Tuesday, 26 August 2014

China is developing a homegrown operating system

China to Go Its Own OS Way, that could be ready as soon as October as part of an effort to wean itself from Western-made software, according to a Sunday report from the Xinhua government news agency.

Following hard on the heels of China's announcement last month that it had launched an investigation of Microsoft under the country's antimonopoly laws, the latest news suggests the new operating system first will appear on desktop devices and then be extended to smartphones and other mobile devices in three to five years.

The now-defunct Red Flag Linux software could be part of the new OS, according to Computerworld.

Western OS makers Microsoft, Google and Apple were specifically targeted in China's plans, noted Xinhua, whose report is based on a story in the People's Post and Telecommunications News, a publication run by China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

China officials earlier this year banned the use of Windows 8 on government computers.


'A Hard Sell'


"This is not the first time that the Chinese government has announced grand plans to replace the dominant 'Western' computing platforms," Bill Weinberg, Black Duck Software's senior director for open source strategy consulting, told.

"A decade ago, they invested heavily in Linux-based desktop and server offerings from Red Flag, even mandating their use in government ministries and agencies," Weinberg explained.

"The government also funded numerous startups and programs at existing Chinese software companies to provide support, applications, etc.," he noted.

"While this program was highlighted as an example of OSS adoption, its actual impact was very limited," added Weinberg. "At the time, the primary impetus was cost, and given that Windows XP at the time was for most intents and purposes free in China, a Linux-based platform remained a hard sell."

'They Don't Like Paying'


Part of China's motivation is that "they don't like paying," Rob Atkinson, president of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, told the E-Commerce Times. "They have a strange view that says paying licensees for software and/or IP is somehow unfair and a form of Western imperialism being imposed on them."

A second reason behind the nation's desire for technological independence is a military one, Atkinson added. "Those two factors are leading them down a path where they want to replace Western technology with their own."

Another effort within the nation targets the semiconductor industry and aims to replace Intel technologies, he pointed out.

The move is "pretty obviously an effort by the Chinese government to increase their ability to both surveil and censor," Berin Szoka, president of the TechFreedom think tank, told the E-Commerce Times.

'A Loss of Potential'


Given the prevalence of software piracy within China, it's not clear how much of a financial threat China's move is to the Western companies being targeted.

"The amount of piracy for Microsoft products in China is so astronomical -- even in central government agencies -- that I think for Microsoft, the loss is more a loss of potential," Atkinson opined. "This is assuming the plan actually works."

Of course, China is a rapidly growing economy, and typically, "when economies get more wealthy, they shift away from piracy. So in theory, in say 20 years, China should be Microsoft's largest market," he pointed out.

"I don't think it has a lot of direct financial impact on Microsoft, as it has been challenging for Microsoft to monetize the use of its products in China anyhow," said Al Gillen, program vice president for servers and system software with IDC.


"As for Google, there may be some impact from the Android app store, but that is the biggest potential concern," Gillen told the E-Commerce Times.

Then again, "if consumers in China choose to not follow the OS vendors, it could be a wasted effort," he added.

'Opportunities for New Vulnerabilities'


Besides the question of acceptance, other potential problems with China's plan could revolve around interoperability and security.

"They want to avoid the potential that an exploit could be put in place by 'malicious' governments like ours, but the irony is, when you reinvent the wheel, you create new opportunities for new vulnerabilities," Wes Miller, research vice president with Directions on Microsoft, told the E-Commerce Times. "They could wind up creating a bigger attack surface than if they had just bought something."

Friday, 25 April 2014

Amazon Sets TV on Fire

Amazon just sauntered into the living room, and it appears Roku, Apple TV and Chromecast are in for some tough competition. Cable- and satellite-TV providers perhaps should worry as well. Game console makers also may have cause for some anxiety. Amazon doesn't need to make a lot of money on sales of the hardware -- it's likely to see a healthy boost in the sale of content to stream over the device.

Amazon on Wednesday put paid to the buzz circulating around its plans for a set-top box, announcing Amazon Fire TV at a New York event.

The size of a CD box and just over half an inch thick, Fire TV takes on set-top boxes, the iPod, Apple TV and game consoles.

It plugs into users' HDTVs to provide instant access to Netflix, Prime Instant Video, Hulu Plus, WatchESPN, Showtime and videos from Amazon, among other offerings.
Users can play a variety of games, including Minecraft, The Walking Dead and Riptide GP2.

They also can play music from Pandora, iHeartRadio and TuneIn, and watch music videos from Vevo. Starting next month, users will be able to listen to their music collection on Fire TV via the Amazon Cloud Player.
  
A Device for All Reasons

Fire TV "will accelerate the convergence of TV with the digital world and force traditional service providers to accelerate their efforts at innovation," remarked Gartner analyst Andrew Frank.

It targets traditional pay-TV bundles "that are being disrupted by over-the-top delivery models that are changing the way people watch and think about TV," he said.

Gaming is where Fire TV will have the biggest impact, Lewis Ward, research director for gaming at IDC, told TechNewsWorld.

The device "will be a serious threat to the big three consoles in the living room -- the Xbox, the Sony PlayStation and Nintendo's Wii -- especially in North America and Europe," contended Ward.

In the long term, Fire TV will take on the global market, Ward predicted, pointing out that Amazon has a presence in 175 countries. "I would consider this a real threat to the hegemony of the OEMs."

Fire TV Specs

Fire TV has a quad-core processor with more than 3x the processing power and 4x the memory of Apple TV, Google's Chromecast or Roku 3. It also has a dedicated GPU.

It delivers 1080p HD video and has immersive Dolby Digital Plus surround sound.

Its Advanced Streaming and Prediction feature guesses which movies and TV episodes users will want to watch and buffers them for playback in advance.

Users can see associated information about content, such as cast and crew details, trivia and bloopers through Amazon's X-Ray feature.

The Fire TV remote uses Bluetooth and offers voice search.

The price for the Fire TV box is US$99. The average game costs $1.85; Amazon is working with game publishers such as Electronic Arts, Disney, Gameloft, Ubisoft and Sega.

Targeting Gamers

Amazon offers a game controller option with dual analog sticks and a complete assortment of controls that pairs with Fire TV using Bluetooth. It offers up to 55 hours of gaming on a pair of AA batteries.

It doubles as a remote for the Fire TV.

The price for the controller is $40, which includes a free copy of Sev Zero, a game created for Amazon devices, which launched Wednesday.

Purchasers also will get 1,000 Amazon coins, worth $10, for purchasing games.

Virtual currencies "are not uncommon in the gaming world," Scott Strawn, a program director at IDC, told TechNewsWorld. "Bringing that approach to consoles could be pretty compelling."

Raining on Fire

"The voice search feature is interesting, but we don't know how it works," Dan Rayburn, a principal analyst at Frost & Sullivan, told TechNewsWorld.

"Does the search work only for Amazon or across Hulu and other services?" Rayburn asked. "And what does it tell you when you search for a movie Amazon doesn't have?"

While Fire TV supports games, it "isn't even in the same ballpark" as game consoles, he maintained.

On the other hand, Amazon might make Fire TV a success, Rayburn said, because "it doesn't make any money on hardware -- it makes money on goods."