Blockbuster Throws Hat into Movie Download Business 72
jtroutman writes "Stepping into the ring to compete with entities such as Amazon, CinemaNow and, of course, NetFlix, Blockbuster announced today the acquisition of Movielink, LLC. The deal had been scheduled to take place earlier this year, but was quashed amid trouble between the then CEO, John Antioco, and the Board of Directors."
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And IE. I wonder what browser it works on - if any.
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It's not like a basic spellchecker would have caught that one.
I wonder if late fees (Score:5, Funny)
Jimmy
Bit Torrent : Re:I wonder if late fees (Score:2)
I know it's shocking but BT is NOT just for grabbing the latest Fedora Core ISO.
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However, as you put it the question is whether or not MovieLink can be competitive, and that's debatable. Given the lengths to which their content had been locked down, then nailed down, then buried in concrete... I'd say no. BB can't effect more change than the studio's will allow, and they've been noticea
Oh, the Irony! (Score:1)
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A few months ago, Netflix did a demo at the Silverlight coming-out party. I suspect that once Silverlight supports the DRM crap that that's how they'll make their cross-platform thing happen.
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A few months ago, Netflix did a demo at the Silverlight coming-out party.
I suspect this demo is nothing more than Microsoft marketing dollars at work. Pretty typical of a smart marketer like Microsoft.
They decide to have MS paid people (subcontractors likely) code a Siverlight demo application that has Netflix branding over it. Microsoft gets permission from Netflix, and Netflix gets their brand shown (free advertising paid for by Microsoft).
In other words, it wasn't Netflix spending any money or even th
Re:Oh, the Irony! (Score:5, Interesting)
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http://blog.netflix.com/2007/08/instant-watching-
According to them it's because there are no publicly available DRM systems for the Mac that the studios recognize.
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Blockbuster throws in hat... (Score:5, Funny)
Doomed to failure... (Score:5, Insightful)
The first company that manages to convince studios to release simple file downloads in common formats that are either/both a) ready to burn to DVD or b) ready to play on an ipod or appleTV and completely unencumbered by any manner of DRM will clean up.
But for now, the only way for me to get DRM-free movies is to buy the DVD and rip the content using quasi legal (or illegal depending on your perspective) methods. How else am I to get them loaded on my media server or transcoded for viewing on my ipod?
It's the same for music. Right now, I either get them at emusic.com where I have a subscription, or the itunes plus store, or I rip CDs. It's silly and wasteful to buy a physical CD, rip it once, and put it on the shelf. As storage capacity increases, this too will happen for movies/DVDs as it has for music/CDs.
-S
Re:Doomed to failure... (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it will fail because :
Of course, I could be wrong.
Re:Doomed to failure... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Does the word burned make it not count as a copy restriction?
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Does the word burned make it not count as a copy restriction?
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Netflix does have the same technology, though, and the same crappy DRM. It's only playable on Windows, in Internet Explorer, using Windows Media Player, and only on a primary monitor. It won't play out of SVideo ports even. That also means that there's a sizeable chunk of people who won't use it.
Still, I don't think it'll really help BB. It doesn't help N
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That's what most people want, the only restriction (and biggest complaint) was that you couldn't just use it simply on any ol' MP3 player, but is easily circumventable (and condoned and supported
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I use Netflix, and it seems to work pretty well for me. Of course, I'm just watching them on my PC as they intended and not trying to store them for posterity because that would be dishonest.
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Most of these things I'm only going to watch once. I mean, as nice as having my own copy of all the Doctor Who episodes out on DVD would be (which are what I'm currently going through on Netflix streaming)...there doesn't exist enough time in my life to watch all the things I plan to twice.
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Re:Doomed to failure... (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't easily rip it. WHO CARES? At any time, I can log back on to Netflix, and WATCH IT AGAIN. FOR FREE. This notion that all DRM is the devil is just silly. NetFlix WatchNow costs me nothing. It was added to my account at no extra charge. Every month I get 30 free hours of WatchNow.
My laptop has Digital-Out for video and Audio. I set it on the tv, close the lid, hook it up to the stereo and television, and there it is. It's just a SMIDGEN more difficult than the VOD that comes thru my cable box.
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You rent a movie for a few bucks. Watch it until your license expires (X plays or X days) and it deletes itself when you're done. You pay $3 bucks a movie or so. Or else subscribe for $10-20 bucks a month. Just like their Total Access, except instead of mailing the DVDs you download them.
It makes for a profitable business model for the _rental_ market. One that has a good possibility of success.
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rebound (Score:5, Funny)
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http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070628/blockbuster_stores
Re:rebound (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:rebound (Score:5, Informative)
I wouldn't mind having multiple queues though like Netflix has. It's really kind of annoying getting 10 chick flicks in a row.
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I was very close to signing up for BlockBuster's service. However I remembered that the store in my town is horrible: their stock is laughable and they never have what I want. I walked through the store a couple of times trying to find movies on the list I'd want to initially
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trajectory is to continue downards (Score:1)
Old news? (Score:2)
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20051226-5842 .html [arstechnica.com]
That's from 2005! Did they just never follow through? What happened?
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Now Blockbuster enters the movie download business, so you actually get no physical object at all, you select the movie online and then proceed to download it. I think they refused to do this until now, so this is not old news, at least for Blockbuster.
Mod Parent Up - Answered question (Score:2)
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Stop chasing the dragon (Score:1)
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Long term, VoD will be a reali
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Of course one might say what does that matter? Sooner or later a media company will get it right and it will happen. It is just aggrevating to have to wa
Blockbuster Fails Again (Score:2)
I've been a loyal NetFlix customer for a while. Their site is well made and their service works as advertised. Contrast this to the terrible experiences I've had with Blockbuster in the past. But I'm not one to hold a grudge. Blockbuster can win me back by making the right moves. They offer in store swapping of movies which is a small win, but not enough to make me switch. Now, they want to compete with NetFlix download service, which is all well and good, and which targets the same audience, people who wan
Downloads good, selection bad, navigation bad (Score:3, Insightful)
My major complaint with Netflix is the way the website is designed, it needs a major overhaul. In particular browsing is a pain in the arse. Categories need to be grouped better, they need to stop having a unique listing for each season when browsing, especially for TV. Star Trek needs a listing for TOS, New Gen, Deep Space Nine, etc, then within each of these list out each season. Searching function needs work as well.
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Shameless plug for GreenCine (Score:1)