The licensing / certification business model that you are operating under is a sound one. I heard somewhere that 50% (or some astronomical number) of sonys income is from Playstation game licensing. However, it requires a critical mass installed base to work. How do you plan to get that installed base when Sony and Nintendo own the market?
Pulling lots of geek features into a box is cool, but that doesn't really speak to the average pre-teen gamer. What about the box is going to make kids ask for one for x-mas?
Do you have a Killer Game or app unique to your box that's going make it a must-have (for non-geeks)?
I've never had one, but then again, I don't work at a high-profile site that's really a target.
However, I did get hit by that bug in BIND. So hackers are out there...
This strikes me as a perfect *legal* application for gnutella. I'm grabbing it now and am gonna put it up.
Yes! Slackware!
The distro that doesn't get in your way doesn't try to do things for you. It just does what you tell it.
Huh, I thought they were gonna wait for a stable 2.4 kernel...
The licensing / certification business model that you are operating under is a sound one. I heard somewhere that 50% (or some astronomical number) of sonys income is from Playstation game licensing. However, it requires a critical mass installed base to work. How do you plan to get that installed base when Sony and Nintendo own the market?
Pulling lots of geek features into a box is cool, but that doesn't really speak to the average pre-teen gamer. What about the box is going to make kids ask for one for x-mas?
Do you have a Killer Game or app unique to your box that's going make it a must-have (for non-geeks)?
I've never had one, but then again, I don't work at a high-profile site that's really a target. However, I did get hit by that bug in BIND. So hackers are out there...