"RokuJoel" wrote:
Not really allowed by the Rok developer or consumer agreements. Our sister company, BrightSign specializes in this sort of hardware and the programming language is Brightscript so any knowledge you have from Roku Development should be portable to the BrightSign Platform.
-Joel
Saying "not really" implies not being permitted is official but exceptions can be made. Is this correct?
It seems to me sayng no is hypocritical as Roku supports all kinds of commerical businesses developing channels. Doesn't the federal government and its laws of interstate commerce call this restraint of trade when a company discriminates? And it is also very disturbing to know that Roku supports racism and pornography with their (wink, wink, nod, nod we look the other way) so don't even try to lie about that because Roku is supporting pornography and racist trash by allowing "private" channels on the same device at the same time I and other honest and decent small business persons are being told no we cannot use Roku for honest and decent business?
I have no love for BrightScript itself as I am a C# and Java developer and we will not consider doing business with BrightSign. I want Roku because it has the relationships with other commercial services my customers would want. The same commercial services Roku is apparently using to discriminate. Furthermore, nothing personal but BrightSign is over-priced junk compared to what I can do with Android and other devices we have available to us. Again, nothing personal but strictly business facts which is why BrightSign does not do well in digital signage and has been in and out of bankruptcy protection.
So again, is this official from Roku that my business will not allowed to build public channels and run them on Roku devices on the premises of bars and restaurants or are there exceptions that do not discriminate and support business owners that do not sell racist pornography and other trash Roku is allowing on their devices?
"RokuJoel" wrote:
Not really allowed by the Rok developer or consumer agreements. Our sister company, BrightSign specializes in this sort of hardware and the programming language is Brightscript so any knowledge you have from Roku Development should be portable to the BrightSign Platform.
-Joel
Saying "not really" implies not being permitted is official but exceptions can be made. Is this correct?
"wzwor" wrote:
Is brightscript unique to Roku?
"wzwor" wrote:
I didn't ask the question about the bar (though I have a pool table in my home). I just happened to be reading about Anthony Wood, Replay, and Roku. I saw your post about the two companies using brightscript and figured you might know the genesis of the language. Some say it resembles BASIC and people use the VB IDE to code in brightscript. I was guessing it was something Wood brought from Replay, but cannot document that.