[mythtv-users] Boxee/Hulu?

jarpublic at gmail.com jarpublic at gmail.com
Mon Mar 2 18:48:30 UTC 2009


On Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 1:39 PM, Brian Wood <beww at beww.org> wrote:
> On Monday 02 March 2009 11:15:03 Eric Sharkey wrote:
>> On Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 11:35 AM,  <jarpublic at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >> Exactly what constitutes a web browser in the eyes of Hulu is not clear.
>> >
>> > I think it is fairly clear. It is a program that renders the html/php
>> > (or whatever it is that they serve up) unaltered.
>>
>> There's no such thing.
>>
>> Web browsers always reformat the display based on any number of
>> conditions.  HTML is not a publication format designed to give an
>> exact layout, regardless of how many web developers might try to pound
>> it into that mode.
>
> Indeed. I do a little work for a web site. I have a terrible time explaining
> that a browser is not like a printing press, and I can't guarantee how every
> browser/computer/screen setup will display things.
>
> The idea is to present the information in a readable form for the user,
> whether he is using a 24" monitor and firefox or a text-based browser on a
> phone. It is the information that counts, not the way it is presented.
>
> The usual response I get is "well the XXX site does it", causing me to curse
> the web developers who succumb to pressures to try and force the web to be
> what it is not and was never intended to be.
>
> If my HTML code has to take into account what browser is being used to view
> it, something is terribly wrong.
>
> So the restarictions HuLu places on their service violate the entire concept
> of the web, but I'm sure the content providers will never understand that,
> they are just too used to mediums that allow for total control of the
> presentation.

This is still clearly different than what Boxee did. Making the
necessary rendering decisions that modern browsers make for different
platforms and screens sizes is not the same as taking the videos from
Hulu, creating a brand new user interface, and dropping the videos
into it. Again I don't have an opinion about the legality, I just
found it odd that this long argument had digressed into debating out
about the legality of things that hadn't and won't happen (ie Hulu
banning anybody from hooking a computer up to a TV). When in reality
what happened isn't as clear legally and really would need to be
decided by a court if it came to that.


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