Experts have slammed
AMD's newly
unveiled Live
PC-based home cinema plans, describing the initiative as "the big pink elephant
that no one wants to see".
Ovum
dismissed the plans as too complex, too expensive and unable to offer any
advantages compared with single-function, discrete devices such as personal
video recorders.
The scathing comments come after AMD announced new products, OEM reference
designs and software for its Live initiative at last week's
Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
Part of the announcement included AMD's Live Home Cinema system, which the PC
industry has tried unsuccessfully to convince consumers is the next 'must have'
in the living room.
"The last time I wrote about AMD Live and
Intel
Viiv, I gave AMD credit for not actively pursuing living room PCs. That has
changed," said Carl Gressum, senior analyst at Ovum.
"In my opinion, AMD should focus on what it does well - semiconductors - not
on developing living room PCs."
The analyst maintained that AMD's initiative fails to address the PC's two
main faults: the complexity of its underlying architecture; and the fact that
the market is not interested at all in letting the PC control the TV.
Gressum went on to note that the PC platform is "plagued" by malware,
spyware, viruses and Trojan horses, and that consumers do not want to deal with
these problems in the living room.
"Even if the PC platform can handle TV and video applications, it does not
mean, from a consumer perspective, that it is the most appropriate platform to
sit underneath the television," he added.
"There is a market for a more advanced TV device than a dumb set-top box or
DVD player, but this device will not be a PC."
If AMD's goal is to develop this market, the company needs to change the
operating system requirements to include embedded systems, according to Gressum.
It also needs to consider whether it is worthwhile to invest resources and
foster industry relationships in a market where the biggest OEMs have largely
failed.
"Stick to the semiconductor industry, AMD. That is what you are good at,"
Gressum advised.
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