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Viiv Falls Flat

smilingman writes "The Washington Post (Retina Scan Required) is reporting that Intel's Viiv media center, which was supposed to revolutionize home entertainment and kill the living-room PC as we know it, fails miserably to deliver in its first incarnation. From the article: 'During a presentation at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, chief executive Paul S. Otellini unveiled Viiv -- a combination of hardware and software that would combine functions of the TV, the DVD player, the VCR and the video game console... In April, Viiv doesn't look much like that vision. On a typical Viiv box, Hewlett-Packard's Pavilion m7360y, it amounts to a smattering of free Web video clips and discounts on online music, movie and game rentals -- plus a nifty rainbow-hued Viiv sticker on the front of the computer.'"

5 of 257 comments (clear)

  1. Buy DRM-free hardware by UseFree.org · · Score: 3, Informative

    Intel is pushing a technology called Treacherous Computing, which will prevent unsigned code from running on their hardware. So even if you have the source code, if you try to remove the DRM restrictions, the hardware will refuse to run the modified binary.

    The Free Software Foundation admits that the anti-DRM provisions in the GPLv3 will not be enough on their own to prevent the nightmare scenario where users can't trust their own computers.

    People who understand the dangers of Digital Restrictions Management at a technical level (ie.Free and Open Source software developers) should warn the general public to avoid buying DRM-crippled hardware. Consumers should know about the great variety of DRM-free computers and accessories built specifically to work with Linux, the KDE desktop, and other Free and Open Source applications.

    On the music side, there are plenty of websites that legally sell DRM-free, RIAA-free music by independent artists. Consumers can use an iTunes-like application called Songbird to easily download songs from these sites.

    As for movies, building a Linux media center works better than the DRM-crippled offering from M$FT. Just download MythTV and run it on a computer equipped with the pcHDTV HD-3000 card and the PVR-350 card -- these will capture both standard definition (NTSC) and Digital/Hi-Definition (ATSC/HDTV) signals.

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  2. Problem is with Media Center PCs in general by itsah2 · · Score: 3, Informative

    It seems to me like the Media Center PC market as a whole is doomed for failure. Sure, some people will like the idea of having content stored on a hard drive that they can view on their TV, but in general, people want simplicity and reliability.

    Viiv (or any Media Center for that matter) can't deliver that. 90% of consumers don't want a box that they're going to have to boot up every time they want to record a show or watch TV. They want something that is easy to hook up, fast to start up (steps are being made towards this for PCs, but I haven't seen a whole lot so far), and, most of all, easy to use.

    Sure, I can use Media Center, but do you think my mother can?

  3. Yes, I do remember that. It was different. by twitter · · Score: 2, Informative
    This is not a first for Intel to try this though. MMX makes the internet go faster. Anyone remember that?

    MMX was an actual hardware improvement that did make media "go faster". It has been used and improved by Intel and AMD. Support for the features is built into the GNU compilers and processor specific Linux kernels, which most distributions have as precompiled binaries.

    ViiV's main feature seems to be hardware based DRM.

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    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  4. Re:VIIV has no soul by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative
    What is VIIV? I have scoured the internet and Intel's site to figure this out.
    Scour harder?

    http://www.google.com/search?q=viiv+criteria
    leads you to http://www.intel.com/support/entertainment/viiv/sb /CS-021546.htm

    Viiv effectively encompasses a motherboard, CPU, the OS + software and an optional remote.

    Maybe you're underwhelmed because... the criteria is fairly underwhelming. No HD size requirements, no graphics requirement beyond onboard video, no tv/vivo requirement, no min RAM, etc etc etc.

    I honestly don't understand the point of their marketing campaign if it isn't mandatory that Viiv includes a tv tuner + remote. At least Centrino meant that your computer had a wireless card.
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  5. Re:same old story by the_macman · · Score: 3, Informative
    That's why American servicemen pry AK-47s out of dead Iraqi fingers, and toss their M-16s in the back of the HMV. Drop the AK-47 in the sand, kick it around a bit, pick it up -- it goes "bang" every time.
    Right. Are you talking outta your ass or do you really think this happens? I'm in the military and I can tell you soldiers in the sand box don't do this. Here's why. US Soldiers are trained to engage point targets, meaning make every shot count and hit as accurately as you can. They are trained from the ground up on this principle. Here is a breakdown of BRM (Basic Rifle Marksmenship) training. AK's, while more reliable are much less accurate than the M-4's the soldiers use over there. Don't believe me, read this. Plus any good commanding officer would chew your ass out for ditching your weapon for an AK-47.