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I'd feel different if there weren't prior art in the form of another companies working product years before they filed the patent. Either that patent isn't valid, or its not close enough to a streaming box to count.
I suspect it is specifically relating to casting. The original Chromecast devices worked very differently than a Roku (but also supports the old casting).
The difference is using a 2nd computing device as a controller it seems, ie using your phone to cast a video to chromecast.
I actually can't believe touchstream won this initial case though because they are definitely a patent troll. The don't make any products themselves they just got an overly broad patent of technology that seemingly already existed (and was pretty obvious) and they go around trying to get companies to pay them licensing fees. And what I read of their patent doesn't even seem like it covers chromecast, they specify a client device -> separate server -> display device not a direct connection to a display device.
The Chromecast still requires an Internet connection though so it's not truly a device to display unless you're mirroring.
Samsung also had casting stuff and I think some of that might predate Chromecast
Might be thinking about DLMA? That wasn't just a Samsung thing but predates this.
Nope, that one was more of an access method for media files. Samsung had these little services which you could mirror your whole screen to (not limited to certain apps like Chromecast), but generally only from Samsung phones.
The first Miracast stuff was introduced in 2012, so that at least precludes Chromecast which apparently debuted in mid 2013. I'm pretty sure the Samsung thing - which was similar - predated that but was more proprietary and didn't have an official standard. I think it was just called something fairly generic like "Samsung Mirroring" etc as a predecessor to "AllShare"