Priest of the Order of the Butterfly
Posts: 750 from 2003/2/14
From: Earth
There are quite a few good ideas here. First the challenges...
This is a huge job. Nicholas might be under estimating the magnitude just a little.
Nevertheless, nice write up Nicholas! In the STB cost is king. The margins are so thin so as to be almost non-existant. The existing STB players - Scientific Atlantic, Digeo - Motorola, Thompson (Hughes, DirecTV, RCA), Panasonic, Pace, Eldon, Echostar (Dish Network) have mature products. It might be better to talk to them about what games, fast boot cycle and cool computing MorphOS and Pegasos could bring to the table. This is what we tried to do with
DYH (little war in Iraq messed us up there, but we are not out of the game yet!).
There also could be another application driver here...
Take a look at this:
http://www.skype.com/download_osx.htmlHere is a part of a letter we just finished writing:
Quote:Specifically, we would like to include Skype in this project:
https://www.avalanchecorporatetechnology.net/deskref.htm
We want to include Skype as an application in the Desktop Reference Project.
From a strategic perspective, please allow us to explain our thinking...
We think the mobile phone will continue to morph itself into the Dick Tracy (video) watch and people will keep doing what they always done - talking/communicating with each other. Having said that it will be more technically difficult for the mobile phone to become a computer than it will a computer to become a mobile phone. Please review this presentation online:
http://www.genesi.lu/olp.php
We are currently working with Freescale on the next generation PowerPC CPU and hope to be a Company that produces the reference designs for Freescale.
Currently the problem for the computer industry is that the mobile phone has a better chance for a few reasons - portability, more feature creep (easy to add calculator, address book, digital camera, etc.), an integrated WORKING billing system and a HUGE revenue stream attached to a common human activity. People pay more than $0.99 for seconds of ring tones and still in LARGE measure gawk at paying anything for the WHOLE song, because the whole billing/ID mechanism is broken on the internet.
From a blog we recently posted:
"You can steal my phone, but can you steal my identity and use my phone as I do -- as me? I mean, give me that SIM card, oh, and here's your phone.
They are integrated by definition. There is piracy of satellite television and cable providers and cheats for video games and MMPG, but try to steal a SIM and still use *the* same phone in the same way with the same ID (as me) for a while. I told you who I was and where I live and agreed to pay to get it. Did I do that when I picked up my computer, XBox or television (maybe if I got my credit card at the same time, maybe not)? That handcuff comes in step two in that realm. People don't like "handcuffs." People won't change and they won't do well to accept too much DRM control -- that is why technology needs to be focused on the experience and not the prevention of it. Help me videochat with my daughter and I will. In fact, the easier it is to copy music or video or whatever, the less of a problem piracy really is. When piracy gets easier, pirates will have less to offer or said another way -- all pirates will be fans. There are ways to make money from fans -- especially when you can offer a better/cooler/more convenient way to do what they do already (back to iPod success). How about an OPEN platform that leverages P2P video sharing and voice/video over IP? It is coming anyway. The solution to DRM is a choice made in the name of a better technology inspired ENTERTAINMENT solution and user agreement. Think entertainment not "songs" or "videos." Give developers tools to create new possibilities that will fuel the creativity to empower technology to meet the demand that won't go away. But, that is the hard road. The easy one starts with the phone and the "trust" that starts at step #1. Of course, we could limit entertainment only to those who have the smart chip *in* their heads...(just kidding!)"
We believe that ultimately the end user device is the terminal or port to the rest of the world (see iPod example for now) AND what people are really after: to talk to others, to hear music, see a movie, etc. Personalization is the key and our business strategy is to commoditize the compliments of our product and business (ex. why buy a DVD when it comes with an XBox or PS2?). You are certainly positioned to be a Global Internet Telephone Company, but together we could be much, much more.
To get a fax you had to have one. We think we could position the hardware in the same way.
By controlling the entire technology stack we will be in a position through the firmware and applications to continually and progressively offer new products and services all while leveraging and supporting the open source community toward future development consistent with the foundational opportunity we can provide.
http://www.genesi.lu/olp.php?slide=11
We want to offer a video telephone platform integrated with games and other useful home based applications in as many languages as possible We have a huge foundation of applications that can be organized to compliment the device we envision. We can support this through our own network and management system and we can get the assistance of Freescale and IBM to do it.
Another example of what this platform could do would be to fuel a whole new genre of video games that could be developed with open source tools at a fraction of today's development costs.
Ultimately, what we are discussing is a whole new internet and a digital distribution system.
<snip>
Now, here MorphOS has an opportunity (all while
Riding the Open Source Wave even though it is not -- remember the Trojan Horse discussion?). In this way if the
Open Desktop Workstation gets in the hands of developers and focused on this kind of opportunity with the kind of support we are now getting (as seen in the recent
Freescale Letter to Developers), the platform and the
Company have a real shot at the future.
What we need to do know is get more things added
HERE and
HERE. Any OS that supports the Pegasos is a good thing and you will begin to see more things added to those pages in the weeks ahead.
So...let's get to work!
Any feedback on the Skype email is welcomed! We could also use gnomemeeting. It would be a good thing to be able to reach real telephones too.
Having a special MorphOS/Pegasos version of Skype would be, we think, a great thing to have with the home console we are discussing.
R&B
[ Edited by bbrv on 2004/9/5 19:57 ]