
As part of our ongoing series, "Building the Wired Home," we've been experimenting with what could be a sea-change in the whole concept of a home computer. Home computers, of course, have long ago become commonplace, and computers have even taken on some roles that used to be delegated to standalone consumer electronics, such as audio and video storage and playback. They've gone from being
exotic oddities to ever-more-useful home appliances. Interestingly, though, as our home computers have become more powerful, sophisticated, and useful, they have also become decentralized and have, in most inefficient fashion, been chopped up and redistributed around the house. "Read more" to learn how our experiment worked out.
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1997-10-01
As stupid as it may seem, simply by virtue of the fact that DVDs have a rudimentary copy protection scheme, breaking that and copying them is a violation of the DMCA in the United States. As I specified in the article, that doesn't make it morally wrong. But it is technically illegal at this time.