Blockbuster's Movie Download Box Runs Linux
DeviceGuru writes "In a better-late-than-never move, Blockbuster has introduced a video-on-demand (VOD) service accompanied by a 'free' set-top box (STB). Like TiVo, Roku's Netflix box, and many other modern Internet-enabled A/V gadgets, Blockbuster's new VOD STB runs Linux. But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services — one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget 'to rule them all,' if you will."
Linux is written by fags for fags. It's true.
Using Boxee on my AppleTV is like living in the future. Seamlessly plays my torrented files and streams hulu (with netflix Coming Real Soon).
It's fantastic.
Now that this stuff is practical, our friendly ISPs are throttling/capping our bandwidth.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Since we know that question is coming...
The box is made by 2Wire and they provide source here:
http://www.2wire.com/index.php?p=437
Wow, I could have sworn somebody just mentioned the Xbox. Runs linux, connects to the internet, can run multiple services.
My little beast will have a place next to my TV set for many years.
It's been a long time.
If the format that the content is delivered in was standardized it would make hardware production costs dirt cheap since the circuitry could be tailored to the standard. There are plenty of OSS streaming Internet video standards and the extra circuitry could cheaply added to the "standard" DVD player. Then content providers could focus on their business model, pricing, product line and the like, and basically leave the tech to someone else.
There is Neuros, whose products fit the description pined for in TFS fairly well. The basic problem, though, is that the various internet video on demand pushers all want DRM which means that, at best, any box they produce will be "open box + big hostile blob" and will more likely be "closed box" or "closed box with API, if we feel generous". Because these guys seem to be shooting for the give them the razor, bleed them for the blades model, I wouldn't expect them to support multiple competing services, and the DRM wrapper will be enough to foil an legal multiservice boxes(and, in practice, make any illicit ones a pain in the ass to keep working).
For the immediately forseeable future, if you want an open, multiple service setup, you want a PC(in the broad sense, including mythTV, WMC, and aTV with Boxee).
But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services -- one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget 'to rule them all,' if you will."
When investors are willing to embrace a model other than "get you on the refills", because the development of these devices (and their after-sale support/warranty) is supported by the revenue generated from the rentals.
My brain is a little fried, but examples that pop to mind immediately: Gillette was the pioneer here for product concept that has jumped product category after product category. Cartridge video games. Printers (first ribbon-based, then inkjet, then laser). iTunes. Xbox Live (a great example: Rock Band.)
Please help metamoderate.
I doubt it. How many of them would benefit by making it easier for their competition?
WTF has happened to Slashdot?!
Why am I only seeing headlines? I thought it was a browser issue til I fired up Konqueror and got the same result.
Remember when Slashdot announced potential changes to the users before they implemented them? UGH. Fix Slashdot please!
I mean... at least Digg acts like they care...
There are alot of products out there that pretty good as an AV Gateway.
There is the Hauppauge MVP that is easy to use and setup, and yes you can put linux on it (if it isnt already).
http://www.hauppauge.com/site/products/data_mediamvp.html
It can stream almost anything but HD with an appropriate server.
A suggestion for the Ultimate at home Multimedia machine would be SageTV with its HD extenders that can play HD and almost everything I have found online. http://www.sagetv.com/hd_extender.html
(( Yes is it can play Netflix too !! ))
-BTK
To get an open-platform STB to talk to services such as Netflix, you'd need to meet their DRM requirements. Currently this seems to require Windows/Silverlight, which really limits what can be done.
Is there a way around this? I hope so.
But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services â" one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget 'to rule them all,' if you will.
http://www.neurostechnology.com/neuros-link
Also runs Linux and a Web browser with Flash so it can access all the TV sites like Hulu.
Is this article a clever plant?
For something that works on Ubuntu and Apple TV, you might want to look at Boxee. It is not open source though. Invites from the main site take a while but you can get one faster from Fred Wilson's blog .
GPL ?
My husband just told me to be more Natalie Portman-y....
GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
Isn't Popcorn Hour supposed to be the bee's knees with this stuff? They haven't released a Netflix component yet, but are supposed to be working on it. In the meantime, it seems like it's the best shot at an all-in-one device for the consumer. Plus it beats the pants off of most media players. How many of them can handle x264?
It's gonna be my Christmas present to myself. I am tired of screwing about with Windows Media Center and nix variations of that. A FreeNAS box and this and I will be set. With the way Comcast and AT&T have been acting recently, I don't want to depend on any video on demand type of system anyway. My last Netflix Instant Queue through 360 readjusted itself 3 times in the last 15 minutes. By the time it was done, it was unwatchable, hell the friggin credits were blurry.
You're right, they make money on the refills, but in the case the refills are subscriptions to the service and the razor they give away is the box itself.
If they aren't making any money on the STB sale, wouldn't it make sense for them to allow other hardware makers to do it for them?
Maybe not. I'm no MBA, but it makes sense it my head. I think the DRM is the real reason everyone needs to make their own.
We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
Depends on whether they modify the source code and/or release the modifications!
A big French service provider just got sued for providing a box containing GPL'd programs. When the accustions were first made 2 years ago, the service provider in question maintains that the programs are not modified and/or are permitted under GPLv2 (but not GPLv3), and that the accusations were fed by competitors.
http://www.freenews.fr/nat/6369-societe-free-assigne-pour-violation-presumee-de-la-licence-gnu-gpl.html
What for? Bittorrent already fills that need quite well...
But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services -- one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget 'to rule them all,' if you will." It's called a laptop logged into the www.piratebay.org ....of course the pirates are the only ones with media that doesn't suck and isn't crippled. Quite up to date too, with a large back catalogue.
David
see above..
Windows Media Video DRM is standardized (or in theory it was until MS decided to go it alone with the Zune and Zune store).
OMA DRM created by the Open Mobile Aliance is standardized, any mobile phone maker or content provider can sign up to it.
Blu-Ray DRM is standardized, as is CSS on DVDs.
The trick is convincing the content providers (netflix, blockbuster etc) to start using a standardized DRM solution (why would they want to allow you to play the videos back on a device that could also potentially play back content from their competitors)
so, you're paying 100 bucks for the little linux box with hd and you get 25 movie downloads for free :)
i guess i could do that
According to Reuters
it's $99 and movies are $1.99 after the first 25. Also they have a miserable 2000 movies but they are the latest from Hollywood, they say.
I meant to add that there was no mention of what those first 25 movies would cost.
It is now official. Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dying
But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform...
News flash, it will never exist. Ever.
Maybe he hasn't heard the media conglomerates controlling distribution want to extract every possible dollar at every possible moment of entertainment.
Oh, and there are probably a dozen boxes already.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
It is in the article, the box is $99 or:
so for a limited time, it is $99 for 25 movies+free box or, equivalently, a $99 box with 25 free movies.
Since that works out to $4/each for the first 25 when they are normally $1.99, it is hardly a special. More like paying double for the first 25 to defray the cost of the box.
are about 7000/5 4ny doubt: FreeBSD
... does it run Linux?
Ok, so I know it isn't cool to on slashdot to pimp your own products, but you might try getting a ZvBox (http://zeevee.com) if you want to get any content to your TV. This works because it snarfs the your video output and transmits HD quality video to your HDTV. And yes, it requires a PC. And yes, it is expensive (we are working on lowering the price). But, since a PC can play any content it truly is a universal solution.
design and build the device that can "open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services â" one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget"
and if reasonably priced your order books will be full...
there are thousands of windows applications that don't work on Linux - thankfully
All commercial services are inferior to what people want and have on-line.
Is there a simple way to pay reasonable price for a movie collection in order to be legal?
I like freedom of Linux world, but would like to support my favorite authors too.
There are several options for the combo box the post asks about.. Maybe not the ultimate box that will play everything, but there are several that will do multiple sources. What I use is a Mac Mini (Core Duo), to play several types of content:
- DVD's (the new full screen DVD and Front Row in Leopard are nice DVD viewing options).
- Movies, TV, and Music via iTunes.
- Broadcast HDTV via MythTV (running backend and frontend on my Mini running OSX)
- Netflix streaming movies via their Silverlight plugin
- Various video file formats via Front Row.
- There are various other video streaming services available, I don't use any of them at this point.
- Occasional special webcasts - like the NCAA basketball tournament early round games.
It's hard to beat the flexibility of an HTPC. I think the Mac Front Row interface + all the other options is hard to beat. Especially considering the small size of the device, quiet operation, built-in remote control functionality, etc..
Areas for improvement:
- Blue Ray DVD drive would be nice.
- Better Netflix streaming. Silverlight is okay, but could be better.
- Blockbuster, or other video streaming support.
1.Download the source.
2.Modify it. (Remember to give back to the community.)
3.Market it.
4.Profit!
Finally, a complete FOSS business plan.
Sig this!
I stand corrected. I skimmed the Reuters article earlier today on Techdirt and I really should have reread it prior to posting.
That's a nice list. I have kind of sortof heard of some of them. Every once in a while I think about checking one of them out, but I really just don't care that much.
I have a blue blockbuster card in my car. Maybe I'd get their box if it was cheap enough and guaranteed to work.
Disclaimer: I do use my PC to record TV, using some cheap Hauppauge card. I use TitanTV for the schedule and watch with VLC, where I can skip commercials with a couple of ctrl-arrows. Between that and other avi files of, um, murky provenance, I have little time for buying more hardware. But my point still stands; Don't underestimate the marketing factor of a known brand. For crying out loud, even I say I "Tivo" something, just because everyone knows what that is. I don't say, Yeah, I Hauppagued that on my PC...
This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
Seems a lot of people have over looked the PopCornHour for their media needs. Plays pretty much every media file you can throw at it and also has the ability to go online and steam SOME content and since, yes, it does run Linux, it shouldn't be too difficult to add more sources.
Islamic assholes. Afraid of love. Afraid of freedom. Afraid of people standing on their own two feet instead of bowing down to other men like sickly gay sycophants. Afraid of women. Afraid of pleasure. Can't persuade people with their ideas so they use violence instead.
Islam defined: The opposite of Allah.
Islam is the great Satan. So says Mumbai today.
Jerks.
"But darn it; when will someone finally offer a reasonably-priced, open-platform STB that serves as an A/V gateway to multiple Internet-based services â" one consumer-friendly, environmentally-designed, low-power gadget 'to rule them all,' if you will."
Well if you all can get the media version of Torvalds to get the ball rolling. In ten years there should be plenty of content for your revolution. In the mean time content providers will try to make money and someone else will say "I will not let you".
Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
"Environmentally designed"? PLEASE! Can't we just get something that works before we start whining about how it is killing the planet? Environmentally designed ... lol!
I would say "never".
Any attempt that would satisfy the DRM-requirements for a service to sign off on working with it would not be considered "open" enough by the Free Software fanatics.
Why don't you ask for a CableCard system for MythTV while you're at it? LOL.
Ops...
Any life is made up of a single moment, the moment in which a man finds out, once and for all, who he is.
When browsing through the slashdot main page, I originally misread th earticle title as "Blockbuster's Movie Download Box Ruins Linux"... feel free to interpret that any way you like.
This is the most recent article on Slashdot's front page, while Slashdot's RSS shows 6 more recent stories.
Why is Slashdot broken all of a sudden?
Sure it's for geeks,but have a look at the ARM BeagleBoard dev kit. If you've got a server/NAS to pull content from (or an ext Hard drive), it seems to be a really interesting platform for a DIY STB for $150. (very power efficient, fanless, runs linux, geek friendly, can be put in a shoe box).
Of course, there's no media center software that I know of, price might not be that different from an appleTV once you add a remote control and some network connectivity, but the geek appeal is great.
I'm currently very near to buying one for christmas.
Other option ? an old PC, if possible SFF case+low fan, remote controller, with tv out. Truly open, supports everything.
bah it's not "free" at all because it has a prepaid 25 movie rental requirement. Netflix service has a subscription that grants us physical dvd's for an unlimited time and as many movie downloads as we want at no extra cost. That is not surprising though as Blockbuster has a history of fine print and outright hostility to its customers.
it was tariffed into history then too? those wind farms are just like big fans as well, right? keep us cool as we warm. linux is part of how we may escape the softwar hostage/ransom scenario.
And that's why it won't work. I use my PS3 for renting movies now and the XBox360 does the same thing. That's why Microsoft got into the video game console business and why Sony has been pushing the PS3 more as an HD TV accessory than a video game console. It's kind of like computers - most people get Windows machines because even if they don't play games, the kids do, and you might as well kill two birds with one stone. The same will apply to the PS3/360 - when compared to Apple TV or Blockbuster's device, whether people play games or not, they might as well get the PS3 and get Blu-ray taken care of. I don't mean to talk up the consoles too much (the main reason I hope the PS3 succeeds is so Microsoft won't rule digital content), but compared to the PS3 and 360, these other boxes are just niche markets. It's just like Apple computers, without the high profit margins. Apple can deal with niche but it seems to be hurting Blockbuster - just look how many times they've changed their business model in the last eight years. Gamestop hasn't changed their business model since it came together in the 80s and they've experienced nothing but explosive growth for twenty years. More and more space in Blockbuster gets devoted to video games - rentals and sales - and I expect this is where they will go. They'll compete with Gamestop until Sony and Microsoft pull the rug out from under them both by offering all games as downloads. If they ever get the bandwidth and cheap enough storage, that is.
Just an AC's 2 cents.
Proof is in the pudding:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/willplatnick/334265255/
They are imposing a 60GB cap on all their users AND will be forcing a 60GB cap on any users of their network including those through 3rd party ISPs that pay Bell to pass traffic over their network. 60GB in 2008 is pathetic and luckily I'm still on a grandfathered unlimited data plan.