Console Inc.

Console Inc.
Private
Industry
Founders Christopher Price
Headquarters Santa Clara, California, U.S.
Products

Console Inc. (commonly known as Console) is an American technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, that focuses on high-performance Android platform design. It is best known for its Console OS Kickstarter campaign, a project intended on developing a native Android distribution for the PC.

Console, Inc. was originally titled Mobile Media Ventures, Inc. In mid-2015 the company announced its intention to do business as Console, Inc. going forward.[1] The company has since exclusively referred to itself as Console, Inc.

The company was founded by Christopher Price. It is a privately held startup.

Console OS

Console OS is the first commercial distribution of the Android operating system, designed for traditional PC hardware. It debuted on Kickstarter in June, 2014. The funding campaign was successful, raising $78,497 from 5,695 backers.[2]

The distribution differs from open-source options such as Android-x86 by including commercial, closed-source drivers, codecs, and players. The Console OS platform, effectively, is the Intel Architecture equivalent to CyanogenMod.[3]

Console OS runs as a native operating system. Unlike alternative solutions for the PC, such as BlueStacks, it does not run Android in an emulator.[4] This provides superior performance, particularly on lower-end systems - but with the disadvantage that the end-user must install the operating system, and cannot easily uninstall the software from inside the original operating system.

Controversy, Fork from Android-x86.org

The 2014 release of Console OS KitKat supported most target Kickstarter devices - but not key/major tablets such as the Dell Venue 8 Pro or ASUS’s Transformer Book T100, as it committed to. Releases became stalled. In 2015, the company released a Lollipop preview release,[5] but took it offline citing major issues.

Releases then stalled for most of a year. Later Console announced that Intel had discontinued Android-IA for PC hardware. Console claims this decision was made in January, 2015.[6] Console claims at this point it was unable to refund Kickstarter backers, citing that Kickstarter will not reverse payment transactions after 90 days.

Despite this, Console said it had a plan to continue development. Later, Console announced that it new releases would fork the Android-x86.org kernel, to continue development.[7]

In December, 2015, the creator/administrator of Android-x86.org, Chih-Wei Huang, published an article claiming Console OS “stole” Android-x86.org, and called founder Christopher Price a “cancer” on Android-x86, arguing that a fork could deprive Android.x86.org of community attention.[8]

Console, Inc. responded with evidence claiming that Chih-Wei Huang demanded a payment of $50,000 to collaborate on changes and contributions. Additionally, Console called Chih-Wei Huang’s effort a “shakedown” - and responded that his letter was “... unfortunate and it’s a disgrace to open-source.”[9]

Chih-Wei Huang later confirmed and admitted that he explicitly demanded the money.[10] Later he claimed that the refusal to donate, and his criticism of Console OS shortly thereafter, were not directly linked.[11]

A technical analysis by the site XDA-Developers’s own staff reporters, showed that Console was under no obligation to pay funds sought or demanded by Chih-Wei Huang. Its analysis further affirmed that Console OS did not steal Android-x86 and forked it properly, with attribution on its GitHub site.[12]

However, the same analysis by XDA was critical of Console for delayed development, missing certain features, and past failures. It also was critical of Intel for a lack of any public explanation for why Android-IA for PC hardware was discontinued, shortly after Console OS began releasing code based on it.

The controversy received considerable attention on several Android news and open-source community web sites.[13][14][15]

Other Products

Console, Inc's first product was the iConsole Developer Kit (code-named "Unit 00"). The developer kit was sold from 2013 to 2014, but they have yet to disclose any customers that purchased the product. Positioned to be a future-generation Android development system, it was built using PC hardware - but ran Android 4.2, Jelly Bean.[16] It was the first Android device to formally ship with an Intel Core processor, and became the most powerful Android device sold at its time.

Console, Inc. announced iConsole micro at Mobile World Congress 2014 in Barcelona, Spain. It was shown under glass at Intel's booth. The company stated they hope to ship it by the end of 2015, and that it intends to be the most powerful Android TV stick on the market.[17][18]

References

  1. "Introducing iConsole micro & Our New Company Name". Console OS Kickstarter. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  2. "Console OS Kickstarter Homepage". Kickstarter. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  3. "Why Lollipop is Such a Pain to Get Working (And, our rollout this week)".
  4. "Console OS Homepage". ConsoleOS.com.
  5. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mmv/console-os-dual-boot-android-remastered-for-the-pc/posts/1122553
  6. . 2016-12-28: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mmv/console–os–dual–boot–android–remastered–for–the–pc/posts/1453171. Unfortunately by January, Intel decided to terminate Android-IA for PC Tablets as well. At that point, we had spent considerable funds licensing and developing Console OS. And we still are. But we cannot refund people at this point - the money just isn't there, as it was first taken by Amazon/Kickstarter, and then we used further funds to continue development. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mmv/console-os-dual-boot-android-remastered-for-the-pc/posts/1453171
  8. https://groups.google.com/d/msg/android-x86/qkWG2TwVBqs/tW1Rm9u9DAAJ
  9. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/mmv/console-os-dual-boot-android-remastered-for-the-pc/posts/1453171
  10. https://groups.google.com/d/msg/android-x86/kF9J4xLvLJU/G_U6Ol44DgAJ
  11. https://groups.google.com/d/msg/android-x86/kF9J4xLvLJU/_yvtYK6WDgAJ
  12. http://www.xda-developers.com/android-x86-console-os-controversy-explained/
  13. http://news.softpedia.com/news/exclusive-interview-with-console-os-ceo-regarding-ongoing-feud-with-android-x86-498737.shtml
  14. http://www.cnx-software.com/2015/12/13/is-console-os-just-a-scam-based-on-a-fork-of-android-x86-with-little-modifications/
  15. http://thevarguy.com/open-source-application-software-companies/open-source-android-code-pcs-was-stolen-console-os-devs-s
  16. "Hands-on With iConsole.tv, An Android Powered Game Console". Engadget. Engadget. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  17. Chippy, Steve. "iConsole Micro. The $129 Atom-powered Android stick.". UMPCPortal.com. UMPCPortal. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  18. https://software.intel.com/en-us/videos/android-iconsole-micro-and-console-os?language=es

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.