Sunday, July 15th 2007
BBC Listens to Open Source community; Makes software compatible with Linux
The BBC is releasing a digital content player, called "iPlayer". However, the Open Source community got very upset when they found out iPlayer was only compatible with Windows XP. And so, after asking the BBC to remedy this (and threatening to go to the European Commission), the BBC has made the iPlayer compatible with multiple operating systems. All the owner of the operating system has to do is pay the BBC for a license, and the player will be made compatible with the operating system.
Source:
The Inquirer
15 Comments on BBC Listens to Open Source community; Makes software compatible with Linux
Edit: Ohhh they mean the user.
Edit 2: Or do they ...
I'm looking forward to using iPlayer, should be cool to be able to watch all my TV later for free - unlike 4OD.
And yea the BBC are fuggin' hoes.. making us pay TV licenses, screw them.
They take your TV license details every time you buy a piece of TV equipment e.g. Freeview, Satellite, a new TV, and stuff... and they check the address and name you give them against a database of people who hold TV licenses, and if you're not on there they'll send you a letter to get one or they'll pwn you up the rear.
What they actually do is send rude letters to every address that doesn't have a TV license claiming that they know they have a TV and will take action if they don't pay. My brother gets them all the time even though he has no TV. The only way they can know you're watching TV is to send someone into your house, and they'd need to get the police to do that with a warrant if it's without your permission, so unless they have really strong suspicions they'd never bother.
But I would find it funny to see someone from the BBC come to my door trying to force me into paying them tv licencing, when I'm a student living in my own house. I'm not a guy that likes being threatened into paying for something I don't want/need. Being tall also helps.
they can detect that youre watching tv, they can detect that youre aerial is active
i myself dont have a tv licence, the aerial on my home is hanging off the chimney and dosent get a signal, my landlord wont pay for it to be replaced, and im certainly not going to pay for it to be done, if theres something i really want to watch i get it on my parents sky+ and move it to my ext usb drive (hacked sky+ boxes ftw!)