The XBMC Project Will Now Be Called Kodi 188
An anonymous reader writes: Citing the problems caused by the lack of legal control over the current name and its long outdated origins as the reasons for the change, The Xbox Media Center team announced that they will switch the project's name to Kodi when version 14 is released later this year. If you're wondering how they picked the name Kodi, here's what they said: "We considered a TON of names. We had a number of requirements for the new name, such as being reasonably pronounceable in various languages and not be a mouthful to say, not be used as a trademark for someone else's media-related product, be easy to remember, etc. The group came up with a list of names and had our lawyer go over them. We then got back a smaller list that had been checked for various legal issues, and then we voted on the final name."
Like the German discount store Kodi? (Score:3, Funny)
Good choice, guys.
Re: Like the German discount store Kodi? (Score:1)
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Is that discount chain a media related product? Because if it's not then it meets their criteria.
It might, but that's still silly. If they were based in Germany and came up with "K-Mart" as their name, Americans would mock it. Let's work with people as they actually exist.
Xtreme Broadband Media Center or whatever would have kept the momentum.
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Re: Like the German discount store Kodi? (Score:5, Funny)
Kobi works well enough.
Obviously not well enough since you couldn't even remember the correct name.
Re: Like the German discount store Kodi? (Score:5, Funny)
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I agree, Jody is a great name, instantly recognizable and difficult to confuse with another name. It's not as ubiquitous as XBMC, nor does it imply the decade-plus heritage, but it'll become memorable over time, I'm sure...
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Re: Like the German discount store Kodi? (Score:2, Informative)
Woosh!
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Hahahah laughing at you so hard now it hurts. I for one welcome "Jobi".
This naming trend has to stop (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is it that OSS projects always seem to pick names that are, at best, obscure, and at worst, completely nondescriptive, yet have cutesy sounding names? I think it started somewhere around 2000. Please stop. Pick more functional names so I don't have to explain to people, "no, dolphin is the file manager and konqueror is the browser.'
This also applies to libraries too. For example, anyone know what 'liborc', 'libnettle', 'libenchant', 'libmagic' or 'libcanberra' are without looking it up? I just picked these at random from /usr/lib. There are plenty more.
Stop. Using. Cutesy. Names.
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So that's why Microsoft is the Winner. Everything has an obvious name like "Word" and "Office" and "Media Player"
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Not that simple, but at least the terms are either obvious or intuitive enough for most to make the leap.
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Microsoft has the benefit of being a market abusing behemoth with a large legal department. They get to play by a different set of rules than the rest of us. That's why Microsoft gets to get away with using trademarks that never should have been allowed.
Smaller organizations actually have to obey the rules.
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:4, Insightful)
Zune. Bing. Works. Visio. Vizact.
And lastly, Bob.
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I use Visio a fair amount for network diagrams.
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:4, Funny)
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Fine by me!
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:5, Funny)
Nice, you now have Karnal knowledge!
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But it was lawful, so... there's that.
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I use Visio a fair amount for network diagrams.
I use Visio for chip circuit diagrams. The is no comparable tool. In Visio you can make a template with smart shapes that fits right in the document, enforces a consistent grid and the smart shapes can be programmed to do useful shit, like maintain an arrow head shape while the shape is stretched, or clear out the crossing line in an abutting bus tee or scale and position the text so it fits cleanly with the bus, or scales a gate automatically to fit the number of inputs (that land on the grid).
Visio used t
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I went looking but I found nothing to suggest Visio smartsheet type behavior. Do they have that?
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I use Visio. It is excellent.
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The OP I was referring to was the AC with the 0-rated post. And I, personally, think Office and Media Player are pretty obviously named; Word, slightly less so, but "
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Vizio (Score:4, Insightful)
Visio sounds like "vision", as in "having a vision", which is exactly what the software facilitates the development of. Easy.
To me, Vizio means "TVs and computer monitors", like the VX32L TV that I'm using as a second monitor for my laptop as I type this very comment. And Vizio makes smart TVs, whose firmware would compete with what is now called Kodi.
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You do realize that the software product Visio predates the TV brand by a solid decade, right?
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To me Vizio means low-grade, crap TV that all of the sports bars use because they are cheap.
Visio on the other hand means a flowchart planner.
Odd that. I though Visio was the only drawing package with both decent scriptable shapes and a half decent UI.
It is the only thing in the Microsoft suite that gives me a reason to use Windows. All other things (coding, designing chips, simulating, serving internet things, writing documents) I can use Linux based tools more effectively.
You could plan flowcharts in it, but that wouldn't achieve anything useful.
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I'm fully aware of that. I used Visio before Microsoft brought Shapeware/Visio corp.
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Well, to be fair "shop" also means a place where things are crafted or repaired (compare with "workshop"). Visual Studio is visual in its design methodology, but no so much a studio.
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:5, Interesting)
Access (obviously a password management tool). Excel (clearly a standardised testing suite). Powerpoint (specialised electrical/electronic interface tool). SQL (who the hell knows what this is?). Outlook (Ah, this is obvious - a weather app).
Janus, Snowball, O'Hare, Memphis, Daytona, Cairo*, Whistler*, Longhorn, Vienna.
*Cairo was the codename for NT4.0 and Whistler the codename for xp, but x and p are the Greek letters chi and rho. Mind blowed yet?
I like the OpenOffice/LibreOffice naming convention for the suite components: Write, Draw, Impress, Base, Calc, Math. I mean, how user friendly do you want it?
Structured Query Language (Score:2)
SQL (who the hell knows what this is?).
SQL is Structured Query Language [wikipedia.org], an ISO standard since the 1980s. "Microsoft SQL Server" is as generic after the first word as "Windows Media Player". Other well-known products implementing subsets of the same standard have names like "SQLite", "MySQL", "PostgreSQL", and "ORACLE Database" (allegedly standing for "One Rich Aristocrat Called Larry Ellison").
Janus, Snowball, O'Hare, Memphis, Daytona, Cairo*, Whistler*, Longhorn, Vienna.
Codenames like these were not intended for use by the general public. For example, Whistler was renamed to "Windows XP" and Longhorn to "Windows Vista" b
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Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:4, Funny)
a FUFMe programming interface?
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the post Google age. You have to pick a nonsensical name so it will show up uniquely in a Google search. I'm a musician for example, and the days of naming your band something like "The Doors" is dead. That name would literally kill any chance you had at success in todays world.
Re:This naming trend has to stop (Score:5, Funny)
ah bollocks, time for the second choice then: The Roof Shingles.
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Absolute true, which is why the open source computer algebra project Maxima has a disastrous name. If you want to find out how to calculate something in it (which is often necessary because the documentation is bad), you can't just search for "maxima", you'll get a million unrelated things.
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Absolutely! That's why Google named their programming language "Go". They clearly know a thing or two about name searching.
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Pick more functional names so I don't have to explain to people, "no, dolphin is the file manager and konqueror is the browser.'
Yeah, "Safari" and "Opera" are such more functional names for a Web browser than "Konqueror".
(And "Windows Explorer" is such a functional name for a file manager; it doesn't at all sound as if somebody tried to give it a name reminiscent of their Web browser.)
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FYI, "Windows Explorer" is much older than "Internet Explorer". The browser was likely named to mimic the file manager, not the other way around.
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Yeah, "Safari" and "Opera" are such more functional names for a Web browser than "Konqueror".
They aren't better names
If you seriously think I was suggesting that they were better names, you really need to go get your sarcasm detector re-calibrated.
and that is reflected in the fact that nobody uses them.
Presumably by "nobody uses them" you mean "nobody uses those browsers", and by "nobody uses" you mean "most people don't use".
However, you have not demonstrated that there is any connection between the lower market share for those browsers and their choice of name.
Much of Safari's lower market share may be due to its low market share on Windows, an OS to which it was a latecom
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W3Counter? You do realize how dumb the use of that is, right? Most people aren't web developers and as such don't go to that site. We call that biased sampling.
And the same applies to StatCounter, which I also cited?
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The number one web browser is still Internet Explorer.
Wikipedia tells a different story [wikipedia.org]. By three of their counters, Chrome has the largest market share (including 'people who visit wikimedia sites like wikipedia', which is probably quite representative), by one counter IE is the largest. Even taking the best number for IE, that still leaves it with under 60% market share. If we assume that all of the Safari users are on OS X (because, let's face it, Safari on Windows sucks beyond belief) then that means that around a third of Windows users have switched t
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Cutesy eh? I like the sound of that. Would give a nice, hip ring to my app for filing tax returns.
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applications have had random non function relational names for years, libraries shouldn't i agree but no matter what, this makes more sense than still going with the xbox media center, which works on everything except xbox's these days
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Why is .NET called that? I would love to know how the hell they came up with that, since it's definitely tricky to Google (do you include or exclude the leading period? Who knows!)
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.Net was a promotional name applied to many products at the time, much like XP before that.
Part of this was to align the current versions, and part of it was to emphasize the network capabilities being introduced. This all happened ~2002, and that was a very big thing (from a marketing perspective) at the time.
This post [stackoverflow.com] seems to think the main reason was the latter. .NET product names [neowin.net]
Partial list of
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ActiveX becomes "Microsoft In-Browser Native Code API".
If you explain it like that, then it's far more confusing. ActiveX is a component architecture - an evolution of COM / OLE. It's used throughout Windows for embedding libraries as plugins in other applications. Pretty much every Windows application uses ActiveX, the web browser is probably among the ones that uses it the least.
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Hardly restricted to OSS, since plenty of proprietary software does the same.
Microsoft Office is also a good example, since "Excel", "PowerPoint" and "Outlook" don't really describe the function at all. Ditto for web browsers, regardless of if they are OSS or proprietary.
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Why is it that OSS projects always seem to pick names that are, at best, obscure, and at worst, completely nondescriptive, yet have cutesy sounding names?
Because OSS projects are led by unpaid software engineers, and they don't have a communications/marketing department?
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This also applies to libraries too. For example, anyone know what 'liborc', 'libnettle', 'libenchant', 'libmagic' or 'libcanberra' are without looking it up? I just picked these at random from /usr/lib. There are plenty more.
I knew the purpose of 4 out of 5 of those libraries. But I'm the distro developer. Ordinary user has no business in knowing what library does what.
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At least they didn't go for a "broken keyboard" name like Flikr, or a URL based name featuring the TLD of some unstable island nation.
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Sure beats apps with names that leave you guessing their purpose, esp when exposed on user interfaces. At least xbox media center describes exactly what the project is.
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"ERROR
Your product name must be at least 8 characters long, contain at least 1 of each of these: upper case letter, lower case letter, number, unprintable symbol, smilie-face, must not have meaning in any language and sound kind of cute."
Re: This naming trend has to stop (Score:2, Insightful)
The temp logo does say Kodi Entertainment Center.
Redefine (Score:4, Insightful)
Couldn't they have just redefined the acronym?
'Xenon Based Media Center'.. something something... It does not have to make sense. Just shorten it back to XBMC. There. No more trademark violation.
We don't even know what the X in xbox stands for either. No one cares.
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Couldn't they have just redefined the acronym? 'Xenon Based Media Center'.. something something...
It's too late in the day for such a simple-minded solution to take hold.
A Google search for "X Box Media Center" returns 426 million hits. "XBMC" 4 million hits.
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"X Box Media Center" with quotes = 496,000 results
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Or perhaps someone got involved in the project who'd had some experience with BMC software, and he said "guys, change the name, you don't want to get confused with that archaic steaming pile of bloatware"
X Square Circle (Score:2)
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I believe this is an example of Poe's Law. If I weren't familiar with the Uncyclopedia, I probably would've started repeating it as fact.
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Couldn't they have just redefined the acronym?
'Xenon Based Media Center'.. something something... It does not have to make sense. Just shorten it back to XBMC. There. No more trademark violation.
We don't even know what the X in xbox stands for either. No one cares.
^^ This.
The new name has nothing to do with XBMC or what it stands for. They may of well as called it Cloud, oh hail the buzz word that means fuck all and everything thats networked, at the same time.
Kodi seems like a bit of a joke when the char Name[0] went +1;
Xtra Bananas Monkies Claim
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Or if they "need" a name-change for whatever reason, why not XMBC (eXtendable Media Based Center)?.
I've found myself accidentally calling it that already because it is easier to say, and no messing around with meaningless "shiny" names like pointed out elsewhere.
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That assumes that keeping the name XBMC was their goal. I'm not sure that it was.
I actually had ignored XBMC for years, believing that it's purpose was to create a media client for Xbox devices. It was not until this post that I realized it was something else entirely, and that I'm actually interested in it.
(If I can figure out how to set up caching properly, I will be using it exclusively on my media box)
Re:Redefine (Score:4, Funny)
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Which does not answer the question what the X stands for either, now does it?
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X is placeholder for 3D, Draw, Sound, Music in Direct3D, DirectDraw, DirectSound, DirectMusic.
sounds like an outpost planet (Score:4, Interesting)
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I remember when they did this. It was the first time I was aware of that a computer was used in the naming process. IIRC they had an algorithm that generated inoffensive names that did not violate trademarks, that would have high recognition value, and had some sort of similarity to the original name. The computer went through 100s of thousands of names, came up with 100 or so that might work, Exxon was chosen from that group. I immediately thought it was just the sort of unaesthetic name a computer wou
I renamed mine "Chromecast" (Score:1)
plus NAS plus DLNA plus Android phone plus Localcast. Works like a treat, the entire family is thrilled.
XBMC couldn't even get the mouse cursor to work (I bought a wireless keyboard/accel-mouse for it) without closing the bug "get a better GPU".
Wish the Open Source solution could have been what the family room needed.
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or "Ouya" (Score:2)
I've got an Ouya, specifically to run XBMC. Runs pretty well with both the controller and a keyboard+mouse, except that the mouse speed is a bit high. Yes, it could use GigE and USB3.0, but running from the NAS it's fast enough and upscales what I've used, so far, in real time. Haven't found a good Linux Blu-Ray-to-stream converter, so no testing with those.
Kodi means flag in Tamil. (Score:5, Interesting)
Obligatory Dilbert (Score:2)
Obligatory Dilbert: http://dilbert.com/strips/comi... [dilbert.com]
My names (Score:2)
Awesome Media Center
Xenu's Base Media Center
Awesome Like Beer Media Center
While they are getting rid of bad legacy things... (Score:2, Troll)
Drop the requirement for the 3D graphics card, since it's NEVER EVER used for anything remotely 3D graphics related.
Don't get me wrong, it's a great way for someone who doesn't know any better to run their CPU at 110% using software emulation, but otherwise a bad decision for their target market.
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Pretty much every user interface technology built in the past 7-8 years requires a hardware graphics card.
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Except the ones explicitly designed not to need such fripperies.
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I suspect we have differing interpretations of what is cool.
What were the Other Options? (Score:2, Interesting)
My Recommendations for an Acronym (Score:1)
- Xstensible Brilliant Media Center
- X11 Bitchin' Media Center
- posiX, But others too, Media Center
- Xquisite Basic Media Center
- Xpert Basic Media Center
- Xpertly Built
- Xquisitely Built...
I could go on... I'm with the others here that say they should have just kept the damn acronym. It's bad enough that we have to keep track of name changes that occur when projects change leaders or get forked. Businesses often stick with dumb names because it's better for the
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Xtremely Bodacious Man Cave
well, crap (Score:2, Funny)
this is going to make the 'XBMC' tattoo I got last month quite difficult to explain to people
What a judge will accept (Score:2)
Kodi? What a dog shit name.
Bear [nookipedia.com], not dog.
Why not just stick with XBMC and say it no longer stands for anything?
A judge might not buy that excuse.
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Oh the grounds that a company called BMC Software threatened XBMC over just the letters. It had nothing to do with xbox.
Re:Why shouldn't something for the XBox... (Score:4, Insightful)
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If you cared to actually read the rest of the fucking article, you'd realize that it's been several years since the software was even COMPILABLE for the original Xbox. Idiot.
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You'd be wrong [xbmc4xbox.org.uk].
Re:Why shouldn't something for the XBox... (Score:4, Informative)
According to the xbmc4xbox wiki [xbmc4xbox.org.uk], it's a fork of xbmc as mainline support for the xbox was removed.
XBMC4Xbox is a third-party developer spin-off project of XBMC for Xbox, with still active development and support of the Xbox. This project was created as a fork of XBMC for Xbox as a separate project to continue having a version of XBMC for the Xbox hardware platform, and was initially started by a few members from the original XBMC project in order to fully breakout the removed Xbox branch support from the official XBMC project and let it continue as a totally separate project, which was announced on the 27 of May 2010.
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That depends on whether the XBMC foundation are dicks and prevent Debian from applying security patches to the Debian packaged version of Kodi.