Hey Jim,
Yes, as Lise says, I was extremely impressed with Gizmo, what it could do for us immediately, and it's potential. Every Android device can either be a client to search / display our MC content, or, act as a control device for our main server. Brilliant design. Kudos.
Now we can listen to tunes, or watch stored videos anywhere in the house with ease on these portable devices. The real world is as Lise points out, is just getting at your stored data. The only thing lacking ( as Lise mentioned ) is the ability to display documents via Gizmo. I don't think this would be too difficult to accomplish as shelling out to associated handlers for the file type is a client bound function in Android. So, a Word or PDF doc .. Android will use the default app ( such as Docs to Go ) for that document type, or, present a choice if more than one installed app is registered as being able to handle the doc type. Being able to display all the media types that MC can handle and serve would greatly enhance Gizmo's functionality.
My personal wish for Gizmo is to be able to drill down into searches. For example, if you search for 'The Replacements', you can't drill down into the initial results .. you only have the option to 'play'. Here's an area where you could shine, and really show off the power of MC.
As Lise alluded to, we're also developing for Android, and thus have the 'gazillion' ( well, maybe about 20 or so ) devices around the house. My view on tablets / phones / and other android devices is that they're great rich media clients. It doesn't matter where the content comes from, either the cloud or local servers, their main strength is in consuming it. I don't think this will change in the short to medium term. I've always admired MC's strengths in categorization and search. It provides a great back end for media serving. Gizmo is a great client front end to get at all those capabilities.
There's one category of Android device that isn't that well known. The Android TV 'media player'. This isn't to be confused with Google TV, these are Media Players similar to WD Live devices except that they run a skinned ( or un-skinned ) version of Android, and have HDMI output instead of a screen and an IR remote control interface ( they also have USB host ports that support HID based keyboards / mice ). I've been testing these types of devices for compatibility with our software over the past few months. On a lark, I've loaded Gizmo on these devices ( thanks for providing the APK as a direct download as most of these devices don't have the Market ), and it works great. So, basically you have Gizmo on a ~$100 media player. Brilliant!
Jonnie