The End of Physical Media 331
L-s-L69 writes "The register is reporting that Forrester is predicting that a third of all music sales will be made by downloads in the next five years. They also predict that almost 15 per cent of films will be viewed by "on-demand" services such as rather than by DVD or video by 2005. "
Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think what these guys keep confusing is that CONSUMING and COLLECTING are two different mindsets, and physical media will always have a market for those of us who like to accumulate.
Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Who keeps track of what Forrester and Gartner predicted in the past? It would be pretty funny to see what they predicted the world would be like now five years ago. IIRC, Gartner said that we'd all be using NT now, and Linux would be nowhere.
I think the real value in these analysts are for companies who these trends favor. For example, a company who owns a piece of digital music sales can say "Forrester says 1/3 of all music sales will be digital." This helps attract customers and investors.
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Really? (Score:4, Interesting)
The PHB's at the other company spent a large amount of time and energy lobbying our CIO to go with Netware for everyone. One of their key points was the fact that Gartner had stated in several research papers about that time that Netware was going to be around for quite sometime and was a viable long term technology strategy for the corporate IT environment.
Riiiiight.
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not nearly enough.
Me, I'm still holding out hope that the black plague will make a big comeback.
-transiit
Re:Really? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure actually. I can boot Knoppix on it fine, and it runs for as long as I tested it without panicking or anything, which means that if it's a hardware problem, it's probably the hard drive. The hard drive scans fine with CHKDISK, but that doesn't mean it's not occasionally encountering failures. Right now, it usually either bluescreens on boot with a "can't page in" type error, or else it gives "No bootable media found", which certainly hin
Re:Really? (Score:5, Interesting)
People who collect MP3s are also collectors. I definately feel more like a collector when I occasionally log onto a P2P system then when I am in a CD store. While I am in the P2P system it is pure hunting and gathering with no concern about cost. When I am in the CD store it is about deciding which of the CDs are worthy my hard earned money (and let's not forget the space they take up in my CD rack).
On the one hand it is cool to look at my rack and see the stuff I own summarized nicely. But on the other hand, physical media is a pain in the ass. CDs and DVDs are really poorly designed media. Way too fragile. For DVDs: too many silly restraints about skipping FBI warnings and advertisments. For CDs: not enough information density.
If I could leave that all behind I probably would.
Re:Really? (Score:3, Interesting)
Would that have anything to do with whether or not you pay for P2P-source MP3s? If you're ripping your own stuff, cool. It seems to drive RIAA nuts, but I think that case falls into fair use. If you're talking about a pay service like Apple's iTunes, that's fine t
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, it's even easier to click on a pre-made playlist, which then plays through the stereo, potentially anywhere in the house. Think: not needing to change CDs every hour anymore. There's a lot to be said for basically putting your entire music collection on "random" . . . it's like a ra
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bullshit. He's saying new players will not play all the media that is already out there. And people will stop making red book players. This may happen over the next 20 or 30 years, but not anytime soon. I can still very easily go buy a VHS tape or recorder. I can buy SVHS tapes and recorders. I can still buy beta tapes pretty easily
Re:Really? (Score:5, Interesting)
It hasn't completely replaced printed media, or replaced it everywhere, but it has replaced printed media to an extent. I routinely receive products with no printed manual, but either a PDF on a CD or else just on a website somewhere.
Re:Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Get back to me when you are required to file a government document online, but it is impossible to use any tool other than a DRM-enabled PDF viewer on a DRM-enabled Microsoft OS.
I'm afraid that's not far ahead.
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
DVD is great for consumers - for a (quite reasonable) one-time fee, we get permanent ownership of media. We get to watch it infinitely; we get to show it to others; we get to sell the DVD if we don't want it.
That's great for us, but the MPAA hates that part. They're all about limiting our uses of their media for their advantage. Even DVD has media controls - they can explain away Macrovision as preventing VHS copying, but what about region coding? They really wanted DIVX to succeed, but consumers balked and the technology wasn't there. They would have loved a DRM-based mechanism, where the DVD only plays in one player.
Why is the MPAA so crazy about controlling its media? Easy - profit maximization. C'mon, they're the kings of repeatedly profiting from the same medium! How many versions of Star Wars were released? Like, 20? We even had three separate VHS releases. DVD is even worse: first the DVD, then the SE/LE/Superbit/Director's Cut, then the Limited Edition with the funky packaging...
Take this to its next logical step. In the broadband/Palladium era, instead of selling you the DVD for $15, the MPAA will have the option of charging you:
(a) a $20 annual subscription fee;
(b) a $20 fee for an ad-free media player on your computer, or a $100 fee for a set-top (pirate-proof) device for your TV; and
(c) a $5 fee for each viewing of the movie, plus
(d) a $2 fee for accessing the special features for a 24-hour period.
Meanwhile, you can't publicly criticize the films or take screen captures without jeopardizing your subscription license ("The MPAA hereby exercises its option under the contract, part XXIV(c)(iii)(a)(2), to withdraw your license to its copyrighted material...")
End result: The movie industry doesn't sell you content and move on. They nickel and dime you for the privilege of viewing their entire library at rental fees. Even Gigli breaks even. They'd be suckers not to do it.
Why hasn't this happened so far, you ask? The MPAA hasn't had the technology available to offer such an option.
Why would we accept this option, you ask? Same reason you rolled over and accepted a $4 charge for Caller ID. They'll raise the prices on DVDs to something absurd, or they'll stop selling them altogether. So, you can take the option they give you, or you can choose never to see a movie at home again.
- David Stein
Re:Really? (Score:2)
But is the prediction true?
By 2004, Forrester is predicting 49 million US households will spend more than $184 billion online. [wminet.com] - We might be lucky if the sum reaches $50 billion in 2003 [commstrade.com].
Video On Demand (Score:5, Interesting)
The whole pause, fast forward, etc... is laggy and inaccurate. I don't like it.
I don't like only being able to watch it for 24 hours, give me lifetime viewing for 15$ then we're talking.
As of right now it's just a waste of money as always.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:5, Insightful)
I share your beefs with the user experience, but those can and probably will be resolved as the technology is refined. Cable box DVR's, e.g., could allow local caching for smoother rewind and fast forward.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
However, with TiVO, if you know in the morning that you're going to want to watch a movie that night, you just schedule a particular showing to record during the day, and it's exactly like on-demand for you when you get home. So it's not quite on-demand, but a
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
On demand movies can be started at any time by the viewer. If you'd like to begin the movie at 8:27, that's possible with the on demand system. Normal pay-per-view movies (Comcast refers to them as In Demand) start at specified times. The most popular movies usually begin every 30 minutes while less popular ones begin every hour.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:3, Insightful)
If "they" seriously want to push this angle, they will be disappointed with the result. People want media they can take anywhere. I, for one, absolutely insist on being able to listen to Bach's 2nd Partita for unaccompanied violin while sitting in a rowing boat in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Never mind how I'm supposed to get there :-)
Most people do not have the resources to lug their broadband connections around on their backs. Most peo
Re:Video On Demand (Score:5, Interesting)
I haven't had any problems with the pause/fast forward in on-demand. I only go to the video store now when on-demand isn't showing a particular movie I want to see.
And if you want lifetime viewing, buy the physical media. Would you actually trust the cable company to "remember" you have lifetime viewing rights anyway?
Re:Video On Demand (Score:4, Interesting)
Kinda.
I've used video-on-demand on my satellite box, but it isn't the same as going to Blockbuster. The satellite transmission is limited to Dolby Pro Logic sound at best (because that can be encoded into a stereo stream), so no Dolby Digital or DTS sound for you. Also, the movies are normally shown in the 4:3 aspect ratio. They have a couple of channels carrying widescreen versions, but the choice is far more limited. Oh, and the TV channels have less bandwidth to play with, so the overall quality suffers.
That's my experience with Sky in the UK, at least. I'll watch something on pay-per-view for the convenience of it, but if I really like it, I'll get it on DVD for the better quality picture and sound.
I *like* having CD and DVD racks stuff with discs. Shows me where a lot of my money is. I don't think I'd ever be happy having it all stored as licence keys on my PC.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
well i guess what he wants(what i would like to see) would be paying ~4-10$ for the film and then get to download good quality xvid with ac3 sounds and keep that then forever, what they should do is to offer BETTER service than what you get for 'free' when you get them from somewhere else(illegally), paying for something that is inferior to what freelo
Re:Video On Demand (Score:3, Insightful)
That's assuming the company continues to trade throughout your lifetime. Also assuming they don't decide to change the rules and hit you in the pocket anyway as a matter of policy.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
$15? at that point, why not just go out to walmart and buy the DVD? yeah, you have to go there and get it, but you have the original which you can just rip?
Re:Video On Demand (Score:3, Insightful)
besides the point, a perfectly clean/organized TV area is the sign of a sick, sick mind ;)
Re:Video On Demand (Score:3, Insightful)
1. P2P becomes fair use and broadband adopting goes through the roof.
2. Fair use is essentially eliminated and broadband stagnates.
I find it hard to see both happening unless broadband gets extremely cheap by, for instance, being subsidized by th
Re:Video On Demand (Score:2)
I never go to the video store anymore. No need. In addition to a few PPV movies that I rent, I record a bunch of stuff off of Showtime, and a bunch of stuff just off of TBS, TNT, and other non-premium movie channels.
(Sorry for the nearly duplicate post.
Re:Video On Demand (Score:3, Informative)
I don't, either...but the stuff that comes through the cable is almost always pan-and-scan. My TiVo is fairly good at finding older stuff that's not on DVD...but if it's available on DVD, I'll add it to the Netflix queue.
such as what? (Score:3, Informative)
Such as what?
Re:such as what? (Score:5, Funny)
Such as what?
Well, the story submitter put something there, but we're not licensed to view it. Sorry.
Don't feel bad. In a day or two, he won't be able to view it either.
Re:such as what? (Score:2)
Re:such as what? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:such as what? (Score:2)
In the UK there is a company called Homechoice [homechoice.co.uk] which has been providing Video on Demand services for close on five years now, all be in it in a fairly limited area at the begining. Currently it's available in most of the UK, as far as I can tell.
I've been using it since it's inception as Video Networks. They offer a huge variety of TV Shows, Films, Music Videos, News Programs etc. all on-demand with different fees applying depending what you watch (for example you can subscribe to various '
Thats okay... (Score:2, Insightful)
Is this really a good thing? (Score:5, Interesting)
I mean in the worst case scenario this will only mean pay-per-view and draconian DRM.
Still need physical media (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree, except... (Score:5, Funny)
I wouldn't go as far as to say 'sales'...
Profit shifts (Score:5, Interesting)
(Related one-time-no-financial-interest-rant: How many hours of quality reading do you get in a week on Slashdot? Toss your five bucks into the hat already...)
Re:Profit shifts (Score:2)
(and I mean everybody , not just teenage geeks) like the convenience of just shoving in a CD or DVD that they own whenever they want into a simple to use
player and not have to boot up a PC and go through licensing hell just to listen to a piece of music.
Re:Profit shifts (Score:2)
Re:Profit shifts (Score:2)
Yes, the money will shift to bandwidth and hosting providers, but not from the artists. Instead, it will shift from the current distribution companies to newer more efficient distribution companies. Currently, the record labels take a huge amount off of CD and DVD sales - and a lot of it has to filter through middlemen such as distribution centers and retail stores. Online distribution is so much cheaper since the only real cost per copy is bandwidth.
This does not even take into consideration cost savings
Re:Profit shifts (Score:2)
Many will pay for their bandwidth bill and nothing else.
Bandwidth is cheap (was Re:Profit shifts) (Score:3, Interesting)
Somewhat different story for movies, of course. Sending the contents of a DVD at this rate would cost around $12 which is cost prohibitive.
five bucks? (Score:2)
Are negative values valid? Taco, I'll send you my paypal link later.
Re:Profit shifts (Score:4, Insightful)
Didn't they say this before... (Score:3)
No more paper too! (Score:5, Funny)
Heh (Score:2)
third of all music sales will be made by downloads in the next five years
As opposed to a third of all music acquisitions being made by download today (as opposed to actual sales)?
Overpriced Services (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Overpriced Services (Score:2)
They have now extended their reach, and are an overpriced movie rental store in many other countries too.
Newsflash: Rental prices DROPPING like stones (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, blockbuster lets you keep older rentals for a week. New rentals for several days. Most local shops let me only rent for 2 days. Blockbuster has a wide selection. The only local place that I've seen t
The End of Physical Media? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The End of Physical Media? (Score:5, Insightful)
The media kills your wallet with a financial death by 1000 cuts.
What's more is the fact that "on demand" viewing is a push model disguised as a pull model. They who control the pipe get to control that which is available to you for your "demand." Think Clear Channel and the pop music machine become endemic to all media.
Of course this will only work if your media is taken from you or rendered usless by force, because, of course, what you want downloadable media for in the first place is to record it to permenant media for viewing, well, on demand. Like maybe on your boat 10 miles out of sight of land or your mountain getaway cabin or wherever.
Sure people want the convienience of on demand media from home, so they can record the shit on cheap, free and open storage media.
Never underestimate the bandwidth of a cupboard full of tapes, CDs and DVDs. Not to mention the fact that such are true on demand media.
KFG
news? (Score:4, Funny)
Heck, I've even got my 51" tv hooked up to a computer for pr0n viewing, and for chrissake.
Re:news? (Score:5, Funny)
Obsolete or just used differently? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sound Quality (Score:4, Informative)
Hooray, five years of tinny-sounding 128-kbps MP3s rather than properly sampled CD-audio tracks!
MP3s are great because they're portable, but they still don't sound as good as compact discs. Never mind the fact that downloading an entire MP3 album pretty much requires broadband to start with.
Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
HomeChoice (Score:5, Informative)
They use a DSL line with a set-top box which splits the signal into two parts: one for video on demand, and the other to plug your computer (or network) into. The video service has an archive of TV programmes in all kinds of genres, as well as music videos and the most recent news bulletins from a variety of sources.
Plus you can also 'rent' movies from them, just by clicking a few buttons. You get to play it as much as you like for 24 hours and the cost is comparable to (if not better than) the Blockbuster round the corner. You can pause, fast-forward, rewind, no problem. It works great.
It's fast, very usable, convenient, cheap and it works. I have seen the future and it is video on demand. And no they're not paying me to say this.
Re:HomeChoice (Score:2)
Yeah , and I can do all that if I buy a DVD for only a few times the price, the difference being I get to play it whenever I want, wherever I want
(I can take it to friends , relatives etc etc) and hopefully it'll still play in 24 YEARS.
"It's fast, very usable, convenient, cheap and it works. I have se
Re:HomeChoice (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course I have a few movies that I've watched many more than 3 or 4 times... bottle rocket, rushmore, the big lebowski...
really? (Score:3, Insightful)
So all codec, player, bandwidth, and DRM issues will be ironed out in the next 15 months? Sweet. </sarcasm>
I don't know where I first heard it, but the best way to do on-demand (at least for a handful of current films) would be to send them to your TiVo in the middle of the night withou you even requesting it, then you just pay for a key to unlock it. But still, I'm big into ownership--pretty much anything worth seeing is worth paying $10-$20 to have forever.
Costs, hard copies and piracy. (Score:4, Interesting)
With a digital copy it'd be just a matter of decrypting the file, sending it along and there you go. If DeCSS was the best the industry could come up with then I don't forsee any online media protection scheme being hard to crack.
And as for the reduction in costs being passed on to the end user? Doubtful - they'll just be absorbed as profit because if people are happy to pay current prices, why reduce them? CDs were cheaper to produce than tapes yet are more expensive.
physical media == more bandwidth (Score:4, Insightful)
My guess is that broadcasted (cable/airwave) media and physical media will always coexist to fit different niches in the marketplace to fulfill different needs.
/. states that The Register reports that ... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm commenting on /. stating that the Register reports that Forrester predicts the end of physical media.
I disagree.
Now others might agree/disagree about my commenting on /. stating that the Register reports that Forrester predicts the end of physical media.
Re:/. states that The Register reports that ... (Score:4, Funny)
Don't try any of those fancy media spinning tricks around here. We're way too clever.
How about Hi-Definition?? (Score:2)
Fifteen Per Cent (Score:2)
That will be 30 downloads worth.
Unrelated topics (Score:2)
The second prediction is just stupid. Just because video on demand is possible doesn't mean people will loose all sense of ownership. I could see VOD replacing video rentals (if it became 100 times more useful than the crap Charter has been pedaling for the last two years)... I don't see why i
And in other news.... (Score:2, Funny)
cheaper DVD vs online viewing (Score:3, Insightful)
I doubt that within 1 1/2 years, online multimedia will make the leaps and bounds necesary to replace DVD. But, I do think that they will make enough progress to signifigantly drive down the prices of DVD due to the competition.
I for one, prefer DVD's to online because of bandwidth, availability, features, etc.. Also, having the DVD play connected to the internet could enhance the DVD, while not replacing it..
I just don't see it happening (Score:3, Insightful)
What's even more significant is the archival nature of DVDs: it's easy to watch what you want when you want, and they're inexpensive enough to produce that there is a plethora of obscure, old, special-interest or otherwise non-mainstream titles. On-Demand can only handle a finite number of titles, and I'd imagine that the vast majority will be new releases.
Given the cost/benefit situation as well as more limited access to less popular or less current titles, I don't forsee the demise of the DVD or other similar future format (blue laser DVD?)
Sure ... (Score:5, Funny)
Check out this piece from TheOnion (Score:4, Funny)
http://www.theonion.com/previous_opinion1.
Future Predictions (Score:5, Insightful)
I think most people lost their faith in the powers of technological prediction when whole the flying cars by 1990 fell through.
People are packrats. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:People are packrats. (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not the end of media - it's supply your own (Score:2)
For rentals - sure. But for music I will still want something to hold in my hand and read while I listen.
Making MP3s (Score:2)
End of Hard Currency (Score:2)
The register is reporting that Forrester is predicting that a third of all financial transactions will be made by credit companies and online banking services in the next five years. They also predict that... ahhh PPPPTTHTHLLTLTTT
Just because more sales/downloads are being done online doesn't mean it's the END of the old disk way. A new media format is needed to kill the old media format. [phonograph... 8-tracks... cassettes... CDs... BlueRay??] And even THAT doesn't mean the old
just wish prices would come down. (Score:2)
I use mp3s today for checking out a band to make sure I'm not going to buy a CD that I don't like.
Now if CD prices could just come down a bit and I don't have to look at a CD rack full of white CD cases labeled with a sharpie... I'd be happy...
Is this anything like the 'paperless society' (Score:2)
While it's fine and dandy to have bits flowing around, they're not permanent, and you need some kind of redundancy if you don't want to lose your data.
The fact that sales of stuff won't be made through physical media doesn't mean the end of it.
On Demand? Pfft. (Score:3, Informative)
Does anyone here live in the Boston area? Have you actually tried to use Comcast's "On Demand" feature? At least 75% of the time I try to watch something, it skips, or audio drops out, or there are horrendous artefacts, or it just won't start. We actually considered ordering an On Demand movie last weekend, but when the preview wouldn't even play, we gave up and watched Jason X on Showtime instead.
(Jason X is a fine film. Really.)
Re:On Demand? Pfft. (Score:4, Interesting)
And it will cost the same.... (Score:3, Funny)
-Ladd
So, what they're saying (Score:5, Funny)
Is that we are to live in a topsy-turvy world where sound and pictures will travel down galvanic wires (snort!) or through the very aether (guffaw!) instead of being carried on good old reliable phonographs [google.com] and daguerrotypes [google.com] .
What next, I ask you? Flying-machines? Women's sufferage? Coloreds sitting at the front of the bus? One can only hope that the imminent dawn of the twentieth-century will put an end to this poppycock.
Interesting, but not right? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, I went and googled and found this [tfi.com] study that basically says that by 2005 only 40% (or so) of US house holds will have broadband service. This too, is a forecast. So, it just seems to me that this projected date of 2005 is a bit, well, optimistic?
Forrester (bah!) (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm so sick of Forrester research. They've been so pro-Internet for so long that every new wave is a realm of optimism for them. They're predictions are always 'out with the old, in with the new'.
I highly doubt that DVDs are going away any time soon. CDs may not be released as readily, but they thought CDs would die with the advent of the miniDisc. (Who uses that?) The increase in downloading of music has more to do with the paltry and rather pathetically released albums as of late combined with incredibly high prices that with people switching to broaddband for all delivery.
If the switch comes to broadband for delivery by the industry, chances are it will have more to do with corporate greed and the desire for increased control (see failure of DVD Regions to mean anything for more info) that it will with people not desiring physical media.
Today's thought.... Stop piracy and corporate greed. Set fair market prices and compete. Damn oligopolies!This "news" is horseshit (Score:4, Informative)
"Music and studio executives are finally beginning to understand that they must create new media services through channels that consumers will pay for. Consumers have spoken - they are tired of paying the high cost of CDs and DVDs and prefer more flexible forms of on-demand media delivery," he said.
Hmm, according to this article over at azcentral [azcentral.com], DVDs are "a freight train that can't be stopped".
Full article text:
DVD sales up 57% in 1st half of 2003
Greg Hernandez
Los Angeles Daily News
Aug. 4, 2003 12:00 AM
LOS ANGELES - The DVD express continues to gather steam.
During the first six months of 2003, a phenomenal 427.2 million DVD units were shipped to retailers, representing a 57 percent leap compared with the same period a year ago, according to the DVD Entertainment Group, an industry trade association.
"This is a freight train that can't be stopped," DVD Entertainment Group President Bob Chapek said. "We are enjoying the momentum and looking to the future for continued growth with an eye toward what is next."
Fueling the growth in software sales are the 10.3 million DVD players that have already been sold so far this year, easily outpacing the first half of 2002 when 7.3 million players were sold.
There are now DVD players in close to 50 percent of all U.S. homes,with more than 66 million players sold in the past six years.
These robust hardware sales are connected to the soaring sales of DVD software.
Overall, the number of DVD units shipped in North America has reached nearly 1.8 billion since the format was launched in mid-1997, according to figures compiled by Ernst & Young for the trade association.
Now, back to the crappy article at hand...
According to Forrester, music sales are set to increase by more than half a billion dollars in 2004 thanks to online revenues.
Equally, on-demand movie distribution channels will generate $1.4 billion by 2005, while revenue from DVDs and tapes will decline 8 percent.
Yeah, they will be down from 100 gazillion dollars to 92 gazillion dollars.
What is this wild speculation garbage? Someone actually gets *paid* to think up this crap? The DVD industry is a huge part of the movie studios' revenue. Even if there were a way to deliver online movies, they would still be raking it in. And they aren't going to change their proven moneymaking business. Look at the record industry, and their unwillingness to change. Hell, they won't even consider change towards a *proven* market for their product. So you think the stakeholders in the DVD market will gladly switch away from their "free" money?
Re:Nonsense (Score:2)