On TV.com: Dollhouse CANCELED, What Went Wrong?
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By David Becker
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 15, 2004 8:48:00 PM

A former Microsoft executive who helped shape the company's initial response to Linux has joined a company selling open-source media software.

CAC Media, a New York-based company that sells software and services for set-top boxes and other media devices, told CNET News.com that it has hired Nat Brown as its chief technical officer.

Brown worked with Microsoft from 1990 to 1999, during which time he helped create the COM+ communications protocol, contributed to development of the DirectX graphics library and helped guide initial plans for the Xbox game console.

He was also one of the main contributors to the infamous "Halloween memo," in which Microsoft first documented concerns about open-source software as a competitive threat.

Brown said the memo, chiefly written by engineer Vinod Valloppillil, partly reflected his admiration of open-source methods.

"There were a lot of us that talked about open-source casually in e-mail, and the memo synthesized a lot of those discussions," he said. "My thought was that there's this beautiful thing with open-source where, as a developer, there's a very low barrier to entry. The flexibility that gives you is really incredible."

Brown said that when he decided to return to work after a few years to concentrate on his family, it was natural for him to look at open-source companies.

"I knew I wanted to get back into something and do it with a smaller company," he said. "I'd been talking with Microsoft about going back to work on the Windows infrastructure. But the company is just very, very big, and the opportunity to have (an) impact and really execute on your ideas is very limited."


Photo: Video Without Boundaries
The MediaReady 4000 will be the first device
to run on CAC Media software.

CAC packages existing and customized open-source applications, device drivers and other components to run digital media centers. The first device to run on the company's software, the MediaReady 4000 receiver from Video Without Boundaries, is set to ship early next year and combines video recording, music playback and other living-room functions.

Brown sees devices powered by CAC software as appealing to folks who want a device that does more than a TiVo-style video recorder but without the complexity and expense of a PC running Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center operating system.

"I'm a big TiVo fan, and I don't say lightly that we'll have an equal user experience and more functionality," Brown said. "I know what the TiVo is capable of doing, and I know that company is not doing it."

Besides the software to run such gadgets, CAC also plans to run a content distribution system that will ship downloadable movies and other video to its set-top boxes, focusing on self-produced films and similar content.

"I see film students selling their films across our network--things like that," Brown said. "There just aren't many places you can go to get independent content. With the distribution services out there now, it's a DRM (digital rights management) nightmare of the same (lousy) content you can get on cable."

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 21 Talkback(s)
This is great news.
>>>Wearable devices, implant technology, connected everything, dirt cheap hardware with fantastic power, and a host of anticipated technologies in the not so distant future tells us that we won't just... (Read the rest)
Posted by: AmusedAtItAll Posted on: 11/16/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
This should be fun  Yagotta B. Kidding | 11/15/04
Another One Crosses Over From The Dark Side  itanalyst | 11/15/04
No, he went to the green side.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/15/04
Yes, there are a lot of good people working at Microsoft!!  DonnieBoy | 11/15/04
Not the first to leave..........  GregSalts | 11/16/04
Yup, the bad ones quit and take up Linux.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/16/04
So what will that do to the quality of the project  FilledOut | 11/16/04
It was a joke, nothing more.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/16/04
An excelent move I would think.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/15/04
Not such a baby step  IT_User | 11/15/04
There are so many things...  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/15/04
I really hope you are wrong...  Patrick Jones | 11/16/04
in japan digital cameras are losing sales  hipparchus2000 | 11/16/04
This is great news.  AmusedAtItAll | 11/16/04
you are right  JasonL31 | 11/15/04
Don't agree here  AmusedAtItAll | 11/16/04
Mark this day in history  Squawkbox | 11/15/04
That was my prediction BTW  Squawkbox | 11/15/04
I like aluminum..  Patrick Jones | 11/16/04
ex-Microsofties got together and worked on the WINE project.  Squawkbox | 11/16/04
and as it's the most common chemical in the earth's crust  hipparchus2000 | 11/16/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Enterprise Applications

  • Check out some of the easiest and most powerful ways to boost productivity while saving money on your application infrastructure. See ZDNet's comprehensive Enterprise Application resource center, now!
  • New Online Dashboard
  • Read about top issues IT decision-makers face every day, plus get cost effective solutions to real life IT problems. Oracle Topline