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TheSmJ t1_iwso3kr wrote

>not letting their software/hardware suck in comparison to competitors in that space. > >Which they did.

Because the market is on its last breath. There's no future there.

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stumpcity t1_iwspqoj wrote

>Because the market is on its last breath

That's not why they did it

Nor is the streaming software/hardware market "on it's last breath." especially considering the fact streaming is about to be the primary means of consuming television.

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TheSmJ t1_iwsszew wrote

Streaming isn't on its last breath. The market for stand-alone "streaming boxes" is. The vast majority of people use their TV for that now.

That just leaves the Roku app, and there needs to be a reason to launch the app for it to be of any value.

You want to take a stab at what that reason is?

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stumpcity t1_iwsvr9m wrote

>The market for stand-alone "streaming boxes" is.

I've already addressed why it's not simply "stand-alone" streaming boxes, and why it also includes the streaming software included in many of the Smart TVs being sold, their software ALSO becoming subpar in the time they spent to pursue content creation alongside their hardware becoming undesirable.

(also the market for standalone boxes/pucks/sticks isn't "on its last breath" either)

You keep suggesting that Roku on Smart TVs works by "launching the app" when that's not how that works, too. You don't "launch the app" on a smart TV powered by Roku. You just turn the TV on. Roku is the software that makes the TV go. You seem to believe it's an app - it's the OS.

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