A Hackable Media Player For HDTV
An anonymous reader writes "Embedded Linux and an open, hacker-friendly architecture power the world's first high definition media player, the $499 Roku HD1000. The brainchild of ReplayTV inventor Anthony Wood, the device could touch off a cottage industry of third-party applications and media packs that work with its Linux-based OS and user-friendly media APIs. Out of the box, the HD1000 can stream MPEG and MPEG2, play music, loop JPEGs, and more to an HDTV -- all at the same time. Roku is selling "Art Packs" of everything from museum-quality art to hot-rod cars as memory cards that work with the device. And, the company will release a C/C++ SDK for the HD1000 before 2004. Finally, there's something to actually show on your $5,000 54-inch plasma TV or 37-inch LCD TV." (Roku is also one of the companies mentioned in an earlier posting about using hi-def displays as digital art galleries).
I don't understand why they would create a system to showcase HDTV sets and not include DVI output on the system? Most, if not all newer HDTV sets include DVI inputs in order to facilitate pixel-perfect representation on the screen.
:) ) but with no DVI output I think my other plan of putting my G4 out in the living room seems like a better plan.
I would buy one of these (once I buy my nice little 42" LCD rear-proj from Sony
Broadcast HDTV is allocated 19.2Mbps for 1080i (1920 x 1080 x 60Hz interlaced)
The speeds go up in 40Mbps, 200Mbps, and 1.5Gbps quality steps depending on the
edit level (contributor, studio, and raw).
To store broadcast 1080i, you'd need 19.2Mbps. DVD is around 9Mbps.
19.2Mbps * 60s = 1152Gbpm or 140MB/min or around 8.2GB per hour.
.. is for some bright spark to add a recorder function/add-on-box to this that will negate the bit that sets HD programs as non recordable.
A modded Xbox can do the same thing (play mpeg2, divx etc.) off dvd-r or streamed off the network with HDTV output up to 1920p. See www.xboxmediacenter.com and www.xbins.org/xbmp.php.
Where is the slashdot credit card with karma points for every purchase.
I paid cash for the following, but don't think I wouldn't have used the slashdot card so I could troll more often.
First it was the netpliance
Then the apex dvd player that plays mp3s
then the tivo and tivonet
now it's a box to display hdtv stuff without a computer
cool, but I think this has more in common with the netpliance than with the other three which are still used.
For its price I would expect more, like something to read straight from a dvd, harddrive or something, no wait that would be useful.
Something doesn't add up. If linux costs $699, then how can they sell the whole thing for $499?!
We didn't choose to add DVI because of the additional cost and complexity. We felt that customers would overall be well served with component and and vga. Of course, DVI is being considered for future products.
-Patrick
-Sr. Software Engineer, Roku.