily plays protected Amazon streams and no one in Seattle gets their panties in a bunch over it.
Ironically eno
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A proprietary binary enforces the DRM.
How would they distribute that proprietary binary on a Linux system, when they need to compile against different versions of different libraries that may or may not be installed on your system, and may or may not still exist next week when you update your system? Do you suggest they statically compile all of the libs and dependencies they need into the binary itself?
Short of coming up with their own Linux distro specifically for the purpose, they have decided that there's no way they can distribute a propri
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http://how-to.wikia.com/wiki/How_to_watch_Netflix_(Watch_Instantly)_in_Linux [wikia.com] It uses WINE, but the ppa sets everything up for you (if you are using Ubuntu). For things like TVs and Rokus, they have special, non-silverlight DRM built in that Netflix has specified. The problem with making truly native Linux client is that, like most things for Linux, the market share isn't there to make it cost effective.
Now if they could just publish a STANDARD (Score:3)
Now if Roku would just accept/publish a standard so my universal remote - that controls EVERYTHING else in my a/v cabinet - can also take over from the forlorn little retarded Roku remote that I daren't possibly lose.*
*ok that's an exaggeration, I found an app for my android that lets me control it in a pinch, or when I want to piss off whoever's watching TV. I do wish it had a "here's what's being watched" scroll though.
harmony remote works fine with roku (Score:3)
Not sure what remote you're using, but my Harmony works fine. If it's not in the database can you have your universal remote learn from the Roku remote?
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It's like 5 buttons. What's to publish?
Reverse engineer that trivial number of buttons and publish that on the web for anyone to use (and integrate into their $10 remotes).
If companies are interested in supporting it, it's pretty trivial if they have any interest in at all. Clearly your bargain bin IR remote vendors can't be bothered.
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FWIW you can just give them a fake number with wrong data, it doesn't confirm the details unless/until you try to buy something.
Oh great, an "update" (Score:2)
We have a a semi-old Roku box. It generally works great, but I've noticed half the time their "updates" break things horribly and we have to wait for another "update" to fix whatever they broke.
Still, if it works, I'll be happy enough. It is a pretty mediocre UI at the moment.
Biggest question... (Score:1)
Is it still smeared all over with Advertisements? It's the one reason I left the Roku for the apple TV. Roku was great until they got greedy and started slathering the thing in adverts.
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Mine has one banner ad at the bottom of the Roku main menu which advertises some show or service from one of the channels. Is that what you mean by slathering and smearing, or do you get something different?
Google Play Support? (Score:2)
I'm just dreaming, but I hope they get Google Play support with this.
What I really want... (Score:1)