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BBC "Not In Bed With Bill Gates"

whoever57 writes "The BBC's head of technology denied rumors that a secret deal with Microsoft was behind the XP-only launch of the BBC's iPlayer. According to Ashley Highfield, the reason that the player only supports Windows XP is that only a small number of Linux visitors have come to the BBC's website. Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear. He also thinks that 'Launching a software service to every platform simultaneously would have been launch suicide,' despite the example of many major sites that support Linux (even if this is through the closed-source flash player)."

335 comments

  1. Lame reason. by SCHecklerX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is 'a small number of linux users' a reason for going with this? What is wrong with using a format that is available everywhere (including portable players!) as a matter of course?

    1. Re:Lame reason. by homey+of+my+owney · · Score: 5, Funny

      Never mind. The title creates an image that I'm not going to be able to get out of my head anytime soon.

    2. Re:Lame reason. by ByOhTek · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hard to find a DRMed format to do that of course.

      <sarcasm>
      I mean, imagine... releasing content on the internet... Without DRM. It would be a catastrophy! It'd lead to chaos, anarchy, pigs flying, snowballs having a chance!
      </sarcasm>

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    3. Re:Lame reason. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      Why is 'a small number of linux users' a reason for going with this? What is wrong with using a format that is available everywhere (including portable players!) as a matter of course?

      Because Bill came by with a wad of cash. Like Steve says, the market has spoken.

      The man is clearly a liar.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    4. Re:Lame reason. by BlowHole666 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I think you are forgetting that you have to look at file formating cost: How long it takes to convert the file to that format because time is money and if you do not break the story because you are converting a file you just lost money.
      How much band with does it cost to send the other format?
      How hard is it for a NORMAL user to find a media player that supports the other format?
      Does a user have to pay for the player that supports that format?

      It all comes down to getting users to your site and making sure the user has no problems browsing your site. Using a windows format answers and eliminates most of those questions. You may not like this because you are a Linux user, I am a Linux user also but you have to look at it from a business perspective. They are managers not geeks. They worry about one thing...the bottom line.

      --
      I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
    5. Re:Lame reason. by twicepending · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From the Article "We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users"

      Now I imagine that relates to visitors to the rather useless BBC front page, using the same info as used to compile the blog post at http://www.currybet.net/articles/user_agents/2.php> which claims that only 0.41& of BBC visitors use Linux.

      I'm a regular visitor to various bits of the BBC web site and I regularly come across other Linux users and just about the one thing we have in common is that we very rarely visit the front page - like most experienced computer users we go straight to sub-site we want.

    6. Re:Lame reason. by philicorda · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You have this in reverse.
      Making the videos only work in Windows specific media players is more effort than using a common freely available codec.

      At an extreme, having a single page with links to the videos in mpeg format would have taken one person a day to set up.

      They may have their reasons, but technically the simplest solution is often... the simplest one.

    7. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How long it takes to convert the file to that format? You think the native format for BBC broadcasts is WMP?

      How much band with does it cost to send the other format? Honestly - it probably doesn't matter - and there's no reason to assume WMP or whatever this is is more efficient than whatever else could be used.

      How hard is it for a user to find a media player that supports the other format? ...they're requiring users download a new app already...

      Dang. I can't do this. I mean, I wanted to feed the troll... I really did. But this is just too much stupid.

    8. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yeah, I didn't realise I was in such an elite club of people! I'd be interested to know how these figures where calculated and which sites & sub-domains it covers. Do the Real Server logs support this figure, for example? I know I regularly listen to Radio1 from Ubuntu. The technical help pages for Real Player even has a specific section with upto-date Linux instructions: did they really spend the time writing this for just 600 of us?

    9. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or...... you cater to your audience. I don't see the problem with any of this. I STILL haven't coded my website to be compliant with Konqueror or Safari. That's not to say they don't work in either, I just don't care because the ratio of Windows and IE+Firefox to Safari+Konqueror+every_other_OS_specific_browser_ever is something like 100:1.

      The demographic on /. might include every weird browser out there (I'm looking at you Opera.) Slashdot is not "the norm" by any means. I run MANY websites with very comprehensive statistics to verify my claims.

      BY THE WAY I'm aware that this is due to a proprietary and closed source player, hence the issue. It's not like you can't:
      A) Get your news elsewhere
      -or
      B) READ, instead of watch video.

    10. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Using a windows format answers and eliminates most of those questions.

      Wrong. Try Mpeg.

    11. Re:Lame reason. by toQDuj · · Score: 2, Informative

      What about the .9 million people using macs then? 5% not enough?

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    12. Re:Lame reason. by argiedot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They pay, you see. So once they pay, you can't go telling them 'READ!'. It won't work. Besides, what's wrong with opposing a proprietary closed-source player on principle itself?

    13. Re:Lame reason. by evilandi · · Score: 1, Informative

      worry about one thing...the bottom line.

      The BBC is a semi-independent government-funded agency, it does not have a "bottom line". It is a not-for-profit corporation.

      Any organisation that complains about US$7 BILLION government funding being too small, clearly has big problems.

      --
      Andrew Oakley - www.aoakley.com
    14. Re:Lame reason. by ewanm89 · · Score: 1

      Lynx, links or links2 for me... Oh, I'm using firefox, btw if it works in safari chances are it works in konqueror.

    15. Re:Lame reason. by somersault · · Score: 1

      With Opera being on the Wii I don't think it will actually be that uncommon anymore. Though I did find browsing on the Wii in low-res kind of crappy.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    16. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a regular visitor to various bits of the BBC web site and I regularly come across other Linux users and just about the one thing we have in common is that we very rarely visit the front page - like most experienced computer users we go straight to sub-site we want.

      I'd guess that a lot of Linux users also wont click on a link that says "Windows Media Player" required.

      Now I imagine that relates to visitors to the rather useless BBC front page, using the same info as used to compile the blog post at http://www.currybet.net/articles/user_agents/2.php> which claims that only 0.41& of BBC visitors use Linux.

      The 400-600 stat is probably also right if they looked only at the stats on WMP media files or something. I know in my case I rarely browse sites requiring flash and never click on RealMedia/WMP links. There is a number of ways they could easily mis-represent the data to show whatever they want.

      Also, what about the users that have a Firefox plugin like User Agent Switcher installed.

    17. Re:Lame reason. by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sounds like some people need to start running a site spidering program through TOR using non-windows user agents.

      Personally, I've browsed the BBC websites (I don't know that I've ever been to the front page) via Mac OS X, Mac OS 9, various Linux flavours, FreeBSD, PalmOS, and even Windows Mobile. I don't think I've been there once via a Windows-based browser (except maybe some of the news articles).

      It would be extremely interesting to see how his metrics are being compiled.

    18. Re:Lame reason. by Nasarius · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not so. The Flash media server can do streaming content without FLVs (see Fabchannel.com, for example). Streaming-only media in an obscure, proprietary format is about as secure as it gets.

      --
      LOAD "SIG",8,1
    19. Re:Lame reason. by redtux1 · · Score: 1

      Its worse than this

      The Iplayer will only install if you have all three of
      XP
      wmp 11
      IE6

    20. Re:Lame reason. by Heddahenrik · · Score: 3, Funny

      0.86% of the Elftown users, use Linux, so 0.41% seems plausible.

      But we can all go to http://www.bbc.co.uk/ and bump that number to 50% ;)

    21. Re:Lame reason. by twicepending · · Score: 1

      http://www.currybet.net/articles/user_agents/ states that the figures are just for the front page

    22. Re:Lame reason. by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

      It doesn't really matter what you think. They've got a mandate to promote access to creative works. Using foreign owned DRM to control the content is a direct violation of that mandate. Without that mandate, they have no right to exist, no right to anything created, no right to any of the money or the wealth or the power at all.

      Would make an interesting defense should they ever choose to go after anyone legally for breaking this DRM and redistributing the content. Of course, the British are a bunch of fascists just like the USA, so it doesn't really matter either way. The laws are flexible when they interfere with the flow of money.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    23. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you liked that image, you will love this: I don't think the Beeb could get into BillG's bed. I think the best they can hope for is to get down on the floor of his car and somehow try to squeeze around the transmission to give him what he wants in exchange for almost nothing.

    24. Re:Lame reason. by Draek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They are managers not geeks. They worry about one thing...the bottom line.

      except that the BBC is legally mandated to worry about more than just "the bottom line". Hence why people are making such a big deal out of this, whereas when some US-based TV stations do it it's just regarded as "common corporate stupidity".

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    25. Re:Lame reason. by RobertM1968 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have this in reverse. Making the videos only work in Windows specific media players is more effort than using a common freely available codec....

      You are both right and wrong. If *I* develop a web page, I purchase and use tools that are platform and browser agnostic. Then again, I work for a company I co-own. So for me, it would be more difficult to make a platform or browser specific video feed/system or website (well, perhaps not website... IE is still a nightmare to code any decent site to, since how it handles things varies per version and occassionally per update).

      If I work for Company A, I'm stuck using the tools my IT Department licensed for our company (most decent sized companies will mandate certain tools or software - among other things, it helps ensure license compliance for every package used). If Company A's Idiot Technology Department (face it, many IT guys in a big company's IT departments are technological idiots who base purchasing decisions off the latest and greatest ad or brochure; with no understanding of the underlying technology or later implications based on their choice - and many of the good ones - because there are plenty of good ones - are limited to what their meddling upper management decides for them*), then I am stuck with using tools that may be geared for a _______ only solution.

      Thus, without knowing more about the BBC's internal decisions when they purchased whatever video handling/processing tools, web tools, etc; speculation is a moot point - and their answers, as lame as they are (considering making a cross platform video delivery system is easy in principle) could entirely (or mostly) be to downplay the fact that they do not have an infrastructure set up to make a cross platform system due to the software/server/etc choices they made earlier.

      The bigger the company (or less cash they have, or smaller IT/deployment team they have) the less likely they will be spending money switching the stuff they already bought with new stuff [it costs more money (since they are buying a 2nd package to do the "same" thing as the first), or even if it's open source they choose for round two, it's more money in deployment, training and support learning].

      And of course, (wrongly) Open Source solutions scare most large companies who don't understand the (lack of) implications running Open Source software has (feeling they will have a lack of control/ownership over the finished product).

      In a perfect (IT) world, where every IT manager knows what they are doing (or is unhindered by upper management forcing decisions on them), and corporate buying decisions are done keeping in mind that the web is supposed to be open access, you are correct. We just dont yet live in that perfect world.

      -Robert

      .

      * At CompUSA, some idiot in upper management decided to use Siebel for their entire sales and service management system. The IT gang got stuck dealing with the consequences of a decision they became stuck with - meaning almost a decade after roll-out, the system still doesnt work properly, quickly or with all the features that were intended - and of course it limits all development to Windows, through IE or Excel or Access (etc). No Firefox, no MySQL/Oracle/whatever.

    26. Re:Lame reason. by budgenator · · Score: 1

      well I guess we'll just have to make the Beeb our home page in the three or four different browsers that linux user usually have on their machines, maybe even reload them every 15 minutes or so to stay current.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    27. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You can never make linux users happy. There's no reason for the BBC to waste money trying.

    28. Re:Lame reason. by SMOKEING · · Score: 1

      Indeed. With BBC RSS in my bookmarks, I only choose one dainty bit out of 20 to read in any depth. It's sheer prevarication, or some other, pure English way of reasoning behind.

      BTW, the official TV broadcast promotes their site showing what browser? Is it Firefox on Mac, or what is it? It doesn't smell Windows.

    29. Re:Lame reason. by tehmorph · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Amen to that- I did notice the 'What OS do you use?' poll on the technology website (Bookmarked for convenience)- it was certainly a much larger number than 600 people. Unfortunately I can't find the damn thing- but think 10-25% of 50,000+ voters, if memory serves.

      --
      Could not open .sig for reading- sanity error
    30. Re:Lame reason. by Hucko · · Score: 1

      k... so now it becomes my news daily page.

      --
      Semi-automatic amateur armchair Australian philosopher; conjecture ready at any moment...
    31. Re:Lame reason. by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Don't the taxpayers fund the BBC? Sorta throws a wrench in the "if you don't like it, take your business elsewhere" angle.

    32. Re:Lame reason. by ultranova · · Score: 0, Troll

      Or...... you cater to your audience. I don't see the problem with any of this. I STILL haven't coded my website to be compliant with Konqueror or Safari. That's not to say they don't work in either, I just don't care because the ratio of Windows and IE+Firefox to Safari+Konqueror+every_other_OS_specific_browser_ever is something like 100:1.

      All websites and webapps I've ever created get debugged until they pass the W3C validator, both HTML and CSS, with no errors or warnings, on any input (for webapps). Amateur pride, I know; if I ever started developing them as a job, I'm sure I couldn't afford the time to do a good job and would start pulling statistics out of my ass to justify that. However, I hope I still wouldn't actually brag in public for doing a crappy job.

      Oh well, at least you're posting as Anonymous Coward, so I guess you still feel some shame...

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    33. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's MPEG.

      Bear in mind that the BBC broadcasts in MPEG2 for terrestrial TV, MPEG Layer 2 audio for terrestrial radio and both MPEG2 and MPEG4 for satellite TV and radio.

      Why oh why are they not simply using MPEG4 for internet broadcasting? Why are they happy to blast unencrypted MPEG material all over north western Europe but insist on a poxy, proprietary DRM scheme for their low quality, hardly used internet VOD 'platform'?

    34. Re:Lame reason. by Spaseboy · · Score: 1

      It obviously has nothing to do with how many Linux users visit the site and EVERYTHING to do with how fucking scared MS is of Flash. Adobe OWNS online video, that was the whole purpose behind the purchase of Macromedia, all of their other assets were garbage3 in relation to Adobe's own assets. Microsoft is not going to find a use for Silverlight unless it opens its own YouTube-like site and it will fail miserably because Microsoft will make sure that you have absolutely no portion of any copyrightable material despite fair use. I guess secret deals is how Microsoft is going to get back the web. It worked for the desktop.

      --
      "I don't want more choice, I just want nicer things!"
      -Jennifer Saunders as Edina Monsoon
    35. Re:Lame reason. by Virgil+Tibbs · · Score: 1

      the bbc is admittedly not for profit.
      but it also not for loss
      the bbc has a list of obligations the length of the UK.
      but you are right the bbc does have big problems...
      it has just cut its staff and is now going to double the number of channels it has
      clearly someone got their maths a little confused.

      --
      www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
    36. Re:Lame reason. by Virgil+Tibbs · · Score: 1

      hey!
      don't DDOS our broadcaster ;)

      --
      www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
    37. Re:Lame reason. by Virgil+Tibbs · · Score: 1
      perhaps you would like to hear the opinions of gnu+linux users 7 years ago!
      go over to here for a peek! my favorite is one guy saying:

      WOW just 10 years old. Can you imagine what Linux will be like in another 10 years time. It will completely leave other OS's behind, if it keeps being developed at the pace it is currently.
      still it must be pointed out that Linus Torvalds did not "start" the whole thing.
      he was more of a catalyst; the process was already there, he just speeded it up.
      --
      www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
    38. Re:Lame reason. by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      Don't the taxpayers fund the BBC?

      No.
      Well, not directly.
      The BBC receives most of it's funding from the annual license that you are required to have for each dwelling where a system capable of receiving and decoding TV signals is in use. So, if you don't have such equipment, then you don't need a license and you don't fund the BBC.

      Of course, proving that you don't have such equipment and defeating the bureaucracy that assumes that there is such equipment (and therefore the obligation to get and annually renew such a license) in every dwelling is another question. Having fought that battle for a decade myself, I can tell you that it's a tedious grind and they never go away. But you do get a certain pleasure from laughing at the "enforcers" as they stand outside your door in the driving snow. It's particularly nice telling them that if they want to take it further they can come back with their warrant, their lawyers, their locksmith, and the police to secure the site. Everyone knows that the police won't support such commercial wastes of time.
      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    39. Re:Lame reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      implementing a multi-platform format requires the designer to code a webpage of links and trouble-shooting faqs to help users who don't have a player or the codec required to view the format.

      remember there are very FEW codecs that come in basic core OS packages (which means I'm not including extended linux packages such as the Redhat 4 disc package, or the Gentoo linux distribution)

      Making sure the users can view the content is very important, using WMV makes this easier on the webmasters by making it relatively idiot proof as windows comes with native support for WMV and it requires NO effort on the users part to view the content, assuming you use windows.

      While I agree entirely that they should have formats that are available to users of all platforms, to say that it would take less work to use a non-OS specific format would be easier, is a biased anti-microsoft judgement (not that it is a bad thing ^.^)

      regardless, you can view WMV under any platform.
      So linux users complaining that they cant view the content, is once again biased anti-microsoft stuff... Linux users know they can make it so they can view the content, or they atleast should know if they are using linux...

    40. Re:Lame reason. by ben_thompson21 · · Score: 1

      Maybe so but this is not relevant to the iPlayer which has to include some kind of DRM for the idea to get off the ground. Without DRM anyone could download the MPEGs and make them available elsewhere. The BBC uses a lot of third party content that it does not own and is only licensed to broadcast in the UK. Making it available in MPEG format for all to download would mean owning the content outright which would be very very expensive and beyond the means of us Brits paying our licence fee. Realistically the BBC had two basic choices given it had to use DRM: 1. License a DRM from a third party (Apple won't let theirs be used by third parties). 2. Write its own. For an interesting and enlightening discussion on the iPlayer you could do a lot worse than look at TheRegister, e.g. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/06/highfield_tactics/

  2. Silly sod by Finallyjoined!!! · · Score: 0

    Claims that there's only 4-600 Linux users accessing the BBC web site! I think he needs to come clean with the web stats.

    --
    If I had an Ass, I'd call it Fanny Bottom, then I could slap my Ass; Fanny Bottom, on the Arse.
    1. Re:Silly sod by aweiland · · Score: 1

      Why is that so hard to believe? It must be a conspiracy.

    2. Re:Silly sod by Entropius · · Score: 1

      ... because there are probably fifty people who access bbc.co.uk using Linux from my *department* at the University of Arizona?

      All the computers run Linux, and people are always reading the news from them.

    3. Re:Silly sod by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      because there are probably fifty people who access bbc.co.uk using Linux from my *department* at the University of Arizona?

      "We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users"

      Wasn't aware there was a University of Arizona in the UK...

    4. Re:Silly sod by vrai · · Score: 1
      Well there are five people in my office (in London) who use Linux to browse the web and are regular visitors to the BBC web site. If you believe the BBC's figures, that means 8% of their Linux using audience are in one small department of a relatively small company. I realise that anecdotal evidence isn't worth much, but it's pretty fucking unlikely.

      It's much more likely that the BBC are following their usual mode of operation when faced with criticism: to lie and hope nobody calls them on it.

    5. Re:Silly sod by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      Of course the parent is right. It's impossible to visit a .co.uk domain from any other country!

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    6. Re:Silly sod by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Why is it unlikely that a niche operating system is used heavily in a niche company, and not everywhere else? Seems like you're getting statistics and probability confused.

      For what it's worth, at one time part of my duties included analyzing logs for a heavily accessed government financial portal. We had three, yes, the number 3, total visits using Linux in a year. I'm pretty sure they were all me from a test machine, although I only remember going there twice.

      Linux just isn't as popular as the people here want it to be. Instead of crowing how it must be a lie, try an figure out why, and change it.

    7. Re:Silly sod by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      ...bbc.co.uk in the UK and...

      I don't suppose you're aware that ip ranges are handed out to various folks? That someone can generally tell where a surfer is from due to their IP?

      When they specifically say "in the UK" yes - I'll dismiss someone saying they're from Arizona. As bbc is a tax-funded group they've an interest in seeing how many of the people actually paying for are using it. Not that hard to do too, so hey. And I fully sympathize if they want to weigh more heavily the impact things will have on those who are actually paying for the bbc, versus those (in Arizona, among other places) who are not.

    8. Re:Silly sod by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      barely worth mentioning, but I'll mention it anyway.

      5 people is not 8% of 400-600. It is approx 1%.

  3. Definitely a screwup somewhere by 26199 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    400-600 people on Linux use bbc.co.uk (in the UK)? I don't think so...

    Someone needs to recheck their server logs.

    1. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by johnw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      400-600 people on Linux use bbc.co.uk It's clearly either a made up figure or a case of very creative use of statistics. He would have been better off with a figure like 50,000 - it's surprisingly small but it's not so easy to prove that it's just plain wrong.

      It would be interesting to do a survey of Linux users to see how many regularly use bbc.co.uk. I suspect the figure would be well up in the hundreds of thousands. 400-600 is just beyond belief.
    2. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      400-600 people visited the beeb website and found it only supported XP/IE/Firefox.
      They subsequently began spoofing their User agent reply.

    3. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by JamesD_UK · · Score: 2, Funny

      I read all my BBC stories on Slashdot you insensitive clod. Since I never RTFA, I never visit bbc.co.uk. QED

    4. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Spad · · Score: 1

      The BBC news site alone gets something in the region of 40 million hits *a day*. I'd expect them to get 400-600 visitors running something like OpenVMS or AIX - even if you take Linux as 1% of desktops you're still looking at 400,000 hits, so unless every user generates 1,000 hits a day they're a bit off.

    5. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by teab+v1.0 · · Score: 0

      Of course, if they were just looking at the logs for www.bbc.co.uk, then maybe it's true. I rarely visit that page, as I normally jump straight to news.bbc.co.uk. This would also mean that anyone arriving from (say) Slashdot would never visit that page, as there would be a direct link to the article.

      However that would worry me if that was all they were looking at.

      I know of myself & one other at work who browse the BBC site (from home) using Linux, and I've spotted a couple more people commenting on here. So there must only be another 590-odd Linux users in the UK. I feel honoured to be part of such a select group...

    6. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure they mean 400,000-600,000

    7. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Vanders · · Score: 1

      That'd be nice if it were true, but the BBC web sites are almost all excellent in any browser you'd care to mention. Even the news ticker on the news.bbc.co.uk front page works in ABrowse on Syllable (Webcore based). I think you'd have to try pretty hard to find something that is IE only through design on the BBC web sites.

    8. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by goddidit · · Score: 5, Funny

      An incovenient truth: There really is only about thousand linux users.
      However they are a very vocal minority and because it's somewhat cool to be a linux guy
      some people claim that they run linux when infact they don't.
      I personally run Windows Vista Home Basic but I pretend to be a linux expert on various internet forums.
      Linux's "popularity" is really just a scam to fool newbies into thinking that people actually run linux.
      Then the newbies try actually installing linux and fail miserably,
      you must really be a kernel hacker to install it.
      Frustrated newbies then ask questions on the various forums and on irc and everybody answers to them in complete gibberish. We all get a good laugh that way (expect the noobs, they try the bogus solutions and fail once again).

      --
      This .sig is exactly 120 characters long.
    9. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Chris_Keene · · Score: 1

      Doesn't answer your question but this is quite interesting

      http://support.bbc.co.uk/support/

      --
      You will forget this sig before you next see it
    10. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well for a start, how many academic institutions do you think carry out research/programming using windows boxes (insert that my University X only uses Windows, Ya Ya, keep moving).

      A large proportion use GNU/Linux and all the other types of Unix out there. May be it's time to crank some of our HPC's up to generate hits on www.bbc.co.uk, oh ya that's right no need, there our more than 600 Linux users in the country, and they reckon there good at reporting.

    11. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by AxeTheMax · · Score: 1

      I run a minor UK site about a non-IT topic (it's about trees, those green things you find in parks). Google analytics says that 1.3% of my visitors this year used Linux. I think he's fibbing, at best.

    12. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by samuisan · · Score: 1

      Worse than that, this is so obviously wrong it looks more like it is deliberat FUD.

      Most big universities in the UK would have more than that many linux users, with a big proportion of them going to the BBC site at some time.

      He is happy to state their 20 million visitors, putting linux at even 0.1% of users (it is higher) would make that 20,000, and besides, how does he think he can tell the operating system from a webbrowser anyhow, given that lots are set to with their ID to make them look like something else.

      If he is the BBC's head tech man, he would know all this... so why was he lying?

    13. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by owlnation · · Score: 1

      Someone needs to recheck their server logs.
      I think you mean; someone needs to check their server logs and use average data to investigate the truth. Rather than, say, specially selecting data that proves your point and covers your ass -- which is beyond any shadow of a doubt exactly what the BBC did.
    14. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      Very dodgy figure!

      It's also dumb to ignore Linux anyway 'cos more and more people will be accessing websites using handheld devices a-La iPhone/iPod-touch. I suspect over the next 12 months there will be bucket loads of new inexpensive WiFi hand-helds, most of which will likely not run any MS software at all.

    15. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i have 50 people that check the bbc via linux almost daily - they are all on the same proxy though so probably that counts as 'one' huh

    16. Re:Definitely a screwup somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three of those people are me. I have 3 locations I regularly access bbc.co.uk from, all running linux. I see no way they know the 3 locations (IP addresses) are the same person.

  4. why not... by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    use a file format that can be used by all Operating Systems, and use a single file format and not a mix of flash & and some other that need to work together in some obscure way, keep it simple & open...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:why not... by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      Because they have to use something which can't easily be copied.

    2. Re:why not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. They prefer that it be difficultly copied.

    3. Re:why not... by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 0

      Really? Will the universe implode if they don't?

    4. Re:why not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they have to use something which can't easily be copied.
      Because it's not like pirates can just download the stuff illegally from BitTorrent or anything.

      Seriously, this stuff is already being broadcast right across the UK without any protection of any sort whatsoever, and being recorded by millions of people every day who can trivially put it on their computers and upload it whenever the fancy takes them. Why the hell would a pirate want to copy iPlayer stuff? They can get better quality versions from P2P with far less effort.
    5. Re:why not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people who onw the programmes the BBC wants to distribute will refuse to allow it if there's no copy protection. So this little universe certainly will implode.

  5. Miscounting by Marcion · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can't believe that. I am a licence payer and visit the BBC website everyday on Linux. I'm sure their proprietary webstats package is just ignoring Linux. He didn't give the number of 'others'.

    1. Re:Miscounting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I can't believe that. I am a licence payer and visit the BBC website everyday on Linux."

      Well, that settles it then - I was worried that you were being missed from the count. You really blew their statistics out of the water there with your detailed analysis of the BBC website user demographics. Now, they're going to have to do something.

  6. A bit incorrect... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you consider that the default installation of Firefox contains a live feed ("Latest Headlines") that feeds from the BBC, you'd be surprised at how many Linux users visit the BBC.

  7. BBC's charter by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The interesting bit here is the Beeb isn't really a commercial organization. They're a public entity which is strictly required to keep itself free of commercial and political influence.

    1. Re:BBC's charter by ByOhTek · · Score: 0, Troll

      A news organization free of political influence...?

      What are they going to legislate next? Not-wet water?

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:BBC's charter by Mr_Silver · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The interesting bit here is the Beeb isn't really a commercial organization. They're a public entity which is strictly required [wikipedia.org] to keep itself free of commercial and political influence.

      They're also required to account for their spending and for keeping costs down. If they proposed a completely open player and it was a significant amount of money more than the Microsoft one then they would have to justify why they went with the costly option.

      Granted I've not worked in a non-profit organisation, but even so, I think that justifying a larger spend on something that affects less than 0.004% of visitors is going to be a very tough sell for anyone.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    3. Re:BBC's charter by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Troll? Does that mean someone here has seen a news organization that isn't politically motivated? I've yet to see one without a slant or bias.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    4. Re:BBC's charter by somersault · · Score: 1

      This is the British Broadcasting Corporation News, not ABC news or whatever you get over there. No doubt there will be biases in place, but not to the same extent as some other news stations have..

      --
      which is totally what she said
    5. Re:BBC's charter by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Not the extent no, but there is definetly bias.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    6. Re:BBC's charter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The News Organization is only a small, compartmentalized child process of everything the BBC does.

    7. Re:BBC's charter by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      They're also required to account for their spending and for keeping costs down. If they proposed a completely open player and it was a significant amount of money more than the Microsoft one then they would have to justify why they went with the costly option.

      Granted I've not worked in a non-profit organisation, but even so, I think that justifying a larger spend on something that affects less than 0.004% of visitors is going to be a very tough sell for anyone. Well, I have worked for a non-profit corporation, and in all likelyhood, I will work in another one soon. Sure, they're supposed to keep costs down to a minimum, but they're also expected to either run a loss or break even overall. This is where donations come in and help support the non-profit. Most importantly, all of their actions are supposed to be directly related to their mission statement.

      Here's the BBC's mission statement:

      BBC Beyond 2000 - Mission Statement
      We aim to be the world's most creative and trusted broadcaster and programme maker, seeking to satisfy all our audiences in the UK with services that inform, educate and entertain and that enrich their lives in ways that the market alone will not.

      We aim to be guided by our public purposes; to encourage the UK's most innovative talents; to act independently of all interests; to aspire to the highest ethical standards; to offer the best value for money; to be accountable to our licence payers; to endeavour to be the world's leading international broadcaster; and to be the best - or to learn from the best - in everything we do. Emphasis mine.

      By ignoring any market: Mac or Linux, they're flat-out defying their mission statement.

    8. Re:BBC's charter by gladish · · Score: 1

      not for the slashdot crowd.

    9. Re:BBC's charter by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      I've yet to see one without a slant or bias. here's one: Private Eye magazine satirises everyone in equal measure, the serious stuff it has in it is unbiased as well (or perhaps equally biased against everyone...).
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    10. Re:BBC's charter by Khuffie · · Score: 1
      They are not ignoring the Mac or Linux market. FTA: "It would be understandable if we'd only ever intended to launch an XP-only iPlayer, but that was never the plan." He had previously told .net magazine that the corporation had to launch to the biggest audience first.

      People need to learn to read, instead of going up in arms. It seems that the choices were: "launch now for the majority of our users that is easy to implement, and follow up later with a solution that works for everyone" or "screw it, make everyone wait".

    11. Re:BBC's charter by owlnation · · Score: 1

      They're a public entity which is strictly required to keep itself free of commercial and political influence.
      A requirement which is breached every single day by at least one individual in the BBC.
    12. Re:BBC's charter by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      In reality, the Open Source solution, flumotion is cheaper than pretty much any commercially supported solution. But, it doesn't do DRM for all intents and purposes, which is the thing they're worrying so damn much about.

      DRM is why they're doing this BS. Without the DRM, the Open Source friendly, Open Source served solution will beat all of the commercial streaming answers, hands down. Now, having said this, the DRM in the Real Networks commercial Helix server offering is comparable, the players exist pretty much on any relevant platform. Now, is Real's offering all that much more expensive than the Microsoft one- or might it be more expensive overall to go with MS' answer? It's my understanding that they're charging a pretty penny for that WMA support to the people using it.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    13. Re:BBC's charter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The interesting bit here is the Beeb isn't really a commercial organization"

      Yes, they are. But they are a commercial organization that is allowed to keep its hand in the public's pocket by means of the licence fee.

      However, the BBC also makes a lot of money off sales of programmes, sales of books, CDs and DVDs, a number of magazines it publishes sold through newsagents, and various other schemes.

      "They're a public entity ..."

      No, they're not. They have a charter they -- theoretically -- have to abide by, because of the way they are funded. They are *not* a public body.

        "... which is strictly required to keep itself free of commercial and political influence."

      They may be required to. They've ignored their requirements for years -- particularly the latter one -- and got away with it. There's a strong left-liberal bias there. They've even admitted as much themselves behind closed doors. Unfortunately for them, the report where they did got leaked:

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=411846&in_page_id=1770

      Goodness, we had more proof of the obvious only just recently -- it's only what one would expect:

      http://www.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/298421/how-liberal-is-the-bbc.thtml

      As for being in bed with Bill Gates, from what I've heard they certainly are pretty good friends if nothing more. But I wouldn't exactly be surprised if stained sheets did turn up at some point.

      The BBC, of course, has to go a little careful. If it shuts Linux and Mac users out permanently it would have to answer to the communications regulator, Ofcom:

      http://www.ofcom.org.uk/

      The BBC will be well aware of that.

    14. Re:BBC's charter by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      Your right they are responsible for containing costs. Producing this microsoft only player cost them over 100 million dollars. They also paid for direct assistance from Microsoft in it's development. For the dollars they spent they could have licensed a cross-platform player from the open market for every single person in the UK for 1/10th the cost they spent developing this MS only client. Not only that but because of budget issues they are going to sell one of their London offices which is a historic and traditional site for the BBC. The value of the land was appraised at 100-200 million. In essence the iPlayer has cost them one of their historic properties that they have owned since the BBC was formed.

      And just so you know the decision to create the iPlayer went something like this. "We need DRM. MS is the expert in DRM. Therefore we will hire MS to write the software.". It's no coincidence that the gentleman that headed development of the iplayer, and those on the committee that picked the methodology are former MS employees.

      There is a reason this story is big news in the UK. It's a huge scandal of mismanagement. The BBC trustee's are very upset about how much money was spent locking in this closed format to Windows only (not even Mac's can play). The linux connection exists only because Linux users were the ones who complained about the player and caused the investigation by the Trustee's which revealed the lack of fiscal discipline and exposed bad management. This was such a big mistake the Trustee's are likely to fire a good percentage of management over this.

    15. Re:BBC's charter by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1

      Producing this microsoft only player cost them over 100 million dollars. They also paid for direct assistance from Microsoft in it's development. For the dollars they spent they could have licensed a cross-platform player from the open market for every single person in the UK for 1/10th the cost they spent developing this MS only client.

      I'm interested in the numbers you quoted, where did you get the 100 million dollars figure from? Which company said they can do everything the Beeb wanted for 10 million dollars?

      There is a reason this story is big news in the UK.

      You must live in a different UK to me! The amount of reporting on this has been limited to online technology websites and the odd paragraph (once, or twice if you're lucky) in the paper.

      The Menezes shooting, Northern Rock and Madaline McCann are "big news" media items, this isn't close.

      This was such a big mistake the Trustee's are likely to fire a good percentage of management over this.

      I'm afriad you're being a tad optimistic and will be disappointed with the outcome.

      --
      Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    16. Re:BBC's charter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >They're also required to account for their spending and for keeping costs down.

      Exactly. So how does using a funky proprietary codec with brain damaged DRM
      CHEAPER than using an open codec which is *free*? Maybe the BBC should ask
      for the same deal the Nigerians got?

    17. Re:BBC's charter by dangitman · · Score: 1

      It seems that the choices were: "launch now for the majority of our users that is easy to implement, and follow up later with a solution that works for everyone" or "screw it, make everyone wait".

      What? There are plenty of cross-platform, Open video CODECs. So why didn't they simply choose "Screw Microsoft, we'll release it for everybody now, and save lots of money and time"? I'm not aware of any difficulty in implementing cross-platform solutions - in fact it would be easier than using proprietary rubbish.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    18. Re:BBC's charter by Khuffie · · Score: 1

      Part of the requirements they have, due to copyright restrictions, is that the videos can only be viewed for 7 days after they've been downloaded (or something similar, I can't remember exactly). Know of any cross-platform, open codecs with DRM?

    19. Re:BBC's charter by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Part of the requirements they have, due to copyright restrictions, is that the videos can only be viewed for 7 days after they've been downloaded

      But those requirements don't make any sense. Anybody can record the broadcast signal, and keep that footage for as long as they like. What's the difference? The BBC should be standing up to copyright holders, and most of all, arguing for common sense - not caving to stupidity. Yes, I know stupidity rules the day, but traditionally the BBC has stood against stupidity, and for intelligence and common sense.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    20. Re:BBC's charter by dangitman · · Score: 1

      P.S:

      Do you know of any DRM that actually works? What's going to stop those videos from being ripped and viewed for longer than 7 days, even if they do have DRM applied?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    21. Re:BBC's charter by Khuffie · · Score: 1
      You assume the BBC didn't try to stand up against stupidity...why? The likely scenario is that the content providers gave them a choice: use DRM or you get no permission from us. And how is it stupid? Because it disagrees with your principles? A lot of TV show's major source of income is DVD sales...if you can download the show, un-encumbered, for free, how are they going to make any profit from DVDs? By your logic, since anyone can record a tv broadcast, producers shouldn't even bother selling DVDs.

      The whole point of this service is not to provide you with an archive of shows you can watch in your own time. It's to give you an opportunity to catch up with the show in case you missed it, in time for next week's episode. They are not selling you anything. While I think DRM is stupid in a lot of cases, in this situation, I see the purpose of it, yes, even though any DRM will eventually be broken; most users wouldn't know how, or where to look.

  8. Perfect example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So management knows more about tech than the techs do?

    Launching with a java or flash player would have been suicide?

    Is the man a complete and utter idiot?

    What can be done to force him getting fored for being incompetent so we can try and find someone that is not stupid?

    These are questions that all of us want answered.

  9. 1% of user base by BlowHole666 · · Score: 0

    According to Ashley Highfield, the reason that the player only supports Windows XP is that only a small number of Linux visitors have come to the BBC's website. Sad to say I have to agree with her. With the exception of Slashdots' visitors the majority of the computer users run Windows. That is why the company I write software for only develops browser applications for windows. Why spend $50k (assuming you have 2 software developers and it takes them 6 months to finish and test the application so they both used up $25k of the companies money) developing an application when only 1% of your user base is going to use the application. I know they could have put the videos into a different format but it all comes down to cost. With cost you have to factor in time. How long does it take to convert those videos to a different format, how much bigger is the file format (costing more bandwidth) etc. No matter how much you guys like Linux and hate Windows (or like Windows whatever) on the business side of things it comes down to money and getting a return on your investment. With Linux you do not immediately see a return on your investment.
    --
    I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
    1. Re:1% of user base by xra · · Score: 5, Informative

      Sad to say I have to agree with her. With the exception of Slashdots' visitors the majority of the computer users run Windows. That is why the company I write software for only develops browser applications for windows. You do not have to write separate browser applications, just one application that wouldn't be restricted to MS technologies. This way you would ensure that regardless of their numbers linux (and other non-windows) users would have access. No extra cost here.
    2. Re:1% of user base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "No matter how much you guys like Linux and hate Windows (or like Windows whatever) on the business side of things it comes down to money and getting a return on your investment. With Linux you do not immediately see a return on your investment."

      And that's why Google is over $700 a share now? Because Linux and Linux-support don't provide return on investment?

      How did this ever get modded up?

    3. Re:1% of user base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just so you know Ashley Highfield is a bloke.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley_Highfield

    4. Re:1% of user base by BlowHole666 · · Score: 1

      You forget to factor in they are probably on legacy code that was built back in 1998 or so that runs on windows and was designed to work with IE etc. Also if their servers were windows servers and they were using the windows streaming video software it would require a rewrite to get it to work in something other then IE or something other then windows because that is all their servers support. We do not have all the details but I bet it came down to cost.

      --
      I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
    5. Re:1% of user base by greebowarrior · · Score: 1

      Erm, Ashley Highfield is a guy...

    6. Re:1% of user base by AusIV · · Score: 1

      Why spend $50k (assuming you have 2 software developers and it takes them 6 months to finish and test the application so they both used up $25k of the companies money) developing an application when only 1% of your user base is going to use the application.

      For something where the wheel has to be re-invented that's true, but this is a video site. There are dozens of examples of cross platform sites that do video, and there are several tools that are readily available to make it happen easy. Unless you're doing something decidedly non-standard, you should be able to write a website target at Windows and have Linux more or less fall into place.

    7. Re:1% of user base by BlowHole666 · · Score: 1

      Do you know what their back end looks like? Is it a Microsoft server, or a Linux server? With windows you can get software for free that does streaming video. How hard is it for an admin to install a version that supports video for Linux. I am just saying we do not have all the details and they probably had a good reason to not support Linux. Just like a year back my friend was creating a flash site and he was on flash 8 and he wanted me to test it in Linux and it would not work (Linux only had flash 7 at the time) so he kept using flash 8 because it was the latest and greatest and had the features he wanted. He did not support Linux because very few of his users ran Linux. Why should he change to flash 7 or wait till flash 9 just to support 1% of his user base? It is throwing money out the window.

      --
      I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
    8. Re:1% of user base by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      There are countless situations where looking for immediate return is not the right thing to do.
      Going multiplatform and implementing standards means coding for the 100% of the prospective clients instead of the 90% or less owned by microsoft, and it's not 2x the cost of a windows only solution. I'd say the windows only solution will end up costing more just to keep up with whatever MS execs think about their new versions of the framework and the OS.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    9. Re:1% of user base by westlake · · Score: 1
      With the exception of Slashdots' visitors the majority of the computer users run Windows.

      It is 10 AM ET. There have been 68 replies to the lead story on Slashdot. What does that tell you about Linux in the UK?

    10. Re:1% of user base by BlowHole666 · · Score: 1

      Going multiplatform and implementing standards means coding for the 100% of the prospective clients instead of the 90% or less owned by microsoft, and it's not 2x the cost of a windows only solution. That is retarded.

      If I find a way to produce a square tire rim and it works ok, and I have a following of about 1%-9% of car users out in the marketplace. Would I expect Goodyear to make a rubber tire to support my square rim? Fuck no I would not. You go for the majority of your users and sadly that is Microsoft. As much as you may hate it Microsoft is the majority. Just because Linux is an option does not mean you MUST support it. When you see Linux on 20-30% of the computers in the marketplace then it you need to start supporting it. Till then it is just throwing money into the wind.
      --
      I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
    11. Re:1% of user base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess all 600 of us must be Slashdot users.

    12. Re:1% of user base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The last time I spoke to anyone inside the BBC the backend servers for things like streaming audio (Real) were Linux. Not that it makes much different for your argument; with the volume of traffic that the BBC are encoding and streaming they're not relying on anything "free". They pay a lot of money to Real and a lot of money to Microsoft (They offer both Real & Windows Media streams) for the software to do it.

      If you're interested, at least once apon-a-time, they even had a few FreeBSD machines doing some encoding and streaming.

      I am just saying we do not have all the details and they probably had a good reason to not support Linux.

      We do have all the details: they didn't support Linux because they needed[1] to wrap everything in DRM, and they claim that Windows Media is the only solution that allows them to do that. The problem with that argument is, well, it's crap. Flash can do cross-platform DRM'd media, for a start. Even Quicktime would have been a better choice than Windows Media[2]. So what we really appear to have is someone who chose Microsoft without any real technical evaluation, no concern for the BBCs own charter nor any oversight from anyone who cared. Now the people responsible are back-peddling and trying to make excuses for their decisions.

      [1]: The requirement for blanket DRM is arguable, but not everything offered on iPlayer is wholly owned by the BBC so their hands are somewhat tied by the copyright holders.
      [2]: At least Quicktime is available on Windows and OS X. Are DRM'd Windows Media files playable under OS X? I admit I don't know; I guess it's possible now I think about it. Can a Mac user confirm?

    13. Re:1% of user base by gallinula · · Score: 1

      Whilst your argument would appear to be supported by the market share, you are misguided. The true reason was hinted at in the podcast and has nothing to do with user base size. It is simply ensuring the protection of owner rights. A fine example was given and I have to say that in principle I agree with the sentiment. It was also suggested that if an intelligent format could be developed allowing for real time adjustment of content (insertion of regional ads, time based or regional limitations etc) then rights owners would be more amenable to non-closed platforms. This is something that better people that I should be investigating with some haste. It has to be a solvable problem. That said, the fact remains that with any open system, rights management (read: protection) will continue to be a hurdle for all current distribution models.

      --
      Every happiness to you and yours
    14. Re:1% of user base by philicorda · · Score: 1

      The beeb mostly uses Linux servers running Red Hat.

      That's why they generally use rtsp (for realplayer) to stream video rather than a MS Windows specific codec.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4606719.stm
      "The BBC News website - under the bonnet"
      "The servers themselves are running Apache web server software on either the Linux or Solaris operating system."

    15. Re:1% of user base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they don't.

      But advertisements do.

      How did YOU get modded up?

    16. Re:1% of user base by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      Out of your analogy, can you please make an example where a free software maker came out with an intentionally incompatible format with no functional advantages over a proven design? Because IMO the square wheel perfectly describes MS in his OOXML and vista GUI redesign stunts.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  10. Chicken and egg by darjen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.
    My guess is that they checked their logs before they created the application, and decided that the small portion of linux users on their site didn't justify the extra development costs of multi platform support. Of course, I didn't RTFA so I could be wrong on that.
    1. Re:Chicken and egg by Taagehornet · · Score: 1

      From TFA:

      And as for the battle with the Open Source Consortium? "The 12 people who demonstrated outside our offices have every right to demonstrate," says Ashfield. "But I think 'the 12 people' says it all."

      Highfield used the numbers of non-Windows users visiting bbc.co.uk as justification for the corporation's XP-only release. "We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users."
    2. Re:Chicken and egg by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

      I might be missing something, but that seems to back up the parents assertion. He's talking about bbc.co.uk, the front page of the site, not the iPlayer specific pages

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
    3. Re:Chicken and egg by jocknerd · · Score: 1

      You are giving them too much credit. I believe they just assumed everyone runs Windows and didn't even question the video format. I've seen it at my work. We will be putting video's of City Council meetings online and the company we hired to host the videos does Windows Media only. I tried pushing podcasting as an alternative to streaming but was told nobody does podcasting. Now the company has come back to us and told us they can make podcasts available for an extra $400 a month. I'm pretty sure they have to go through the process of converting WMV files to MPEG-4. Thats why its so costly. Everyone here thinks that a great deal except me. I tried to argue that a 12 year old can make a podcast. But these are all Windows users. I'm a Mac and Linux guy.

    4. Re:Chicken and egg by darjen · · Score: 1

      Well, the quoted article from the other response to me said that's what they did... though I suppose it could be that that's just what they claimed they did. Call me crazy, but that's probably what I would do if I was designing an application for my users. I would definitely want to go and find out what I can about my target audience, and then take into account the best way to reach the most people on whatever budget I have. As far as your example goes though, yeah I agree that podcasts would definitely be a good way to reach people across platforms.

  11. Of course it was by Skiron · · Score: 0

    It is so obvious that the BBC are in cahoots with MS over this, I can't see how the bloke can say they are not - so he is obviously a blatant liar.

    I am seriously considering some sort of action (legal or otherwise) as I have to pay for a BCC TV licence, yet get deliberately locked out of the BBC player (by the BBC's CHOICE) as I do not use MS products.

    1. Re:Of course it was by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      Having a license entitles you to own a TV, there's nothing about being entitled to watch video over the Internet - if you're using theiPlayer there's no way it can check your license.

    2. Re:Of course it was by Skiron · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bollocks... the licence money I pay FUNDS the BBC, which they are using to pay MS to produce a locked-in player that deliberately stops my using it as I do not use MS products.

      This sounds like racketeering, to me.

    3. Re:Of course it was by teh+kurisu · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If MS and the BBC were in cahoots, don't you think there would be a Vista version? Microsoft doesn't want you buying XP any more.

    4. Re:Of course it was by jimicus · · Score: 1

      They're seriously talking about extending the license to anyone who owns a computer.

      Yet I have only Apple Macs in my house.

      I will gladly go to court and explain yes, I have a computer.

      But owing to the BBC's own decisions I am not able to use their service on it.

    5. Re:Of course it was by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      I don't know who's sleeping with whom, but it sure looks like someone's getting fucked.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    6. Re:Of course it was by slack_prad · · Score: 1

      And what makes you think iPlayer doesn't work in Vista?

      --
      Sent from my desktop computer
    7. Re:Of course it was by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      From the website, under "Making BBC iPlayer available on Mac, Linux and other platforms":

      Concurrently, we're continuing to develop the platform for use with Windows Vista, Apple Macintosh and Linux operating systems.

      It may work on Vista, I don't know, I don't have a copy to test it on. But it isn't supported and it's 'still under development', which I think makes any 'In bed with MS' theories less than credible.

    8. Re:Of course it was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If MS and the BBC were in cahoots, don't you think there would be a Vista version? Microsoft doesn't want you buying XP any more.
      Then why do they keep extending the EoL of XP?
      Microsoft to extend Windows XP sales
    9. Re:Of course it was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the bbc always prints MS press releases as news so its not surprising

    10. Re:Of course it was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because Bill Gates is in bed with the BBC doesn't mean he gets Anal.

    11. Re:Of course it was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft doesn't want you buying XP any more.

      Then why did them come out with Vista? Never underestimate the deviousness of our chair-throwing overlords. Absolutely nothing else could have drummed up such demand for XP.

      (-brought to you by the Reynolds-Alcan alliance.)

  12. A wise designer once told me... by JetScootr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "You don't decide how big to build the bridge by counting the number of people swimming the river."
    Cuz once the bridge is up, hundreds more who couldn't swim the distance will want to cross.

    --
    Pavlov wouldn't be so famous if he'd used a can opener instead of a bell.
    1. Re:A wise designer once told me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Beautiful.

  13. Not in bed with. by RandoX · · Score: 1

    ...under the desk, maybe.

    1. Re:Not in bed with. by iknownuttin · · Score: 1
      ...under the desk, maybe.

      Yeah, but who's on the receiving end?

      --
      I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
    2. Re:Not in bed with. by JK_the_Slacker · · Score: 0

      Dear sir, your fetishes interest me. Please subscribe me to your newsletter.

      --
      I'm waiting for a "-1 somepeoplejustshouldn'tgetmodprivileges" meta-moderation.
    3. Re:Not in bed with. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ballmer looking angry with chairs...

  14. Stats not about iPlayer by paintswithcolour · · Score: 4, Informative
    "Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear."

    It should be clarified that he was talking about the root bbc.co.uk site NOT the iPlayer site, so it is clearer why the would expect Linux users to visit the site.

    1. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by Perl-Pusher · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He is throwing numbers out doesn't know what the hell he is talking about. Linux visitors to the BBC site has to be a hell of a lot higher than that. 400 to 600 hundred linux users? I got more than that when I was was working for a local Virginia newspaper! We had over 100,000 visits per day, linux users were running steady at about 2%. The problem with linux users was you never knew which browser they were going to use, opera, firefox, konqueror even EI running under wine.

    2. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > even EI running under wine

      E-I-E-I-O...! [hick] enough ofda shinging - now where'd i shput that bottle? [hick]

    3. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by SeattleGameboy · · Score: 1
      You just answered your own question.

      Do I really care to go the extra distance to support 2% of my traffic? Probably not.

    4. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      2% of the BBC's audience is.... still a lot of people!

    5. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not compared to ~98% (less Mac users) it isn't.

    6. Re:Stats not about iPlayer by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      Windows has 98%? That's surprising given Apples recent sales figures, although I'll accept that Windows is still has vastly the majority.

      The BBC published figures in 2005 which at the time showed Linux users at 0.4% (which at the time equated to 100,000). Also, Mac users were running at 4.4% (so presumably 1,100,000 users).

      I would be *very* surprised if either Mac or Linux users have diminished in numbers since this time... especially since Apple are doing so well these days, Ubuntu is making Linux more accessible and Vista by all accounts, isn't quite as polished as perhaps it should be.
      Ashley Highfield has since posted an update regarding his original figures btw! Interestingly, his high-end figure of 97,600 Linux users is still lower than the figure in 2005. But then, I think Ashley Highfield has already made it clear that he is unqualified to comment on such matter! :P
      I'd also venture that the percentage of non-Windows clients will increase in the future; more and more devices have internet access embedded, and few use MS software (iPhone/iPod-Touch, Asus Eee PC, Nokia 770/n800/n810. Plus, loads of smart phones. Due to price considerations, it is unlikely MS will make any significant in-roads into these markets.

      So my (somewhat rambling) point is: non-Windows based users *do* represent a significant minority.

  15. Did even the submitter read the article? by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because if they had, it would have been perfectly clear that by "the BBC website" he meant bbc.co.uk, as that's actually part of the referenced quote. Given that the site is one of the most popular in the UK, and is used by people from all walks of life, I'd say that their OS usage stats stand fair chance of being representative of reality...

    1. Re:Did even the submitter read the article? by smallfries · · Score: 1

      The only interesting thing on that site is the link to news.bbc.co.uk. Given that the main use of the beeb's website is for the news and that most people with a clue would just bypass that server and hit the frontpage for the news site the only thing we can infer from the statistic is that most clueless people use windows...

      --
      Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
  16. Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by Bushcat · · Score: 3, Informative
    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear

    iPlayer is based on Kontiki (owned by Verisign). Windows only, unless you're prepared to jump through virtual hoops, AFAIK. Reading through the user agreement: it's targeting UK-based computer users. Hmmm. Shall we build a Windows, Mac or Linux player? No-brainer, really, when the P2P distribution layer is Windows only.

    1. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by kebes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Shall we build a Windows, Mac or Linux player? No-brainer, really, when the P2P distribution layer is Windows only. Sure... but isn't that backwards?

      Generally you shouldn't pick your technology (programming language, toolkit, etc.) and then pick your audience based on what it supports. Instead, you should write out a list of requirements, and then pick the technology that satisfies all those needs. In this case, if one of the requirements was: "Must be available to all fee-paying persons with computer access (i.e.: must be platform agnostic)" then an OS-specific technology would never have been chosen in the first place.

      I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt, and assume that this is a result of mis-management (e.g. not thinking very hard about requirements) rather than corruption (e.g. collusion with software companies), but in any case I question their planning process.

      (And to those who may respond that "must support DRM" was one of the requirements in the initial design, and could only be satisfied using Windows-only software, I would then say that placing content protection above equal treatment of fee-paying users was, again, a poor design decision for an organization like the BBC.)
    2. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by Bushcat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I guess it went something like this. And it hurts the Linux & Mac fanboys, but it is the shape of the world: BBC: "We want to get our stuff out to people. People mock us, but we actually do a pretty good job most of the time, content-wise and technology-wise. We want our subscribers to have access to our content." Verisign: "We can help you with that." BBC: "OK, please help us, but at minimal cost to our subscribers, because we have to fight for every pound." Verisign: "Here's the solution with the DRM you require, and the distributed platform you need to minimize your costs." BBC: "That works for us. We'll go for it. It's a shame it's Windows only, but we're realists." And that's it. In the real world, it's Windows. Second step would be a Mac iPlayer. In context, Linux is a luxury item. Beeb got it right. (And I'm a Linux user, but I'm not a blind Linux user)

    3. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      "Here's the solution with the DRM you require"

      And there's the problem - the OP addressed that by saying "placing content protection above equal treatment of fee-paying users was, again, a poor design decision for an organization like the BBC".

      I agree with him. I don't want DRM on content that I'm forced to pay for.

    4. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by horace · · Score: 1

      The BBC does not hold all rights over all of its programmes, actors get repeat fees and so on, the BBC is forced to buy a large percentage of its programmes from independent producers who will retain some rights. Often the BBC will only have UK rights. For example the iPlayer makes "Heroes" available. That isn't going to happen without robust DRM. In order to make the relatively free distribution of content acceptable to rights owners they needed either DRM or a complete rethink of their commercial practices. Its new supervisors are not really up for that kind of thing and want an iPlayer type solution quickly. It claims there was no acceptable DRM alternative and will have other (Mac at least) solutions available soon.

      Macs are also excluded.

      Still the BBC is noticeably less ambitious than it was and Ashley Highfield does not appear to look much further if there is a Microsoft solution available.

    5. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by maccam · · Score: 1

      Never attribute to conspiracy, what is more easily explained by incompetence.

      --
      Half Word - Will Double, Wire Palindrome, San Francisco
    6. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      The BBC does not hold all rights over all of its programmes

      True, but there's still a vast amount of good quality programmes over the years produced by the BBC. It would be great to have that available.

    7. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by wpanderson · · Score: 1
      --
      neuro at well dot com (when I post, it's my opinions, no-one elses)
    8. Re:Based on Kontiki so no Linux version by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead, you should write out a list of requirements, and then pick the technology that satisfies all those needs

      or at least, most of them, to allow you to implement the braindead ideas that duh management at BBC want just to shut them up. They chose an off-the-shelf solution. I can't sound off too much about iplayer, because i'm working on it (thus posting anonymously), but here's the facts:

      1) Microsoft were definitely not in bed with the BBC with this one. There was never even a question of it, just lots of paranoid people making presumptions just because they went with a Microsoft solution. There is a multi-platform player in the works, and as far as I'm aware, both flash and silverlight versions will be made available. I've even heard some people claiming that skinkers - a company part-owned by microsoft which implements streaming solutions - had something to do with it. Their evidence? NONE! skinkers make a completely different product. It wouldn't be helpful to them in any way. Really.. grow up guys.

      2) They're working to a DEADLINE.. they're not trying to make something perfect, they're just trying to implement their mandate which nobody asked for in the first place, then go back to doing what they're best at.

      3) Much BBC content is part owned by companies such as the Discovery Channel and Paramount. Their hands are tied. For stuff solely owned by the BBC, there will be no encryption.

      4) The back end is running on linux(!!)

      5) It won't work anyway - it's p2p which gives network administrators a routing nightmare. It'll be shaped to the point of unusability by ISPs trying to keep their bandwidth working. They don't have anything specifically against p2p except the fact that routes can pop up from anywhere, so you can't work around it with dynamic routing. You always end up downloading stuff over lots and lots of hops.

      you can now all put your tinfoil hats back on.

  17. 600 linux users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > 400 to 600 are Linux users.

    2008 will be the year of linux on the desktop:P

    Seriously, I read BBC news from work on my windows box but I'm not listening to or watching media streams in the office and I only use linux at home. I'm not sure the stats are significant in the way this guy thinks they are, I pay a license fee but know for a fact that my employer does not.

  18. Small numbers from Linux by ddrichardson · · Score: 1

    That's peculiar, given that Firefox is the default browser in most all Linux distributions and a default install includes a BBC News RSS feed I find those figures very, very strange.

    --
    A thistle is a fat salad for an ass's mouth...
    1. Re:Small numbers from Linux by Toby_Tyke · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think the article may have printed 400 instead of 40,000, or something like that, because 400 out of 17.6 million seems insanely low.

      --
      "I realise this is not a very popular opinion but it's the truth, and there for needs to be said" -Bill Hicks
  19. Why not design for open in the first place? by Nomen+Publicus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The Beeb did it because it was the cheapest, easiest, but not best, option.

    That said, it was a really stupid move and managed to get everybody from the smallest Linux hacker to the UK government commenting in public about the policy.

    Creating an open "player" for all platforms would have taken more resources at first, but from that point on all future platforms would be supported by the people who use the platform.

    Sadly, the Beeb needs closed source to implement the no-save and timed delete features forced on them by others.

    1. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he is lying.

      From TFA: "We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users."

      I don't understand that. News.bbc.co.uk is frequently linked from the Slashdot front page, and although not every Slashdot visitor is running Linux or based in the UK, I'd expect a much higher number than that on the basis of Slashdot visits alone.

      There are more than 600 Linux users in the UK. And some of us even give a shit about what the BBC spends our money on. But I guess minorities don't matter to publically funded broadcasters. Nice one, BBC.

    2. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The Beeb did it because it was the cheapest, easiest, but not best, option.

      How is designing an embedded player that only works on microsoft windows harder than encoding an mpeg and providing a link? They chose a platform specific solution that was both harder to implement and more expensive to implement than the cross-platform option. That's why people think they made a deal with Microsoft, there's really no other way to explain their choice.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by MythMoth · · Score: 1

      I absolutely don't believe it. If this is true then I personally am nearly one percent of all the Linux users who visit the UK website. The figure is completely ridiculous; Linux is a niche, but not that niche.

      --
      --- These are not words: wierd, genious, rediculous
    4. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Streaming MediaOn July 27, the BBC will launch its controversial and oft-delayed BBC iPlayer after four years of development and a budget of more than £3 million ($6.1 million).


      Over S6.1 million is the cheapest? Easiest perhaps, but not the cheapest.
    5. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      It cost over 100 million pounds to develop. That isn't cheap.

    6. Re:Why not design for open in the first place? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      I understand the deal was inked by some idiot named David Brent. He must not be too smart.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  20. Maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe 600 was the amount of people who logged onto the site using IE6 through wine? :p

    But I repeat, they are definitely NOT in bed with Bill Gates...

  21. Love the summary by toleraen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear. Hey Fudmitter, he's not talking about the media site, he's talking about news.bbc.co.uk. Still that seems a little low. We should have upped those numbers for him and linked his site directly in the summary...
  22. Not in bed together, but they LOVE the same SPA! by CorporalKlinger · · Score: 1

    From what I know of the BBC, they've always prided themselves on "spreading the word" of the BBC as far and wide as possible, setting up broadcast stations in some of the most remote parts of the world to share their news, informational programming, and perhaps most importantly - the English language - with those who often have very limited resources. I can tell from personal experience - I am able to receive the BBC from midnight to 4 AM on my local public radio station here in Indiana on a nightly basis... I was able to receive the BBC loud and clear when I was on a relief trip to Honduras (though I think the programming was moderately different from that received here in Indiana) - and one of my peers reported being able to receive the BBC when he was in a remote part of Africa on a hunting expedition. For a company that claims to want to make their information accessible to everyone, I find their explanation for a Windows-only launch of their player less than satisfying.

    I don't think that MS and the BBC are necessarily in bed together. The problem likely stems from hiring programmers that aren't familiar with porting software to the Linux platform. I know that the BBC is well-funded, but I have serious doubts about the influence this project's leader within the BBC has over the "uppers" who write his budget and provide his human resources. With limited resources, the idea might be to "cast the net as wide as possible." Sure, porting the player to be Linux-compatible *should* be really easy, but I can say from experience that porting multimedia software that incorporates a significant amount of network interface software to access the feeds from the internet from Windows to Linux often requires something of a "special touch" - something I, unfortunately, do not have. Those programmers they hired built the software they did, perhaps, as a "test." CNN and the NY Times have both launched major media projects that later failed - this might be the BBC testing the waters to see what demand is. Still, their excuse could be a little more realistic and honest.

  23. oh god, not this again... by greebowarrior · · Score: 5, Informative

    When will people stop whining about iPlayer being XP only? There's no secret Microsoft alliance, and no great conspiracy.

    The main reason why iPlayer uses Windows DRM is because the companies who produce content for the BBC didn't want their shows streamed without some kind of rights management, because, god forbid, it should end up on bit torrent. The cause of this is most likely ignorance on their part, because, as we all know, DRM stops piracy, saves lives, cures cancar and ends world famine.

    The core code behind iPlayer is completely cross-browser, having worked on some of it, I know that it conforms to BBC New Media guidelines, which specifically state that all HTML, JavaScript, etc must be compatible with all major browsers (we even tested major elements of it in Firefox, and quite a few of the developers worked on Mac/Linux boxes)

    There has always been a plan for a Mac/Linux version of iPlayer, but the current DRM requirements being imposed on the iPlayer Core team make it somewhat difficult for them to actually get working on it

    1. Re:oh god, not this again... by heraclitus23 · · Score: 2, Informative

      When will people stop whining about iPlayer being XP only? There's no secret Microsoft alliance, and no great conspiracy.


      When non-Windows players (Mac and Linux) don't have to pay a license fee and be excluded from services. Also, the worry is not about the Beeb management, but the iPlayer team many of whose senior figures are ex-Microsoft employees.

      The main reason why iPlayer uses Windows DRM is because the companies who produce content for the BBC didn't want their shows streamed without some kind of rights management, because, god forbid, it should end up on bit torrent. The cause of this is most likely ignorance on their part, because, as we all know, DRM stops piracy, saves lives, cures cancar and ends world famine.


      That a reason, if it is, to use DRM, not Microsoft DRM. Anyway, it's kind of silly---there are no digital rights management of broadcasts.

      There has always been a plan for a Mac/Linux version of iPlayer, but the current DRM requirements being imposed on the iPlayer Core team make it somewhat difficult for them to actually get working on it


      Well, sort of, there is plans for a streaming only version for Mac and Linux, but, again, that's unfair treatment to license payers.
    2. Re:oh god, not this again... by ddrichardson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The main reason why iPlayer uses Windows DRM is because the companies who produce content for the BBC didn't want their shows streamed without some kind of rights management, because, god forbid, it should end up on bit torrent.

      That would be a fair argument, except that a large proportion of contents is produced by the BBC at the expense of licence payers, who should be able to access the information they are paying for regardless of operating system. In essence, one could argue that as a licence payer it's our content.

      --
      A thistle is a fat salad for an ass's mouth...
    3. Re:oh god, not this again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How can the core code behind the iPlayer be cross platform when it based on the windows only Kontiki P2P software and for playing windows DRM? What have New Media guidelines got to do with an *application* that plays windows media and upload/downloads files using a windows only p2p sharing system? Do you think we are discussing the streaming system the BBC came up with to placate the BBC trust and get them off their case for 6 months?

      There are no excuses for the use of Microsoft only technology in this. If they couldn't persuade a maker of a show to allow it to be on iPlayer sans DRM then the show should be not be available on iPlayer. Simple as that. Everyone except the BBC sees the fixed-platform nature of the iPlayer to be a violation of the BBC's charter. And it is very suspicious that we were promised a cross-platform iPlayer which suddenly got taken away at the same time the BBC clearly started to have much closer ties with Microsoft.

      The government should scrap the charter and force the BBC to go commercial. The BBC is behaving like a commercial organisation these days anyway so it might as well do it properly.

    4. Re:oh god, not this again... by greebowarrior · · Score: 1

      its a very valid point, but the flaw in your logic is that you imply that people, more specifically, the content producers and management, aren't inherently stupid.

      we all know that iPlayer content SHOULD be DRM-free, but unfortunately the powers that be don't think like that, as they're too worried about people outside of the UK being able to view the content, instead of worrying that everyone inside it has access to it

    5. Re:oh god, not this again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In bed with Gates or not, I tried to get the BCC's iPlayer to work last night on a machine running XP. I spent a futile hour including reading the help pages which advised me that a DRM reset was required and directed me to a page which, viewed using Internet Explorer version 6 as required, showed a greyed-out button with no further help or explanation.

      After a while I gave up and headed for the Pirate Bay to see if I could find a .torrent for the TV program my wife had missed.

      I would assert that the BBC are being fair to users of all operating systems - this damned thing doesn't work on any operating system.

    6. Re:oh god, not this again... by grahamm · · Score: 1

      The main reason why iPlayer uses Windows DRM is because the companies who produce content for the BBC didn't want their shows streamed without some kind of rights management, because, god forbid, it should end up on bit torrent. Which should be a non-argument. The BBC broadcast their programming in digital both on satellite and Digital Terrestrial TV. Anyone with an internet connection and a PVR which can transfer files to a computer could record any programme broadcast by the BBC and share it using bittorrent or any other p2p program or upload it to a video sharing site.
    7. Re:oh god, not this again... by LordSnooty · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, these days a lot of BBC content is produced by independent companies and the BBC merely pays for the right to broadcast it. They are no more "the public's property" than any major US show.

    8. Re:oh god, not this again... by ddrichardson · · Score: 1

      Would you have a link or a reference for this? I have been poking in and around their site for a while and cannot find any.

      --
      A thistle is a fat salad for an ass's mouth...
    9. Re:oh god, not this again... by elvum · · Score: 1
    10. Re:oh god, not this again... by ddrichardson · · Score: 1

      Much appreciated.

      It does however confirm pretty much as I assumed - that no less than half of their output is in house production

      --
      A thistle is a fat salad for an ass's mouth...
    11. Re:oh god, not this again... by elvum · · Score: 1

      In-house production is still almost invariably encumbered with other people's rights. Music is a particular issue - the BBC (and other broadcasters) have agreements in place with music copyright collecting societies that act for musicians and record labels, but these have to be negotiated in advance for each type of use (eg domestic broadcast, international distribution, DVD releases). Actors, writers and other contributors often have contracts with clauses that give them residual rights. Again, this means that each kind of use for the programmes must be negotiated, often with unions such as Equity. If a programme makes use of archive or library footage, or material from a wire service, then the rights to use that material must also be negotiated. The fact that the programme itself was directed, produced and filmed by BBC employees only negligibly simplifies the rights situation.

      You can glean a lot of information on the subject from this page detailing the paperwork that the BBC requires independent production companies to submit with their programmes.

    12. Re:oh god, not this again... by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      Most of the management that selected the technology were former MS employees. The selection was based on DRM and the belief that MS knew more about DRM than anyone else. This DRM is tied to windows DRM and is inseparable, as in there can never be a player on other OS's because the technology is MS's and patented. Working in other browsers doesn't allow the player to work in other operating systems.

      The stupid player cost over 100 million pounds to develop. That's outrageous.

    13. Re:oh god, not this again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the fact that iPlayer has launched without a Mac version is a bigger story but it can be explained by the fact that the Beeb isn't a commercial organisation. If it was then it would have to ask itself why it would ignore 5-7% (my guess) of customers. In a commercial organisation, those extra customers could generate your profit.

    14. Re:oh god, not this again... by greebowarrior · · Score: 1

      no, i don't think we're talking about the streaming system. iPlayer is basically an application window that loads an IE control. The elements of the application that you see are actually written in XHTML/CSS/JavaScript.
      As for Kontiki, it's actually available for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X

    15. Re:oh god, not this again... by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Actors, writers and other contributors often have contracts with clauses that give them residual rights. Again, this means that each kind of use for the programmes must be negotiated, often with unions such as Equity. If a programme makes use of archive or library footage, or material from a wire service, then the rights to use that material must also be negotiated.

      But why would this necessitate DRM? The exact same intellectual property (music, writing, actors, etc) is broadcast without DRM by the BBC over the airwaves. So, if it requires DRM for web distribution, then why doesn't it require DRM for broadcast distribution?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    16. Re:oh god, not this again... by elvum · · Score: 1

      It doesn't necessitate DRM, but the rights-holders still demand it.

    17. Re:oh god, not this again... by dangitman · · Score: 1

      So, the BBC should show some balls and tell them that they are smoking cheap crack that's only hurting them - not immediately cave, and waste hundreds of millions of dollars to appease them. They need the BBC more than the BBC needs them.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    18. Re:oh god, not this again... by elvum · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I agree. The ongoing writers' guild strike amply demonstrates how willing people are to withdraw their services if they don't think they're being treated fairly. The BBC would suffer an immense loss of goodwill within the industry, and quite possibly with the public too if it adopted a hard-nosed attitude. YMMV of course.

  24. Development costs by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    Face it, there are tools out there that make it insanely easy to provide content to the majority of users.

    Most likely they went with what some consultant said, to get up and running as quickly as possible with the minimum in costs.

    Now, what would it take to come up with something in Linux that can read this data? Is it even remotely possible?

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Development costs by budgenator · · Score: 1

      You forgot the "and he just happened to have a turn-key solution to sell them with recurring licensing fees" part.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  25. Well... by thepartyanimal · · Score: 0

    when the linux users get a real OS like Windows it wont be a problem.

  26. what's the big deal... by fattmatt · · Score: 1

    Why is it so hard to believe there is only a small Linux desktop community that use it regularly? This seems to be a characteristic of every sub-culture, an internal self awareness that does not extend past the members of the sub-culture and the general misunderstanding the 100s of millions of Windows users actually recognize there is a small and insignificant amount of Linux desktop users.

    did that make sense? haha...

    1. Re:what's the big deal... by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      A small number, yes.. but 600 users out of 70 million? Give me a break. The 0.41% figure mentioned is ~280,000 linux users based on their own stats.

      That also doesn't explain why no osx client... 5% of 70 million is 3.5 million users they've pissed off.

  27. Nope by KiwiCanuck · · Score: 1

    They're just lying ion the sheets and holding hands.

  28. Assumed error in parent story... by Aphrika · · Score: 1

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.
    Actually, it is clearly mentioned in the article. The numbers represent users of the BBC website, not the iPlayer site.
    1. Re:Assumed error in parent story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still a bizarrely small number. Only 600 Linux users in the UK visit the BBC website? I don't believe that. Show us the stats!

      This reminds me of New Labour's way of justifying every policy that they come up with. "99% of respondents to our survey were in favour of something that sounded a bit like our policy, when we phrased it carefully!"

  29. It is clear by Mr_Silver · · Score: 1

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.

    He's not talking about media downloads, but the entire bbc.co.uk site which, according to Google, is about 3,310,000 pages.

    From the article:

    Highfield used the numbers of non-Windows users visiting bbc.co.uk as justification for the corporation's XP-only release. "We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users."

    They didn't do a Linux version because only 0.0035% of users are identifying themselves as running Linux.

    I'm not making any comments about whether or not this is a good idea. I'm sure others can provide good arguments for both ways.

    --
    Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
    1. Re:It is clear by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      They didn't do a Linux version because only 0.0035% of users are identifying themselves as running Linux.

      They are, however, locking out about 855,000 Mac users. Not that, compared to ~16M Win users, that's extremely much, but it's not exactly insignificant, either. Not if your standard is to bring your program to everyone, which does fit the BBC.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  30. Open Source Alternative? by s7uar7 · · Score: 1

    Given that the BBC had to wrap the iPlayer videos in DRM to satisfy the rights holders, what open source equivalent could they have used? Or would they have had to write something completely from the ground up?

    1. Re:Open Source Alternative? by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      The bbc broadcast unencrypted over satellite, cable and terrestrial. Why the DRM requirement now? They're already broadcast DRM free to most of northern europe.

    2. Re:Open Source Alternative? by s7uar7 · · Score: 1

      For the same reasons that the RIAA demanded DRM for paid downloads when their tracks are already broadcast DRM free on the radio.

      Exactly what those reasons are, I couldn't tell you, but I suspect it's a combination of a lack of technical understanding by the people who make the decisions and the perceived (and to a certain extent proved) threat from filesharing.

    3. Re:Open Source Alternative? by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      It's a contractual thing. Broadcast over satellite, cable or terrestrial TV is treated as a separate thing to making content available on the Internet and the terms and conditions are different for each. I doubt that a contract being nonsense from a technology point of view would be a successful defence in a law suit.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
  31. Summary Inflamatory as usual by gaspyy · · Score: 1
    Obviously, after 6 years of /., I'd expect no less...

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear


    Highfield's (the chief of tech) argument is pretty solid actually. The BBC site (bbc.co.uk, not the media download area) has 17 million monthly visitors, out of which 600 use Linux.

    It does make perfect sense to please the 99% of the users first and then cater to the specific needs of the other 1%.

    [...] despite the example of many major sites that support Linux (even if this is through the closed-source flash player)


    Gotta love the spin. They were offering media downloads, not just streaming, so it's apple to oranges. I may not agree with the DRM, but then again it's their right to make the content available only to those who pay the tax.

    Finally, so self-respecting zealot could fail to note that flash is closed-source. Obviously, if BBC would have chosen flash from the beginning, slashdotters would be now outraged for BBC ignoring Ogg...

    And what's this doing in "Your Rights Online" section?
    1. Re:Summary Inflamatory as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would have to agree, noone seems to be mentioning this for some strage reason, but iPlayer does NOT support Windows Vista and Internet Explorer 7. :)

    2. Re:Summary Inflamatory as usual by gaspyy · · Score: 1

      Sorry to be replying to my own post...

      Yes, the 400-600 figure is absurdly low. I based my original post on the assumption that no one is lying or massaging the stats to prove a point...

  32. Does this affect all media on all BBC sites? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to listen to Radio 1 with Realplayer. This mean the next time I hit it up on my Mac I'm not going to be able to listen? =/

  33. Re:good riddance by nagora · · Score: 1
    I cannot wait for the day that they go offline completely.

    Errr. Surely that day arrived when your TV set came with buttons to select other channels? Just don't watch it. I can't imagine what you would prefer to watch given the quality of the competition, but nobody's forcing you.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  34. Submitter is either confused or an out right liar. by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1
    The BBC spokesman said that BEFORE they instituted the iPlayer software, they had very few visitors using Linux. The submitter then tries to refute this statement by using the current state as to why there would have been fewer visitors in the past.

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.

    This is disingenuous and does not refute the fact that 94% of the visitors to the BBC site were using Windows before the iPlayer rollout.

    Either the submitter can not read, can not think, or is a trolling fanboy. In any instance, the submission is inaccurate.
    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  35. It's a licese thing by IchBinEinPenguin · · Score: 1

    The BBC don't own, and therefore can't (be seen to) give away, the content.
    They have to at least pretend to make it difficult to 'hack' the player and capture the content.
    If they release a Windows player and it gets hacked, no-one cares (yet another Windows hack, film at 11).
    If they release a Linux player and it gets hacked they'll be roasted for loosing the content (how dumb are you? releasing a player on a platform where users can recompile the kernel to defeat your DRM?!?!).

    1. Re:It's a licese thing by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      The BBC don't own, and therefore can't (be seen to) give away, the content.

      They own a large amount of content, surely. If all of the BBC material was available for free viewing, that would be a huge amount of content, and I suspect people would then be far less bothered about using DRM on the remaining non-BBC material.

      The problem is I suspect that they don't want licence payers to be able to view the content that they've already paid for - they'd rather get them to pay again and again, by selling it to channels like UKTV Gold (where we also have adverts on top of paying for it twice).

    2. Re:It's a licese thing by Zelos · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, a lot of the BBC's content these days is made by independent production companies and licensed to the BBC.

    3. Re:It's a licese thing by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, a lot of the BBC's content these days is made by independent production companies and licensed to the BBC.

      That's interesting, and a bigger problem that needs to be addressed. I support the licence fee on the basis that it can be seen as a good thing to produce content owned by a corporation that's accountable to the people/Government. If the money's just going to be used to bid for content produced and owned by private companies, then the licence fee should be ditched, so we can pay for what we watch. I don't see why we should be forced to pay so these independent companies can profit.

  36. it just might be true by westlake · · Score: 1
    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.

    The BBC is more than media downloads. It is the prime news site in the U.K. If the BBC isn't seeing many Linux users, it could be because there aren't many Linux users.

  37. Wal-Mart made the same claim by HangingChad · · Score: 1

    Until it came out they had hired a former MS exec.

    I think it was funny that they pooh-poohed a demonstration by a dozen people. Any number of people come out to protest a technology choice should be an eye-opener. One of the first things I learned working for public radio was that you didn't piss off opera fans. There weren't very many of them, but they were vocal and passionate. Much like Linux users. The Beeb should have more class.

    It still surprises me to find IE only web sites from big companies, but they're still out there. It's so rude and comes across as primitive and...last week.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  38. Guys, what did you expect? by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 3, Interesting
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:Guys, what did you expect? by EvilMole · · Score: 1

      Nice try, but iPlayer was well underway long before he joined - including the decision to use WMP.

    2. Re:Guys, what did you expect? by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      Source?

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    3. Re:Guys, what did you expect? by EvilMole · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Huggers joined in May 2007. The first closed trial of iPlayer started in 2005, with Windows Media: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intergrated_Media_Player, http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbimp/F2824809?thread=2535012

  39. why a player? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is 2007, they don't need a "player", that's already out there in a huge fashion, all they needed was to pick an open format, then let folks use whichever player they want. This was an artificial decision based on a "problem" that doesn't exist and that didn't need to happen.

  40. In other news by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1, Funny

    In other news, FOX News Channel has announced that it's not in bed with the Republican Party, George W. Bush announced that he's not in bed with big oil, and every member of the U.S. Congress has announced that they aren't in bed with any lobbyists or special interest groups of any kind.

    Finally, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton announced that she's never been in bed with anybody but herself. (That one's almost believable!)

    1. Re:In other news by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Mods have no sense of humor today.

  41. The more amusing of two evils by Sockatume · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Executive summary: "Management ineptitude with statistics, not conspiracy, behind stupid BBC move."

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  42. I Hate Rock n Roll by smack.addict · · Score: 1

    I love the BBC
    I love it when they're pissin' on me
    And I love MTV
    I love it when they're shittin' on me

    1. Re:I Hate Rock n Roll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sat on the floor and watched TV
        Thanking Christ for the BBC
        A stupid fucking place to be

  43. Oh, come on... by sribe · · Score: 1

    Why he would expect a large number of Linux-based visitors to the site when the media downloads are Windows XP only is not clear.

    I'm pretty sure they had a web site before they put up these media downloads, and I suspect that they probably looked at those stats before deciding that their visitors are mostly running Windows.

  44. 400 to 600 Linux users? by Tibixe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We have 17.1 million users of bbc.co.uk in the UK and, as far as our server logs can make out, 5 per cent of those [use Macs] and around 400 to 600 are Linux users. I read news.bbc.co.uk and use Linux. so I am the 0.2% of the users mentioned there :P
    There must more than 600, because a "Latest BBC Headlines" bookmark comes "preinstalled" with Firefox.
    (At least with the ones I've seen)
    1. Re:400 to 600 Linux users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My 0.2%, I've no idea how they analyzed their stats but the quoted figures are simply not believable.

      What's more, I've been reading BBC news on linux since it launched in the late '90s. Well before most of my non-tech friends and relatives even owned a computer.

    2. Re:400 to 600 Linux users? by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Firefox runs under Windows. I daresay more people use Firefox for Windows than use Linux as a desktop OS these days, although I don't have any numbers to support that.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    3. Re:400 to 600 Linux users? by shish · · Score: 1

      The "I run Linux and read the BBC website" group on facebook currently has 670 members, having been created after this story was posted...

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
  45. Why not just use an open codec? by jonwil · · Score: 1

    Why not just stick the files up in MPEG4 or some other open codec (or even the DIRAC codec which the BBC has/had some connection to)?

    Stick it behind a login page (with only people who have TV licenses able to get access).

  46. Bill Gates by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

    I'm sure Bill Gates will be happy to hear this news. Someone call him up.

    1. Re:Bill Gates by VGPowerlord · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure Bill Gates' wife will be happy to hear this news. :P

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  47. Clearly Not the Man for the Job by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    An Operating system, (O/S), is not the requirement to download a file that is in a certain format. All current Linux, MacIntosh, Unix, and Microsoft O/S's have the ability to Download a file. These current O/S's can all execute "Multimedia" programs. Certain programs can only execute on a limited set of O/S's; But, there are Multimedia programs that can work on ALL of the above stated O/S's, and many other O/S's not stated. Clearly, access to only a few people, was the intent of the final decision maker in this case.

    1. Re:Clearly Not the Man for the Job by ja · · Score: 1

      Clearly, access to only a few people, was the intent of the final decision maker...


      For inversed values of 'few' ???

      --

      send + more == money? ...
  48. 2 out of 3 ain't bad... by Kugrian · · Score: 1
    The BBC iPlayer Accessibility Statement makes for some interesting reading.

    The BBC is committed to making its output as accessible as possible to all audiences (including those with visual, hearing, cognitive or motor impairments) to fulfil its public service remit and to meet its statutory obligations.


    I live in England, pay the License Fee, and run Ubuntu. I guess only two out of three prevents me from being part of their audience.
  49. What a moron by mikeb · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The really *scary* thing about this is that the BBC's HEAD OF TECHNOLOGY is still trotting out the bullshit line that this is about Linux users. It is not and never was. It's about a body that is publicly funded from MY F****NG TAXES, with a statutory duty to serve the whole UK population, choosing to use proprietary and encumbered technology. If he's too stupid to understand that he should resign.

    It is not about Linux. It is not about Linux. It is not about Linux.

    It's about ensuring that there is a free, open and competitive market in producing players. What annoys me is not that there is no Linux player, but that NOBODY CAN CREATE ONE from the specifications (since there aren't any).

    With idiots like this in charge at the Beeb, there's no hope.

    1. Re:What a moron by EvilMole · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ..."with a statutory duty to serve the whole UK population..."

      I look forward to you campaigning to get the BBC to broadcast all its DAB channels on analog radio, as they're not fufilling their statutory duty to serve the whole UK population blah blah blah...

      The fact is that you CHOOSE to use a minority platform. That means you're not going to be first in the queue when it comes to getting new services from the BBC. You'll get them eventually, unless the marginal cost of providing them is too high - just as there's people in the UK who can't get digital TV (and won't get it for years).

    2. Re:What a moron by mikeb · · Score: 1

      DAB is an open(ish) standard with many implementations (though I'm not sure about whether the codec involves patents). A suitably skilled person can take the spec and build a player.

      Your reply doesn't counter my view at all - it supports it.

      The BBC should not be in the business of providing players, it should pick standards that allow others to build players. That is the whole point of the argument. It's not about Linux (is there an echo in here?)

    3. Re:What a moron by Zelos · · Score: 1

      I think the GP's point was that there are large areas of the country with no digital reception at all at the moment.

    4. Re:What a moron by EvilMole · · Score: 1

      "DAB is an open(ish) standard"

      There's no such thing as an openish standard. It's either open or its not. DAB uses MP2 as its codec, which isn't open, and that's due to be replaced by AAC, which also isn't open.

      What you mean is "available on multiple platforms" which isn't the same thing.

      "A suitably skilled person can take the spec and build a player."

      Only by buying chips which already include support for proprietary codecs. That's the equivalent of saying that "a suitably skilled person can take the spec and build a Windows Media Player" - by buying the codecs from Microsoft.

      "The BBC should not be in the business of providing players, it should pick standards that allow others to build players."

      So if it had simply said "we're making all our content available as protected Windows Media" you'd have been happy? I doubt it.

    5. Re:What a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet another angst-filled reply from some techie looking after his own interests. They're not ensuring a "free, open and competitive market in producing players". That's your own twisted and incorrect impression. All they care about is providing content.

      Accessibility for all walks of life will come later. The blind can't watch this either, and they're paying just the same taxes as you are.

      Get over yourself.

    6. Re:What a moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The blind can't watch this either, and they're paying just the same taxes as you are.

      Actually blind people get a discount on the TV licence.

    7. Re:What a moron by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      There are however plenty of analogue alternatives if theres no DAB coverage. Whats the alternative to iPlayer from the BBC?

    8. Re:What a moron by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Actually blind people get a discount on the TV licence.
      And if the blind have a black and white television, they get a even better discount.
      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  50. Beta Sign Up by bugg_tb · · Score: 0

    Well I don't really believe these figures. When they were asking for beta testers the asked you for various details and what OS you used I of course tapped in linux and was told that I didn't fall within the criteria. I'd like to see how many people were logged as linux users from the sign up, I think that would give a good indication of what the BBC were thinking during the development stage.

  51. Hello? Mac sales outranking pc in universities? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    recent surveys and sales data shows mac sales are now out numbering pc sales in major universities state side, given Europe's more progressive leanings it's pretty easy to extrapolate similar if not greater trends across the pond, not to mention bbc does have an American division.

    and guess what, mac runs a posix interface. It's not that hard to make the mac version linux friendly.

    In other words, this is a cop-out at best, and more likely his claims are an outright lie.

    However, never attribute to malice or conscious intent what can be attributed to laziness or incompetence. The ms development platform, especially graphics development, is geared toward the lazy (think directx vs opengl in the gaming world)

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:Hello? Mac sales outranking pc in universities? by DaveCBio · · Score: 1

      I am confused as to how this matters Apple has always done well in academia, but that has yet to translate into any major inroads in the business world. Sure Mac sales are up overall these days, ironically after they became able to run Windows, but you still aren't going to have a majority market share with how entrenched Windows is unless there is some kind of major IT shake up. From the BBC's perspective they are going to put the most money into the biggest market share and that makes sense. It's the same reason not many games get ported to the Mac or Linux, it's just not worth the sales regardless of the warm fuzzy feelings.

    2. Re:Hello? Mac sales outranking pc in universities? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      right, because university students never grow up, or develop brand loyalty, or use mac in their homes despite being forced to use windows in business, and of course they never patronize bbc while in school right?

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    3. Re:Hello? Mac sales outranking pc in universities? by DaveCBio · · Score: 1

      Like I said, Apple has been in schools for YEARS. In fact they have been the dominant PC in many educational institutions for a long time. Hasn't really helped much now has it? Academia and business don't always have the same ends in mind. For example, I work in video games. Lots of universities, art schools, colleges use Macs, but when it comes to game development (Mac games being the obvious exception) most of the tools we use are Windows PC bsaed.

  52. I suggest he goes to youtube by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

    After years of looking at Linux, wanting to use Linux, and feeling Linux just wasn't ready (all the while hating myself for using Windows, feeling like a beaten wife), I've discovered the Glory That Is Ubuntu. My God, that is some brilliant shit. I did a demo install in VMware just to see how good the latest version is. Can I say wow? Yes, yes I can. What's more, flash under firefox looks great. I can run youtube vids with full motion and sound, no lag, and it's great.

    The point to this long story, why aren't they going with the flash player? I mean shit, it works so effortlessly. Very little buffering, no worries about needing to find funky codecs, etc, web video feels far more advanced than just a few years ago. Then again, BBC was running realplayer for the longest time so even a poke in the eye with a sharp stick would be an improvement, xp by comparison must seem a revelation.

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  53. Whinge moan whinge moan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck the Beeb and their insane technology plans. I know some people associated with it and they REALLY need to stop drinking the Kool-Aid. Or perhaps they should drink some more.

  54. Seriously speaking by TheLink · · Score: 1

    Linux makes up a very small percentage of desktop users, less than 1% probably.

    HOWEVER, Mac users are a significant percentage. There are statistics that claim 16% for notebooks, and I've got my own stats that don't disagree (based on mac addresses). There's also an impression that Mac users are more willing to pay more for most things.

    So the stuff we make definitely has to work with Macs. Does the BBC's "Windows XP" only stuff work on Macs running MacOS? Without too much hoop-jumping.

    BTW, I've even seen a PS3 (based on user agent - it sends short < 300 byte DHCP packets which is RFC noncompliant on some interpretations of the RFCs, seems some older Macs do that too). We did request some game consoles for proper compatibility testing with our stuff, but somehow they haven't appeared yet. Wonder why :).

    Come to think of it, another dept did have a game console, and it was used for playing games. How quaint ;).

    --
    1. Re:Seriously speaking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      600 users just isn't a believable figure though is it? The guy is either incompetent or lying.

      As I pointed out elsewhere, I visit news.bbc.co.uk using Windows from work. I use linux everywhere other than my work desktop (even on my Macbook). So the stats are flawed because of a monopoly on business desktops. Yet it's not these businesses that are paying the license fee and I don't imagine many of these visitors ever watching a missed TV episode whilst at work!

    2. Re:Seriously speaking by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Agree.

      There are easy ways to do multiplatform video.

      Also, for the Beeb to be Microsoft-centric is "just wrong" from an "institutional" point of view. The Beeb is not supposed to like that.

      Fauxnews could go do that sort of thing if they want, I don't care :).

      --
  55. What's with the iName, anyway? by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1, Funny

    I like how the BBC was obviously trying to draft on the recognition of Apple's iNames but without the, shall we say, fucking courtesy to actually run on the Mac out of the box. Nice one, tools.

  56. Re:good riddance by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

    As far as I know the BBC operates on a business model similar to the German public stations: If you own a TV set you pay the fee. It doesn't matter if you watch the channel, you're paying anyway. (Yeah, that makes it even funnier when they lock out part of the userbase.)

    The idea behind the mandatory fee is to keep the stations unbiased by corporate interest and market trends. It does kind of fulfill those goals, the former more than the latter. I don't think it's a bad concept per se, but it is quite annoying when you find out (for example) that you're forcedly financing a business partnership with Microsoft that has exactly zero value for your Windows-free household.

    --
    USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  57. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

    This is disingenuous and does not refute the fact that 94% of the visitors to the BBC site were using Windows before the iPlayer rollout.

    Either the submitter can not read, can not think, or is a trolling fanboy. In any instance, the submission is inaccurate. So what about the other 6% of users? If 94% used Windows you think they should ignore 6%? Considering it's the general public who FUND the BBC, it's pretty much the same as a company refusing to acknowledge 6% of its shareholders
  58. There are a lot of tinfoil hats about. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not infeasible that the BBC don't get many hits from linux users. I read the beeb a lot, but I mainly tend to do so at work. I can't recall the last time I read it from home on linux.

    Also I know a large number of people who also read the BBC news at work. I don't know of any companies though that use linux desktops.

  59. That doesn't make the numbers right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    if he's got them wrong.

    Hell, there's more than 800 visit the BBC site from one company along (using linux).

    So stats from bbc.co.uk may be representative but that doesnt mean the stats are either correct (incorrect logs) or that he's quoted the actual figures.

  60. And at the Associated Press... by warren_spencer_1977 · · Score: 1

    When I worked at the Associated Press in Manhattan a few years back, we released audio and video on our web site, but only for Internet Explorer. Which means no Linux of course. The howls of protest were drowned out only by the chatter of lame explanations by red-faced managers, citing cost, deadlines, and oh, the media-player agreement with Microsoft, as insurmountable issues. Needless to say, getting Firefox support in place became a high priority. I would image these guys will be feeling the same heat about now.

  61. BBC Worldwide. BBC's commercial interests. by StraightHead · · Score: 1

    The BBC has good reason to use a DRM distribution platform. The iPlayer's eventual role is to be not only a source of broadcast programmes, but also as a store front for the BBC's commercial division, BBC Worldwide. But, what with all the OS controversy, they're keeping that quiet for the moment.

  62. The own most of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The BBC own most of the content.

    So either

    a) don't broadcast content they cannot release unDRMd
    b) don't put on iPlayer any content they cannot send unDRMd

  63. I can see why they did it by DrXym · · Score: 0
    The BBC were beguiled by the lie that Windows Media Player and strong DRM would be the answer to all their problems. Instead iPlayer is a disaster - a mish mash of JavaScript, ActiveX, WMP and some proprietary downloader that doesn't even work on the platform it's designed for. If you don't have exactly the correct version of the software (Windows XP, IE 6) it doesn't work at all. .

    Naturally the BBC have concerns about their content but I think they've gone absolutely the wrong way about things. After all, do they really think there is a massive market for pirate episodes of Eastenders, Panorama or the similar things this service is for? Why are they being so paranoid?

    My belief is that they should tie access to the service to a TV licence. Licence holds can register, get a user id & PIN and use the supplied Java client to get their content. After that it's entirely up to them how long they own it. Perhaps the Java client works like a PVR, caching the data and deleting old files after 30 days. But it could also offer to export data so users can save it for longer. It could even do so in H624 or ASP but ensure the file is watermarked and cross-referencing the file to the TV licence. That way if it is shared the offenders can be identified and their their access revoked. Otherwise the downloader / player is free for users to use any way they see fit for personal use.

    I think the solution is far more reasonable, open and workable than the bloody mess they have now. Consumers get a client that runs anywhere and leaves them in control of their settings. And the BBC gets kudos rather than egg on their face.

  64. Re:Not in bed together, but they LOVE the same SPA by Zelos · · Score: 1

    Exactly - they still broadcast the BBC World Service on shortwave radio, after all:

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/schedules/frequencies/index.shtml

  65. Nation shall speak peace unto nation by rx-sp · · Score: 3, Informative

    This man is clearly a small-minded idiot who the BBC should be ashamed to have on their staff. Frankly, I don't care a jot about support for Linux or Mac. That's not where I'm coming at this from. I'm coming at this from the simple tenets of the BBC's constitution, that "Nation shall speak peace unto nation". This is on the plaque outside Broadcasting House, the BBC main HQ. It's why the BBC has offices in eastern countries you've never heard of. It's why the BBC broadcasts programs for minorities. It doesn't say "Nation shall speak peace unto nation provided they're running a compatible operating system". That's like it saying, "National shall speak peace unto nations provided they have white skin", or "Nation shall speak peace unto nation provided they support the British government's war on terror". There are no bars here, for any reason, trivial or otherwise. It really is disgraceful that this man is in a position of power in the BBC. It shows how far standards have slipped in the BBC. The iPlayer project will very probably be cancelled anyway because another fuckwitt is running the BBC and has massively overstretched the organisation, so that it's now cutting back by billions of pounds. Generation X has all growed-up and they're simply not up to the job.

  66. Think this is bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try the tools used for FMLS and GAMLS. They are tied, not only to Windows, but intrinsically tied to to IE. I tried to use the Realtor tools for which I have to pay annual dues on Linux with FireFox, but it just fails work. Then I tried on a Mac with Safari and FireFox, still wont work. I wrote to them telling them that they should support other browsers and that I am very disappointed in them and their product and the reply I got was that "we ae sorry about your problems not being able to use our applications. The reason it dosent work with other browsers is because it was designed to work with Internet Explorer." So there you go. Finally I had to give in and buy a laptop with Vista in order to do my work.

  67. Re:Not in bed together, but they LOVE the same SPA by jimicus · · Score: 1

    The problem likely stems from hiring programmers that aren't familiar with porting software to the Linux platform.

    There's a simple reason for that.

    They don't have an IT department any more. It was outsourced some time ago - shortly before it became apparent that the Internet was likely to become if not the future of media distribution, then at least very significant.

    The development process seems to have been "throw something cheap and cheerful together at the last minute". It had to include DRM because pretty much everything the BBC produces is wrapped up in all sorts of licensing. Heck, even Tuesday's episode of Eastenders used some recent commercial music in the background at one point - that would have to be licensed under specific terms, and it's exactly that kind of thing which prevents the BBC from making all their content free to all.

  68. A BBC Website - Some Stats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I manage a BBC website (can't say which one and need to post anonymously). Our October operating system stats break down as follows:

    Windows: 77.77%
    Mac: 20.84%
    Linux: 1.23%

    We even had a few game console visitors and 2 people using FreeBSD.

    1. Re:A BBC Website - Some Stats by aedan · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't giving the stats in such detail make you easy to identify?

  69. iPlayer, DRM and Crossplatform Support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    There is a nice interview on backstage blog with Ashley Highfield about the iPlayer, DRM and Crossplatform Support:
    http://backstage.bbc.co.uk/news/archives/2007/10/iplayer_drm_and.html

    The iPlayer, no don't do a runner, seriously, it's taken over the mailing list, dominated our discussions and is something that many members of the backstage community care an awful lot about. So do we.

    We all know the questions. Why don't we stand up to the rights holders? Why do we insist on using DRM? Why did we sign a secret deal in blood with Microsoft?

    So we finally decided that these questions needed answers, and the only person to talk to was the boss.

    We present 26 minutes of questions and answers about iPlayer, DRM and cross platform support with Ashley Highfield, Director Future Media & Technology.

    In this frank discussion we cover the DRM issues, explain that iPlayer isn't a Microsoft only party and ask why didn't we use a non propriety solution.
  70. gnash plays media by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

    gnash plays media these days. Yes, it doesn't do a perfect job of emulation, however it's straightforward to stick to the parts of flash that work in both gnash and flash.

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  71. launching a cross platform service .. by rs232 · · Score: 1

    'Launching a software service to every platform simultaneously would have been launch suicide'

    Why is it I have no problem viewing media on other sites except the BBC, how is it Youtube has no problem launching a cross platform service. What possible technical difficulties are there in running streaming video, none ...

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  72. plus gnash by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

    Plus there's gnash, which is an open source flash player which will play youtube videos, or at least until the next time they rev to a newer version of flash.

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  73. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If it is not cost effective to support those 6%, then yes, they should. Tell me, should they spend the same amount on 6% of their customers as they did on the other 94%?

    Let me put it in a way that your little mind can grasp: If it cost 1 million to implement iPlayer for each platform, then it would cost:
    1. The cost per Windows user is 0.06
    2. The cost per Mac user is 1.17
    3. The cost per Linux user is 1,166


    And, companies often do not do what 6% of their shareholders. I think you have forgotten that shareholders vote on many things and it is majority rule. If a vote is 49%/51%, then the 49% lose and the policy of the other 51% gets implemented.

    What makes you think you and your choice of operating system is more important and deserves a bigger share of the money and resources than the other 95% of the population? What makes you think you are worth 19,400 times than 95% of the rest of the population?

    Do you see the depths of your selfishness yet?

    More importantly, if you had RTFA, you would have seen where they decided to support the majority of their visitors first and then add support for the rest later.

    Now, stop being a self-centered asshole.
    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  74. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  75. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by HappySmileMan · · Score: 1

    If it is not cost effective to support those 6%, then yes, they should. Tell me, should they spend the same amount on 6% of their customers as they did on the other 94%?

    What makes you think you and your choice of operating system is more important and deserves a bigger share of the money and resources than the other 95% of the population? What makes you think you are worth 19,400 times than 95% of the rest of the population?

    Do you see the depths of your selfishness yet?

    More importantly, if you had RTFA, you would have seen where they decided to support the majority of their visitors first and then add support for the rest later.

    Now, stop being a self-centered asshole. Well then shouldn't Linux users be required to pay less tax so that it doesn't go to BBC? Or is that unreasonable? (yes that's a rhetorical question) Is it selfish to want to watch something you partially funded with having to go and buy Windows?

    Also I don't recall anywhere stating that the BBC was aiming to make a profit, I DO recall that they aim to help make their programmes accessible to as much people as possible. Currently they're ignoring 6% of people. and the fact that it'd take £1000+ to port to Linux might make sense, except that the majority of the code would only need small changes, and they should be able to fairly easily identify the parts that need to be redone easily if they followed good design.
    So really it comes down to something a bit more like £1000000 to develop for Windows, another 10-20000 to develop for Linux and Mac, unless you're suggesting they code the whole thing from scratch for each platform?
  76. You glossed over the "if" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and it's a pretty big "if".

    What's the cost of a free player? Nil.

    What's the cost of developing your own free player? X00,000

    What's the cost of buying a commercial system? X,000 + audit logs + continuing licensing + upgrades

    Oh, and it's more likely that the Non-Windows systems are more like 20%, not 0.04%, though much of the 20% probably *could* use windows.

  77. Is that right? by cca93014 · · Score: 1

    400 to 600 Linux users out of 17 million? I find that hard to believe...That's less than 0.003%.

  78. Given the constraints of DRM I would have by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    Given the constraint that this media could not be put out in an open format (since then it could be used by non-BBC customers who were not covered by a license) I would have had to do the same thing.

    I don't like windows. I'm headed towards linux (most of my apps are now OS agnostic except everquest).

    But as a project manager, it would be insane to delay delivery to 95% (they claim 99%) of my customers for several months. It is probably not even profitable to try to service 1% of the customers but as a government entity they have to do a lot of things that are not profitable (like people with no children must pay school taxes).

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  79. Re:BBC trialled OGG Vorbis by fialar · · Score: 1

    About 4-5 years ago, the BBC did a trial of streaming their programs with Vorbis. One of the guys who worked at the Beeb was into Open Source and managed to convince management to use Ogg Vorbis. However, there was some issue with rights management and they had to stop doing it. To this day I don't know why. It sounded so much better than the realplayer.

    http://support.bbc.co.uk/ogg/

  80. Drm by majortom1981 · · Score: 1

    I thought the bbc said its only for windows because linux didnt have the required DRM. Did that change?

  81. Why don't they just use QuickTime? It's free. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    The comment about it being too costly for a multiple OS release is a load of horse shit. They payed Microsoft money to license the Windows Media, and it only works on Windows. Why not use Apple's free (as in beer) QuickTime Streaming Server? Not only is it actually free, but it can be played on Windows, Linux, OS X, and a host of other OSes.

    It's like CNN using RealPlayer and Windows Media. They're paying two companies to license their streaming technology that limits their viewing audience, when they could use a free solution that works with everyone.

  82. And what about Mac Safari users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tried to watch the fiery Japanese plane crash video but was denied because I was not using their sanctioned OS.

  83. BBCs stats are publishes and he's wrong by g00sie · · Score: 1

    Linux is at 0.4% - if there's 17 million visitors, then there should have been about 70,000 linux. http://www.currybet.net/articles/user_agents/2.php

  84. This stuff always begins to surface around... by jskline · · Score: 1

    This stuff seems like it always begins to surface round the same time every year. It's now the coming onslaught of the Christmas shopping season, and Microsoft's sales of Vista loaded PC's is dwindling, and worse yet, individual upgrades to Vista. They need to prop up sales in the EU to pay for those heavy fines, so lets make sure that only Windows users can play media with news orgs. Next will come US news sites converting over to new format that only works on Windows media player because all major US news sites are only reporting .002% of users have something non-windows...

    Come on people. How much more cannon fodder do you need here??? :-)

    --
    All content in this message is copyright (c) 2008. All rights reserved. RIAA is prohibited here.
  85. Linux fanboys are gay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get a grip, if a site doesn't want to go out of it's way to support less than 10% of the market how can you blame them. They are not a non profit organization people. If you want them to support Linux so bad, why not donate your time to recoding their site ? No, instead you'll just bitch.

    I don't blame them, they looked at their pages statistics and it's all windows users and media player is the prefered media app for windows, so ...... sounds like Linux needs better media support. Now you want corporate American to susidize Linux support even when it's clearly not in their advantage.

    The funniest part is the guy saying Oh well I guess Linux user don't want to come since they can't play the media. Oh how the mightly rational of the linux user has fallen on that one.

    So, if that guy had ever been to a new site or read current events much he'd know that MOST of the articles are text not video. So, it's reasonable to say that if you're not attracting Linux users for your articles, why do you think you'd attract them with flashing pictures and even if you did, that's American media's selling style, not british media.

    The fact remains beforehand that Linux user don't use the BBC. It's not that the site doesn't appeal to them or some BS reasoning like that. I don't watch video on news channels at all unless it uses a built in player. If you hadn't noticed video news on the net usually sucks anyway, it's cut up, commercial laden crap. If you need flashing pictures to make you visit a news site, then you simply aren't all that interested in current events.

    Let Linux users do what they want, but what they want to do isn't visit the BBC in any large population as observational fact shows. Denying the reality of that just makes you look ridiculous and blaming MS is like the GOP blaming Clinton for 911. OK crazy fanboy go back to those 5 good games that run on your platform and making a background out of your packet sniffer data.

    If you want to whine about something Linux fanatics, whine about no DirectX support, not the damn BBC's decision to support the vastly more popular media player. If Apple and Linux combined weren't still like 10% of the market you guys might have a valid point, but you don't. Sure, the BBC could have made a smarter choice, but it's their choice. You don't need to exaggerate the truth just because you don't like it, that discredits you and Linux. WMP isn't a bad product and even sometimes plays files that VLC won't and certainly can stream audio with less lagging over low bandwidth connections than VLC (at least in Vista). I personally use VLC because it's fast and simple, but it's not for most people. Most people these days want programs that are idiot proof, and that usually equates the bloatware.

    1. Re:Linux fanboys are gay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the fuck are you here?

      Do you even know where "here" is?

      I think you might be looking for the other forum: http://forums.microsoft.com/

  86. It's the CBC that's in bed with Microsoft by fyoder · · Score: 1

    CBC Radio Live Streams

    Initially all Windows, but when geeks complained they threw us a bone of two ogg streams from Ontario. It has been that way for some time, with no sign of other regions being offered in ogg. Another reason to hate Toronto, I guess.

    --
    Loose lips lose spit.
  87. Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pure Bullocks

  88. TEH LUNIX IS TEH ABOT TEH CHOIZE!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Teh Lunix is teh all about teh choice. Don't teh BBC undrestand dat?

    We is teh all about teh choice, and supporting teh choice, so long as teh choice not teh MiKKKr0$$$loth. Becuse dey TEH EVIL!!!!

    So we all about teh choise, as long as teh choice not be teh Mikkkro$$$loth.

    ALL about teh choice!!!

  89. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well then shouldn't Linux users be required to pay less tax so that it doesn't go to BBC?

    No, Linux users are choosing to use Linux. Using Linux comes with some cost to the individual using it. Don't like, don't use Linux. Don't sit there and whine that you are not getting what you want and expect everyone to bend over backwards for you. Don't act like you are 20000 times more important than you really are.

    Also I don't recall anywhere stating that the BBC was aiming to make a profit, I DO recall that they aim to help make their programmes accessible to as much people as possible.
    Funny, but 95% of the population seems like much of the people as reasonably possible.

    Currently they're ignoring 6% of people. and the fact that it'd take £1000+ to port to Linux might make sense, except that the majority of the code would only need small changes, and they should be able to fairly easily identify the parts that need to be redone easily if they followed good design.
    Then, you should, in the spirit of open source, volunteer to do the work for them.

    In any case, you are just whining because the 5% that make up Mac users and the .004 percent who make up the Linux users were not treated as important as the 16+ million Windows users who make up 94% of the market.

    You are a selfish brat. You want to be treated as special because of something you choose to do. If your choice should not effect what other people are required to do. Tell me, do you believe that because a few people choose to drink and drive that the rest of the population should be forced to stay off the road? Do you also believe that because a portion of the population chooses to smoke that smoking should be allowed everywhere including elementary schools, movie theaters, and hospitals?

    You are not special. You do not have any special rights. No one should have to be forced to do something simply because you choose to be different.

    Grow up and act like a responsible adult and live with the consequences of your decisions.
    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  90. BBC stats were published a while ago by g00sie · · Score: 1

    And linux is 0.4%. So a lot higher that he says. Nearer 60,000 that 600 http://www.currybet.net/articles/user_agents/2.php

  91. Public key crypto is more than good enough by CarpetShark · · Score: 1

    Well actually, they could offer downloads of asymmetrically encrypted vids, and offer some simple decoder apps, for anyone who has registered with them, proven their a feepayer, and gotten a keypair.

  92. Ballmer . . . by The+Second+Horseman · · Score: 1

    From a mental image standpoint, just be glad the headline wasn't "BBC Not in Bed With Steve Ballmer"

  93. Re:BBC not in Bed With Bill?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The BBC's head of technology denied rumors that a secret deal with Microsoft was behind the XP-only launch of the BBC's iPlayer..."

    circa Sep 2006 news by TechWeb
    "The British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) and Microsoft Corp. said Thursday they took a step toward strengthening their working relationship by signing a nonexclusive memorandum of understanding.

    The agreement defines the framework to explore opportunities for delivering and consuming BBC content and what the news organization said reflects the evolution of broadcasting.

    BBC Director General Mark Thompson, and Director of New Media and Technology Ashley Highfield, met Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates in Seattle to sign the agreement and discuss the BBC's digital strategy.

    ...

    Future plans for the BBC include building out an online archive system, re-invented the Web site, second-generation Internet-based services, and ways to share online content in the future.

    The memorandum of understanding aims to identify "common interests" between the BBC and Microsoft. Areas for collaboration include search and navigation, distribution, and content enablement." [italics mine]

  94. online poll by blank+axolotl · · Score: 1
    A couple days ago the bbc news technology website had a poll titled "Will you be buying Leopard?". They've taken the poll down now, but here's one report I found of the results:

    18.26% Yes - I need new spots
    5.61% No - I'm happy with Tiger
    11.62% No - Linux is my OS of choice
    64.49% No - I'm a Windows user
    I couldn't find the number of pollers, but I vaguely remember is was quite large.
  95. No... by joshsnow · · Score: 1

    An incovenient truth: There really is only about thousand linux users.

    No, according to TFA, there are only 12 linux users.

  96. Complain to the BBC here! by samuisan · · Score: 2, Informative
  97. linux? by ZhuLien · · Score: 1

    what's "Linux" got to do with iplayer working on XP only? I mean the reason is dumb! what about other OSs? I use MorphOS and MacOS too...

  98. Interview on Groklaw by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Read this if you think iPlayer is a good idea - http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20071021231933899

    Mark Taylor of the UK Open Source Consortium makes the point that the BBC has spent 100 million pounds on the iPlayer project. They're also going broke and will have to sell their flagship London headquarters building for - guess how much?

    So, this project has already beggared the BBC. Am I too paranoid in seeing this as the first step in yet another Microsoft 'embrace and extend' play? They've had ambitions to own broadcast TV for ages. If they can prove their DRM works for a major broadcaster over the net, next step will be to DRM the broadcast TV. After that, if your TV doesn't have Windows Inside, you'll be shit out of luck.

    --
    --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  99. Re:Why don't they just use QuickTime? It's free. by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

    Why not use Apple's free (as in beer) QuickTime Streaming Server? Not only is it actually free, but it can be played on Windows, Linux, OS X, and a host of other OSes.
    There is no quicktime player for Linux.

    It's like CNN using RealPlayer and Windows Media.
    Realplayer is supported on Windows, Linux and OS X.
    --
    Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  100. You joke, but you're right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There aren't as many *nix users as we love to believe there are.

    And the self-proclaimed *nix "gurus" we often encounter online aren't giving n00bz bad advice because it's fun to do so: they do it because they don't actually know the answer to the questions n00bz ask.

    It's also why so many *nix "gurus" fall back on the standard angry "RTFM!" reply.

  101. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

    No, Linux users are choosing to use Linux.
    Many users aren't choosing to use Windows, many users aren't choosing to use Linux, they use either anyway.

    Don't sit there and whine that you are not getting what you want and expect everyone to bend over backwards for you.
    This is nothing about bending over backwards for someone. This is about being forced to pay for a service that some people cannot use and should be exempt from it.

    No, Linux users are choosing to use Linux.
    "CHOICE IS BAD!"

    Then, you should, in the spirit of open source, volunteer to do the work for them.
    Did you know that I use Linux because of it's technical superiority rather than any idealistic reasons?

    I also actually paid for various distributions I use. From Mandriva to SuSE Linux, so stop with your annoying stereotyping.

    Feel free though to suggest exactly what work for them and don't forget to give all the specifications for it.

    DRM is already supported on Linux thanks to realplayer, which runs on OS X, Windows and Linux.

    Tell me, do you believe that because a few people choose to drink and drive that the rest of the population should be forced to stay off the road?
    No. I also don't believe I should be forced to pay for a service that I cannot use because I choose to use Linux. Much like the people who choose not to drink and drive.

    Do you also believe that because a portion of the population chooses to smoke that smoking should be allowed everywhere including elementary schools, movie theaters, and hospitals?
    This point doesn't make sense to me. Smoking is banned in public places and within private companies in the UK because it infringes on other people's health. These regulations are in place to protect lives. Linux users getting charged for a service that they cannot use does not protect lives.

    No one should have to be forced to do something simply because you choose to be different.
    I don't drink, I don't smoke. I shouldn't be forced to consume alcohol because the majority happen to. I shouldn't be forced to breathe the air you made toxic because you and many others have a smoking addiction. I shouldn't be forced to pay for a service I cannot use.

    Remember, this is about paying licensing for a service provided by a private company, not a government tax.
    --
    Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  102. Of course they are not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...in bed with mr. Gates, he has left the building as we all know.
    The question is if they are in bed with mr. Ballmer.

  103. Re:BBC not in Bed With Bill?? by zcat_NZ · · Score: 1

    So there IS actually a deal with Microsoft. It's just not a 'secret' deal.

    --
    455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
  104. The BBC isn't made of money by jrothwell97 · · Score: 1

    While we all say that 'the BBC should do an open platform', remember that they need the time and money to invest in these things. And with the BBC's budget considerably lower than it should be, and some utter cretins in management sending most of the money to the stars of certain late-night chat shows (who normally don't even ask for it or want it), the fact that the content creators, being the greedy gits they are, will demand ludicrously high prices if DRM isn't applied, and the Daily Mail's 'scrap the license fee!' brigade out, there's no way the BBC could have spent the money on an open platform. For the most part, it's not its fault (the small part whose fault it is lies in the corridors of power).

    Nevertheless, as a Mac user (thanks to my old PC blowing up - and another one I brought in to aid it suffering the same fate) I will be incredibly happy to see the iPlayer use Flash. Mainly because it beats WMP any day, and due to the fact that Adobe has spent a bit of money making it UNIX-compatible, it will work on that ~5% of machines.

    --
    Those using pirated Tinysoft signatures(TM) are a real threat to society and should all be thrown in jail.
  105. BBC's Own Stats Show 7,500 Linux users minimum by vik · · Score: 1

    Their recent article on Leopard had a poll by the side, asking who was going to install it. There were in excess of 55,336 votes (I stopped looking at that point) and the poll showed over 14% had Linux as their preferred OS. That means AT LEAST 7,500 users.

    I have a screenshot of the page if anyone gives a damn.

    Vik :v)

  106. You're saying it wrong! by nickrout · · Score: 1

    It's not eye-player its eye-pee-layer. You know, the DRM layer that protects your Intellectual Property. It's only supposed to be playable for 30 days after download.

  107. if it's publically funded, it should be by alizard · · Score: 1

    platform agnostic, no ifs. ands, buts, or excuses.

    If the BBC CTO can't figure out how to do what millions of webmasters have figured out (I mean, if he'd just gone with Flash, that's everything including Macs and Linux boxes) he needs to be replaced by somebody competent. At least competent enough to figure out how to make a deal with YouTube.

    Of course, perhaps the technical arguments for XP-only were made by MS in GBP, Euros, or unmarked US $100 bills.

  108. How many users? by speardane · · Score: 1
    He claims 400-600.

    I live in the UK, use Linux & visit BBC everyday.

    With a UK population of approx 60m; an approx Linux market penetration of 1%; assuming 1 in 10 use the BBC regularly (which sounds low & ignores the ROW!) figures in the 60,000 range would seem plausible - he's claiming 1% of that. Some kind of "statistical" or data collection? error.

    We need to get some verifiable statistics - is there somewhere to securely host data collection of verifiable details? (won't need to be big if it's only 400)

    Also Firefox in the UK has reportedly 11% penetration - I am sure people who actively went to the effort of moving from MS - must be grateful to be forced back into the fold (with WMP)!

    --
    if "Faith" could be proved with facts - would it still be faith? So why does "Faith" try to present beliefs as fact? -
    1. Re:How many users? by rar42 · · Score: 1

      Why not visit http://www.bbc.co.uk/feedback/bbci_comment.shtml and tell them that you use Linux. It might even be worth asking them to pass your message to Ashley Highfield :-)

      --
      rgds,
      Richard Rothwell
      "All that is required for evil to triumph is that the good keep silent"
    2. Re:How many users? by speardane · · Score: 1
      I have signed the petition and written to them - I think they are trying hard to ignore their licence payers.

      Basically I find the numbers literally incredible (o.5% Mac & 4-600 Linux out of 17.5m users).

      I'd like to gather evidence first - before stating the BBC is accidentally or deliberately misleading us.

      --
      if "Faith" could be proved with facts - would it still be faith? So why does "Faith" try to present beliefs as fact? -
  109. 100 million pounds!!!! by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 1

    100 MILLION POUNDS!!!

    Sorry - seems I didn't make my point strongly enough. People keep saying the BBC couldn't afford to develop an open solution. They've spent 100 million pounds on this. That's 100,000,000 GBP.

    Does anyone seriously think that pouring a tenth of that funding into an non-proprietary solution wouldn't have delivered the goods? The Miro project would be a great starting point. The addition of one of the FOSS DRM initiatives would have covered them for those programmes where rights protection was deemed necessary.

    The BBC had a chance to develop a de-facto standard and license it around the world. Instead, they have climbed into bed with Microsoft and blown the housekeeping money on a pile of crap.

    It would be interesting to submit a Freedom of Information request to the BBC and find out how rigorous the procurement process was.

    --
    --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  110. 5 pounds per licence holder by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    After digging around, this is the best stat I can find - In March 2004, there were 24.5 million licences in force. So the iPlayer has cost every licence holder over 5 pounds - and that includes the huge majority who will never use iPlayer. Let's be optimistic and imagine a takeup of 100,000. That means the iPlayer has a per seat cost of 1,000 pounds. So, two questions: would you pay 1,000 pounds for a copy of this piece of software? And is it fair that non-users are subsidising you to the tune of 995 pounds?

    Yet another Freedom of Information request worth making: ask the BBC to break down the money spent on this.

    If we knew the facts, I truly believe arrests would be made

    --
    --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  111. This is exactly the problem by codingmasters · · Score: 1

    This is exactly why Linux is not as widely used at it should be. Because companies refuse to support it. It's a continuous, unbreaking loop. Companies don't write software for Linux, so no one uses it. Because no one uses it, people don't see any point in writing software for it. See my point?

  112. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

    Many users aren't choosing to use Windows, many users aren't choosing to use Linux, they use either anyway. ...
    "CHOICE IS BAD!"

    No, dumb-ass. You make choices you live with the consequences. One of the consequences of using a third tier, server-centric operating system is that one does not get a lot of support and that support tends to be crappy. Stop putting words in my mouth, fanboy.

    Did you know that I use Linux because of it's technical superiority rather than any idealistic reasons? I also actually paid for various distributions I use. From Mandriva to SuSE Linux, so stop with your annoying stereotyping. Feel free though to suggest exactly what work for them and don't forget to give all the specifications for it. DRM is already supported on Linux thanks to realplayer, which runs on OS X, Windows and Linux.

    I really don't give a damn why you use it or what distro's you have used. I have used everything from Slackware back in the mid 90s to CygWin and SuSE today (I use it on my home server and dual boot my two windows boxes, plus I have an NSLU-2 running Unslung as a mail server). It is not stereotyping to suggest that one give back to the community instead of whining about someone not supporting their precious O/S.

    No. I also don't believe I should be forced to pay for a service that I cannot use because I choose to use Linux. Much like the people who choose not to drink and drive.

    No, dumb-ass, most people do not drink and drive and most people use Windows. You choose to use Linux, much like some people choose to drink and drive. And speaking of being forces to pay for a service that one can not use, I can not use welfare or the schools because I have a good job and no children. Does that mean you believe I should not have to pay taxes to support those items?

    This point doesn't make sense to me. Smoking is banned in public places and within private companies in the UK because it infringes on other people's health. These regulations are in place to protect lives. Linux users getting charged for a service that they cannot use does not protect lives.

    Here, let me educate you. In both instances, a group of people, who make up a minority of the whole, engage in an activity that the majority does not. In both instances, the minority wish to impose upon others so that they may both engage in their activity and suffer no consequences to their choice. You and your ilk wish to force the expenditure of resources, resources that could be better used, to support your platform, even if it is not cost effective. Smokers wish to smoke anywhere and everywhere they want, even if it disturbs or harms others. In both instances, the minority group is being self-centered assholes.

    I don't drink, I don't smoke. I shouldn't be forced to consume alcohol because the majority happen to. I shouldn't be forced to breathe the air you made toxic because you and many others have a smoking addiction. I shouldn't be forced to pay for a service I cannot use.
    First off, I do not smoke and I rarely drink, so you can climb down off your high horse. Second, while you "shouldn't be forced to consume alcohol because the majority happen to", you also don't get to complain you didn't get a free beverage on "Free Beer" night, and that is exactly what you are doing.

    You, in your ignorance, are taking instances where the majority (society) imposed it's will on the minority(smokers, drunk drivers) and equating it to a minority(Linux users) trying to impose it's will. Choosing to use Linux does not make you special and it does not mean that anyone has to think of you before Windows users, or even think of you and your operating system at all.

    Get it through your thick skull: You are a self-created minority (a tiny minority at that) and you can stop being in the minority at any time. No one owes you anything because you choose to be in the minority. Quit bitching when people don't go out of there way to make things simple or even available to you.
    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  113. He is lying. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Where I work at least 10 people in my *department* use Linux regularly.

    This is one department of around 100 people in a company that does not support Linux desktop (i.e. these people surf from home).

    I simply do not believe those numbers.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  114. Complete bullshit. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The amount of people from ethnic minorities in the UK is around 8%.

    If you think any UK government institution could get away from servicing this people in the base of cost, then you would be deluded.

    They can try ignore Linux users because it will not make any headlines and they believe they can get away with it, not because the size of the minority we represent and the cost of serving us Linux users (if they can't serve me then they should give me my license money back).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  115. Re:Submitter is either confused or an out right li by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

    No, dumb-ass
    Name calling, that will really get your point across.

    You make choices you live with the consequences. One of the consequences of using a third tier, server-centric operating system is that one does not get a lot of support and that support tends to be crappy.
    It's obvious you didn't comprehend my post, but I forgive you.

    Stop putting words in my mouth, fanboy.
    You're the one whos generalizing :)

    I really don't give a damn why you use it or what distro's you have used. I have used everything from Slackware back in the mid 90s to CygWin and SuSE today (I use it on my home server and dual boot my two windows boxes, plus I have an NSLU-2 running Unslung as a mail server). It is not stereotyping to suggest that one give back to the community instead of whining about someone not supporting their precious O/S.
    You run random crap? So?

    I really don't care that much for support of Linux as much as being forced to pay for a service I cannot use.

    You fail to address that over and over. Instead you imply that my major point is that I want Linux support, no it isn't. There should be two options:
    • Support the people you're forcing to pay you.
    Or
    • Exempt people you do not care to support.
    Instead, you're still being forced to pay for a service you do not and cannot use. This service isn't even part of the government. I have a big problem with this.

    First off, I do not smoke and I rarely drink
    This wasn't a assumption on my part, this was just a theoretical fact created for argument sakes which you have failed to address.

    Second, while you "shouldn't be forced to consume alcohol because the majority happen to", you also don't get to complain you didn't get a free beverage on "Free Beer" night, and that is exactly what you are doing.
    Again, this isn't about something free, I am being forced to pay for a service I cannot use. Get it through your head.

    Choosing to use Linux does not make you special and it does not mean that anyone has to think of you before Windows users, or even think of you and your operating system at all.
    Using your own logic and examples.. Choosing to drink and drive is not special because there are majority that don't and therefore there shouldn't be any concern about it.
    --
    Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  116. Keep the bullshit coming, it is fun to refute it. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    An institution mandated and paid to service all its audience can't griggle away of its responsibilities towards *all* the people paying money for those services.

    There are widely available tools to make content available in all major computing platforms, Linux is a mainstream OS now, well understood and used by enough people in order to justify the effort. We are not talking about an arcane OS like OS2, Amiga or something of the sort. We are talking about Linux, which no matter how much you disparage about it, is perfectly supportable by any company willing to do so.

    If a private company can't support my choice of computer then they will not charge me for their services and we will part ways. That is not an option for a public company. It is akin to the department in charge of roads to stop VW Beetles from driving on the streets after charing them all the relevant taxes.

    You talk lots of rubbish about taking responsibility for our choices, you forget (or don't know) that the license fee that pays the BBC is *compulsory* and that people can go to jail for not paying. SO it is not entirely our choice to pay for a service which later on is not delivered for a mainstream computing platform, if it was solely a matter of choice I would never bother to go to the BBC iPlayer service, but I have paid and now I demand to be served as any other paying license fee payer.

    No service? Fine, my license fee should be reduced then. If we are forced to pay then we should not be forced to pedal MS products in top of that, last time I checked the BBC is not an agent or distributor of MS software...

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  117. And whose fault is that? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    What is stopping them to hire production companies as contractors for content whose copyright would belong to the BBC?

    Unless there is something very specific on the BBC charter it seems to me like the buddies in the BBC do not want to harm the business of their buddies in the producing companies.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:And whose fault is that? by IchBinEinPenguin · · Score: 1

      What is stopping them to hire production companies as contractors for content whose copyright would belong to the BBC?

      Lack of money?

  118. Ther may not be many Linux users.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... but the claim that there are only 600 UK Linux users visiting the BBC website is ludicrous. I almost feel like using the freedom of information act to find out.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  119. BBC's excuse by Siddly · · Score: 1

    I visited the site as I had read the story on slashdot and elsewhere, then I signed the petition. You would have thought that the BBC's long use of Linux in key areas would have been enough to warrant a Linux version. Furthermore, Linux was not mentioned in their announcement and if there was that intention, it would have been stated in the release.

  120. There is a little problem. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    That we have already paid for the service.

    As a project manager I would fire you for ignoring 5% (or 1%) of our paying costumers. That is a consideration to be done *before* not after a license fee is levied.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:There is a little problem. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      You'd be very weird then because in my 25 years in business there have been hundreds of occurrences where we put the needs of a larger customer ahead of a tiny customer or group of customers.

      You'd probably be fired after you failed to support a huge customer because you wanted to support 100% of customers.

      Your statement doesn't match the way it works in the real world when frequently there is no "right" answer. You have to pick between only bad options.

      ---

      So let's imagine the result of your claim however.

      Yes boss, I'm holding up rolling this out for 99% of our customers because I want to get 100% coverage.
      Well, yes, we do have to hire three new people for our QA department who have Linux experience and have the IT department set us up a bunch of new machines with the various major distributions of linux (Red Hat, Ubuntu, Mandrake (in europe), etc.) while we only need one environment for our windows base.

      Yes all the testing for the windows media player 10 has already been done by Microsoft and is certified to work. However, we will probably need to write our own DRM'd linux player so we need to hire a couple hotshots. We have to be very careful of licensing-- we can't just use the media player code out there because a lot of it has restrictions on being used for profit.

      I'm glad I have your 100% support for this plan boss. Because even if it takes us an extra year, we'll satisfy 100% of the customers, instead of 99% of them today.

      ---

      I don't know who your boss is likely to be but he's a darn site different than any boss I have ever had.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  121. Nonsense. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    The BBC spend 100 million pounds on this nonsense (mentioned elsewhere in this discussion, I have seen it mentioned elsewhere).

    You are jesting surely by suggesting that such amount of money would have not been enough to develop an open solution ....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  122. If Operating Systems Ran The Airlines... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    also from parents link:

    This sums up what I feel about Linux and the whingers that moan how hard it is to install/use.

    If Operating Systems Ran The Airlines...

    UNIX Airways

    Everyone brings one piece of the plane along when they come to the airport. They all go out on the runway and put the plane together piece by piece, arguing non-stop about what kind of plane they are supposed to be building.

    Air DOS

    Everybody pushes the airplane until it glides, then they jump on and let the plane coast until it hits the ground again. Then they push again, jump on again, and so on...

    Mac Airlines

    All the stewards, captains, baggage handlers, and ticket agents look and act exactly the same. Every time you ask questions about details, you are gently but firmly told that you don't need to know, don't want to know, and everything will be done for you without your ever having to know, so just shut up.

    Windows Air

    The terminal is pretty and colorful, with friendly stewards, easy baggage check and boarding, and a smooth take-off. After about 10 minutes in the air, the plane explodes with no warning whatsoever.

    Windows NT Air

    Just like Windows Air, but costs more, uses much bigger planes, and takes out all the other aircraft within a 40-mile radius when it explodes.

    Linux Air

    Disgruntled employees of all the other OS airlines decide to start their own airline. They build the planes, ticket counters, and pave the runways themselves. They charge a small fee to cover the cost of printing the ticket, but you can also download and print the ticket yourself.

    When you board the plane, you are given a seat, four bolts, a wrench and a copy of the seat-HOWTO.html. Once settled, the fully adjustable seat is very comfortable, the plane leaves and arrives on time without a single problem, the in-flight meal is wonderful. You try to tell customers of the other airlines about the great trip, but all they can say is, "You had to do what with the seat?"

    Lee, UK