In this blog post Mark Thompson has said that the BBC is "aiming to
launch a download version of iPlayer for Mac this year":

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2008/02/iplayer_choices.html
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sean DALY
Sent: 15 April 2008 13:33
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [backstage] Ashley Highfield leaves BBC (almost)

Michael, that's easy: I would judge you on your actions. For my part,
many (that would be MANY) moons ago I was a journalist for a Windows
magazine and later, purchased over a quarter of a million dollars in
Microsoft licences; in both ways I helped build their monopolies. I
can't even say I didn't know there was cheating back then; I saw the
first conclusive proof of undocumented system calls by Excel in 1993.
Back then, I thought it was great that IBM's stranglehold on the
industry was being challenged and that unfair competition was not too
high a price to pay for a common platform.

People at Microsoft are used to distrust and resentment, although
generally speaking they ascribe that to jealousy of success and not
Microsoft's actions. For many years working against standards for
commercial gain was just the way things were done unless there was
mutual recognition that more opportunities would come from standards
support. Remember IPX/SPX? I remember how a little company called Adobe
got the idea to distribute a free reader for their portable document
format (one of four in the market at that time) from a smaller and
fiercer competitor taking market share, Farallon. Adobe won that war and
buried Farallon, but it took them many years to seek ISO standardisation
for PDF and the world is better off for it. (Of course, Microsoft can't
stand it, they won't support PDF and they want to attack Adobe with
Windows-only XPS. So much for Microsoft
interoperability.)

When Mr. Huggers says he is proud of his work at Microsoft which
included blocking open standards, concerns about conflict of interest
are justified. Those concerns can be allayed by promoting open
standards. Of course, that means dropping Windows Media (which means
dropping Microsoft DRM). Can a former executive promoting Windows Media
be reasonably expected to reverse a decision to use Windows Media? I say
give him the benefit of the doubt, but for how long?
There is still no download support for iPlayer outside of Windows.
What will he propose? No one is better positioned than he to enlarge WM
Player's usefulness by negotiating Dirac support in WM Player, either
natively, in a branded player, or as a standalone codec installer.

Sean.
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