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CES: Open Source Development = CE Harmony = Consumer Satisfaction

Talk of open development was a hot topic today, with everyone from Jerry Yang of Yahoo! and Rob Stoddard of NCTA to the editors of CNET calling open source development and new industry standards the keys to creating more useful and marketable consumer electronics.

Yang’s keynote address highlighted the release of Yahoo! Go 3.0, the site’s software offering for mobile phones. In it, he explained that leaving Yahoo! Go open sourced was imperative to the continued development of the software. “Having the ability for third party software to interact with Yahoo! Go makes it easier for users to receive relevant content,” Yang said.

Yahoo! Go offers widgets to perform many different tasks, including eBay, MySpace, and MTV News integration. The hope is that software developers and other websites will develop software to work with Yahoo! Go and ultimately make the Internet more efficient and useful to consumers on mobile phones.

In a CNET-hosted panel titled “The Next Big Thing in CE,” Stoddard, along with George Kliavkoff of NBCU agreed that open-sourcing and creation of (and conforming to) industry standards would allow consumers to integrate different technology components with ease. In a discussion about the future of content delivery, both agreed that portable devices must be able to connect to televisions, computers, and DVR set-tops and share content without limitation. One of the major current limitations of programming that is available online is that it is unable to be transferred to mobile devices, they said.

by Tony Brown, a junior at the University of Missouri

Posted on January 8, 2008 10:57 AM | Comments (0)

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