xenophon13 said: it is true that many american households do not have high speed internet. you're probably being generous by saying half. however, in 2009 tv will make it's transition to digital and the frequency spectrum they currently use will be up for auction. these frequencies will be great for a wireless broadband signal which could change things a lot. right now a great number of households simply can't get a broadband signal (my parents for instance) simply because the cable company does not support it in their neighborhood. wireless could change that (which of course depends highly on who wins the bid and what they decide to do with it. how hard would it be to add those features? not very as that it's purely additional content and could be added. it's features like picture in picture that would be hard to implement but i don't see that as a breaking point for the format.
i downloaded a movie from xbox live just to see how it looked and sounded. i'd say it looked good. certainly not 7.1 HD sound but fuck it, my sound system is stereo so what do i care. and don't forget that MP3s are worse in quality than CD and yet it is still an extremely popular format simply because of the other features it adds such as smaller device size, lack of skipping, and negligible physical storage. the example of MP3 doesn't make it a rule that people will go for the lower speced format with unique features but it's certainly disproves the rule that the higher speced format will always win.
completely true and i think this is the biggest hurdle that downloading services will face. Fifth, no matter which movie-download service you choose, you’ll find yourself facing the same confusing, ridiculous time limits for viewing. You have to start watching the movie you’ve rented within 30 days, and once you start, you have to finish it within 24 hours. For example, the 24-hour limit. Suppose you typically don’t start a movie until 7:30 p.m., after dinner and homework are put away. If you don’t have time to finish the movie in one sitting, you can’t resume at 7:30 tomorrow night; at that point, the download will have self-destructed. netflix - unlimited downloads from their entire library for at low as $9 a month. granted - there entire library is only 7000 titles but it's a start and something i'm excited about. to potential is amazing.
also true but it's kind of the same point as point 4. right now execs are afraid of the internet but if they don't make a change eventually illegal services will cannibalize their industry just like MP3s are cannibalizing the music industry. |
....you have some very valid points and really i could see the industry going either way. it's just that personally i'm excited about the direction netflix is going and will be hoping that they have success.








