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Solve : Netflix launch on Android?

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Netflix Press Release May 12.
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...free app available for download from Android Market. The Market download will initially be available only on select phones that currently have the requisite playback support. We expect to quickly add to the number ...
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Could this mean a shift away from Microsoft Silverlight? Quote from: Geek-9pm on May 16, 2011, 11:46:18 AM
Could this mean a shift away from Microsoft Silverlight?

What does silverlight even have to do with any of this?Unless I was desperate (like stuck in an airport for hours because of a canceled flight), I can't imagine watching a hour and a half movie on a phone.  Tablet maybe, but phone no way. Quote from: BC_Programmer on May 16, 2011, 01:23:08 PM
What does silverlight even have to do with any of this?
Glad you asked. Here is a article two years old
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Netflix Defends Silverlight Streaming
By Lincoln Spector, thestandard.com    Mar 5, 2009 6:28 am
Netflix is defending the Silverlight-based PLAYER it uses to stream movies and other video content to PCs, saying that it's "more stable" than other streaming technologies.
Some CUSTOMERS have expressed frustration with Silverlight streaming ...
PC WORLD articleOh, so you mean that it could mean that netflix will be SHIFTING from SilverLight. Quote from: BC_Programmer on May 16, 2011, 06:35:26 PM
Oh, so you mean that it could mean that netflix will be shifting from SilverLight.
Sorry if that was not clear. Linux users complain that they can not use SilverLight because it is tied to Windows. So Ubuntu users have to make a VM Box and put XP in it just to watch Netflix while inside Ubuntu. Some  Linux users refuse to reboot and work inside of Windows.
Netflix is going after the mobile market. The image quality on mobile device is lower and the bandwidth is often higher. So a high performance native code thing like SilverLight is not needed. Apparently.
The Android system works on phones and tablets. So far the Netflix does not yet do tablets, but does some things like Xbox and Wii.  Now if Netflix were to build a portable player that works as well as SilverLight, they just might drop Silverlight so that they wold have one player that would adapt to any platform. But that is the question. Would they want to do that?  Am I barking at the wrong tree? Quote from: Geek-9pm on May 16, 2011, 07:41:36 PM
Sorry if that was not clear. Linux users complain that they can not use SilverLight because it is tied to Windows. So Ubuntu users have to make a VM Box and put XP in it just to watch Netflix while inside Ubuntu. Some  Linux users refuse to reboot and work inside of Windows.
Moonlight... Not sure if that would work.



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Netflix is going after the mobile market. The image quality on mobile device is lower and the bandwidth is often higher. So a high performance native code thing like SilverLight is not needed. Apparently.
More precisely, it's not POSSIBLE. I mean, it possible, but it's not feasible, simply because an Android device could use any number of instruction sets. On the other hand, whether the result is in a sort of "native code" or not is irrelevant since SilverLight isn't; It's Managed code.
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Now if Netflix were to build a portable player that works as well as SilverLight, they just might drop Silverlight so that they wold have one player that would adapt to any platform. But that is the question. Would they want to do that?  Am I barking at the wrong tree?
Silverlight isn't a "Player" it's what Netflix is currently using for their player; that is, Silverlight is no more a Video Player then, say, OpenGL or Direct3D are to a 3-D game.Application jealousy is something that everyone suffers from at some point or another.


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