I have been wondering, "what's wrong with this guy?" I finally figured it out. He's only 15. Back before you were born there was this thing called the Nintendo Entertainment System. It is considered the most important console in videogame history. It crashed all the time. There is a well know fix for this problem called the "Nintendo Blo&job." I know that you might not understand that word, but your parents will tell you what it means when your older. For the record, your problems with game crashes are the developers part. Go to Bioware's forums and read about KOTOR's crash problems. BTW, why did you buy the XBOX if you hate MS so much. Why didn't you just stick with the PS2 and play Tony Hawk with your friends?red ufo said:Well right now we can't even get a 2 hour movie to play in HD without pixels and dropouts and they think they can get 1080p smoothly?
Sh*t!
I don't care if M$ can do 20,000p I'd rather have anything but these people muscling into my living room. I'm never had a console crash until M$ made one, and I'll bet my first major crash on HD will be the M$ codec down the road.
After this gets in place just watch the anti-competitor contract garbarge take place. M$ can dominate the HD codec market in 5 years and every STB will crash for no reason left and right.
mike123abc said:...
Also, you do not have to have your software/hardware written/designed by Microsoft. You can license the standard and write/design your own solution, you just have to pay the licensing fees on all the copies/devices you sell. Note that these fees are *MUCH* less than even MPEG-2. Also note that the license go through 2012, and auto renews to 2017 without a price increase.
Essentially it looks like Microsoft could really care less about trying to make $$ off of this. Really if you have 40 billion sitting in the bank, trying to get an extra million or two from licensing fees does not make as much sense as trying to get your software adpoted as a standard.
soledade said:I always thought the MS monopoly will end once their embedded OS is running our home appliances. Specifically refridgerators. The world will finally decide MS crap is not acceptable when they reach for a beer and find the fridge is "blue screened".
txdude said:As someone who works in the IT field with windows, *nix and Mac systems I can tell you that 2000 & XP don't blue-screen any more often than linux or Mac systems go into kernel panic. Most blue-screens on windows PCs are related to hardware or device driver problems. A properly configured & maintained system should not ever have this problem... If you are still using older versions of windows or basing your opinions on them, then your information is out of date.
Embedded XP and CE are very different than a PC OS. A PCs OS has to support all kinds of hardware & software and has to be able to tolerate user stupidity as well. And unlike a PC a embedded system doesn't use a hard drive for it OS, the OS is stored in Memory that boots much faster and is not continuously being written to like a hard drive. An embedded system can be very refined, very efficient and since there are no modifications made by the end user, they are much more stable than PCs (think XBOX, PS2). That is why many banks ATMs and many gas pumps are running embedded windows CE or XP or some other OS's like linux/unix, with very little problems. An STB is the same... A vendor can license the tech from MS and decide exactly what the system does, including developing the device drivers necessary. The only components of the OS that are included are the ones that the hardware vendor decides on. If the hardware vendor does a good job it doesn't matter what OS it's running on, The device will function as it was intended.
BTW... I haven't specifically checked into this, but I'm willing to bet these Moto STBs that Voom uses, that everyone complains about how they freeze up are running a version of linux. Does that mean linux is bad? No... it just means that Motorola needs to get their act together.
As someone else noted, there's no price increase coming for more than another decade. By that time, there will be better codecs available.M$ don't do something for nothing. Ever see the price of there software. Sure its cheap now to obtain dominance. They the squeeze comes into play.
Could you tell us more about your WMV9 evaluation process. What kind of displays/projectors are you using? Did you have a chance to compare WMV9 back-to-back with MPEG4 or with MPEG2? Any other details would be greatly appreciated.
This is very, VERY! good to hear!oddwunn said:I have done quite a bit of MPEG2, MPEG4, and WMV9 encoding on my own, as a hobbyist, and as far as I am concerned, as much as MPEG4 is an improvement over MPEG2, so is WMV9 over MPEG4 ... WMV9 is considerably more efficient than MPEG4 (I don't know the actual numbers), and more importantly, is much cleaner and artifact free...
You guys are doing a good job. Keep it up.