Maybe E* should buy TIVO and close it down. Its gotta be chaeper than paying 100 million to settle
Many still consider TiVo to not last very long. Some see this lawsuit as nothing more than a way to either license their software/technology to Dish for a nice $$$ payout or have Dish buy them up outright.Before this lawsuit hit the forefront recently, I read that analysts expected Tivo to move to selling/licensing their software and getting out of the h/w business. Might still happen- if they survive.
The VOOM HD DVR went to Star Choice, and the whole home networking technology went to FiOS TV (Motorola).Gee- I wonder what ever happened to that whole house DVR Voom was about to release?
And anybody know if Voom paid the penalty for cancellation of those 5 satellites they had on order? Or did somebody pick them up?
Yeah, I know, getting off topic- start a new thread.
Tivo has gotten money from D*. There are groups that "invest" in lawsuits that may fund them- look at the Blackberry and SCO Unix suits.
Tivo's business plan may have moved from monthly fees to lawsuits, but in the long run their only asset is their software. Others can (& I submit, do) produce better software to perform similar functions. Maybe someone could take the Tivo software and make it faster, less annoying and appealing to other DVR makers. But why license good software when most of your (cableco) customers are happy with minimally functional DVRs? Will that last?
In the bigger picture, the best fix is for the Patents Office to stop issuing patents on things that are simply too basic. Not every good idea should be considered patentable.
No, you're not alone. Many of us intensely dislike the Tivo s/w.
Maybe E* should buy Tivo and fire all of them, especially the lawyers.