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by sandwell
1307 days ago
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> Maybe the space is just more fragmented? Android is pretty darn fragmented though. I expect that aftermarket firmware would be an issue for content providers. For example, is Netflix going to allow third party firmware developers to create an app to access their content? They will already have contracts with content distributors like Lionsgate that mandate DRM in their own apps to prevent piracy. If your aftermarket firmware doesn't support Netflix, Prime, HBO, etc then it might have limited appeal. Browser based apps might get around that in a limited way. As for printers, I think of them as loss leaders to generate ink sales. Don't know either space particularly well so might be wrong. |
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Agreed that content support and DRM are a difficulty.
I know that the ink price gouging is part of why printers are weird, but that results in the default firmware being user-hostile in a way that I would have expected to make people want aftermarket firmware all the more. I suspect that the difficulty there is also something about fragmentation and perhaps a lack of devices that even try to be open (Google publishes all the documentation and source to build AOSP for a Pixel phone; I'm aware of zero printer vendors doing so).