"brucerothwell" wrote:
My thought is that perhaps the "content" I am trying offer people is valuable, even if they don't have a Roku box, but only a computer.
My thinking is that it would be a fair amount of work (however, quite far from impossible) to recreate the Roku interface, but to what end? A Roku is designed to be attached to a tv and interacted with via a remote, with the user sitting some distance from the screen. A user sitting at a computer who is browsing the web, will have a keyboard and mouse to interact with the environment, will be able to read smaller text, and so on.
That's not to say some of the Roku design concepts (like the hierarchical lists, springboards, and some of the navigation elements) can't apply to a web-enabled interface to your content. I just don't think it would make sense to do everything exactly the same as the box. I also don't understand destruk's comment about mass downloading, it's certainly possible to lock-down the content(if necessary) from that kind of attack.
If I was sitting on a large pile of content I wanted to distribute, I'd probably be trying to make it as accessible as possible, across as many devices as possible. That'd probably mean desktop, phone, and tablet web apps, iphone and android apps, roku and game system apps, and as many other devices as I (and/or my company) could reasonably support. <<-That last bit about support is probably the key :).
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