Author

Topic: Bitcoin supported Roku channel (Read 2506 times)

legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
October 25, 2014, 11:34:34 PM
#4

"In-wallet entertainment" I think has enormous potential.

I think it's an enbaressment, no matter it's potential.
newbie
Activity: 54
Merit: 0
October 22, 2014, 09:24:52 PM
#3
Hey,

I just stumbled across this post while brainstorming on how to create a Roku app that would meter content against a wallet balance. Why that idea popped into my head may interest you. Check out what these guys are up to.

http://bitcoin.new-aeon-design.com/blog/tittiecoin-adult-innovation/

"In-wallet entertainment" I think has enormous potential.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
August 03, 2013, 07:57:55 PM
#2
If any of you guys, who are reading this post without commenting, actually do pursue anything along these lines, please let me know.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
August 03, 2013, 05:35:08 PM
#1
I've recently moved, and have moved just beyond the current build-out range of the cable company.  I hate sat tv, sucks during a storm, which is one of the only times I watch tv.  Plus it's expensive.  I know that I need broadband Internet, for my homeschooled kids if nothing else.  So I manage to get broadband out there, to be installed this Friday.  Still, my wife complains that the smallest ones need distractions when the older kids are supposed to be studying.  We've been without tv since the move, and their all a bit ancy.  (personally, I don't really watch much tv anymore) So I do some research, and settle upon a Roku 3.  I do some more research, and discover that the devices support "private channels" that anyone can set up without prior approval from Roku, so long as they have a developer's account and a streaming server to use.  (Roku doesn't actually provide any content for the devices, all content is provided by others)  While many of these private channels are ad supported, or simply fly-by-night projects that die once the developer loses interest; my idea was that of a subscription model, paid for only in bitcoins.  If some talented coders here could put together a "Bitcoin Network" for the Roku, using legally accessible content (I read about one guy that created an unofficial Kahn Academy channel, since all of the Kahn Academy videos are copyleft), the developer could actually make a living maintaining the channel.  Or more than one developer in competition could actually make for some quality programming under the right conditions.  Alternatively, bitcoin supported ads such as Project Wonderful might be another model worth persuing.  Since I don't intend to do this myself, I grant this idea to the forum membership.  If you've got skills, and plenty of freetime, (unemployed coder, perhaps?) see if you can carve yourself out a real income doing this.  If nothing else, I'd like to know if it's possible to actually earn a living providing bitcoin accessible content.  That alone would be worth an article in Bitcoin Mag.
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