Netflix May Already Be Killing Blockbuster? 302
Mattintosh writes "A blogger at C|Net takes a moment to consider the impact Netflix has had on Blockbuster. Some notable highlights include heavy losses ($35 million), job cuts ($45 million worth), and store closings: 'Much like the print media and retail stores refusing to change, Blockbuster has been a victim on an online company finding new and inventive ways of bringing a product to a customer. And due to its size and outdated corporate culture, there really is no salvation for Blockbuster at this point. Try as it might, the future of Blockbuster is bleak, at best. Sure, the company still enjoys revenue that climb into the billions of dollars, but with an ever-increasing net loss and a public refusal to focus on Total Access--the area where Netflix continues to dominate--what is the impetus for us to jump on the Blockbuster bandwagon?'"
Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:4, Insightful)
Meanwhile, the only thing saving Netflix's ass is the anticompetitive nature of the telecom industry in the US, which causes us to have broadband slow enough to make downloading DVD-quality movies too painful... time marches on.
Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:5, Insightful)
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I prefer my movies to be of reasonable quality. Netflix's selection of DVDs is also much greater than its selection of downloadable movies.
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I won't be going back, because they scammed me for a few months of extra service and falsified their records to match up. They ended up accusing me of having my password scammed, even though the downloads were mine from during the time I was still subscribed.
I suspect that the limitations on netflix are
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Rental replacement cost (Score:3, Informative)
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Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:5, Informative)
Yes you did... Try actually USING the service. Whatever they're using does a HORRIBLE job with the conversion from DVD.
Lots of aliasing, like they use some incredibly crappy deinterlacing filter. The video is scaled out to square pixels, even though WMV supports aspects just fine. Anyone who knows one bit about video encoding will force dimensions to multiples of 16, but the videos I've seen aren't even multiples of 4... huge waste of bits. And that, unfortunately, holds true... don't even try watching at any bitrate below the max (some 6000kbps), even with a file size of 2GBs it looks like a 1-CD rip you might find floating around on some P2P network.
Their inverse telecine filter is crap, if it exists at all. Progressive DVDs (film) are encoded passably, but anime I've seen is HORRIBLE. Take Ninja Scroll, use some braindead deinterlacing filter that blurs the two fields, so you have the old telecine ghosts every 5th frame and it looks like complete crap... then drop one out of every 5 frames (but be sure to keep the horrible blurred frames) to make sure you completely destroy the picture... then you've just started to approximate what the Netflix conversion process does.
Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:4, Funny)
Worst online video service ever.
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That's funny, I was just telling someone how I couldn't tell the difference in regular TV and Netflix's Watch Instantly (on a 42" set)...Granted I wasn't expecting it to be great quality, I am still impressed with the service.
Apart from a limited selection (~5K titles), and the fact it only wants to run in IE (but has a simple full-screen interface), it is everything I would expect from the company's early approach at on demand streaming video.
I guess YMMV, but they do include it at no additional cost
Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:5, Interesting)
I drive by the store containing the kiosk (which is directly across the street from Blockbuster and Hollywood) at least several times a day. I'd rather put my money there ($5 for a rental at Blockbuster? Please.) and have slim pickings than go to Blockbuster.
Can someone please explain to me why you are willing to pay astronomical monthly fees for Netflix on a recurring basis and you might not even get your #1 choices? I just don't understand how the business model survives.
Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:5, Informative)
On top of that, when my monthly fee dropped from $9.99 to $8.99, I had to do nothing; my monthly rate automatically went down.
Seems pretty fair to me.
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Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:5, Interesting)
Now on the other hand: if all you want to do is see the major releases and not pay $10 to see it in a theater, then cruising the video kiosk is certainly the way to go.
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The mode of rental is very different, though - it just clicks once you build your queue and start getting films.
It's not about dropping by on a random moment of ennui, to pick up a movie that is hopefully not horrid... it's about setting up your 'movie wish list', and knowing that practically anytime you want you will have a Good Movie (TM) you actually want to watch.
I haven't been as lu
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why netflix (Score:4, Informative)
definitely live in a different area than me. Kiosk at my safeway has under 30 movies, and most are around $3-4. pre netflix I watched 3-4 a month, and had watched every movie I was interested in (that was available) a few years back.
Netflix has a great site, I have rented 300 movies in the last 2 years, and I have 50 movies in my queue. The site has no problem finding new (to me) movies. No more wondering rental stores, or hanging out at a kiosk daily. monthly I visit netflix.com, and imdb.com in seperate tabs, 1 hour max to top off a new list of movies for us. To do anything equivalent at a remote site would require printing the results of the same browsing, and printing the queue, and then hunting for which of them are their.
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I like variety. Netflix has almost everything I want, and when they don't, they tend to get it in quickly.
I consider Netflix to be reasonably cheap. $12 a month for me, and I pay four times that much for internet service and six times that much for electricity. It's just not a significant cost, and it easily pays for itself in convenience and selection.
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That's fine for you, but ... (Score:2)
isn't a universal opinion.
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Not only that, but the movies I get from Netflix are not even available at Blockbuster, and they aren't at your friendly neighborhood Torrent site, either.
Netflix is great because it's a long-tail model business, just like Amazon. Sure they make money on the best sellers, but they really excel at serving up the rarities, and their customer base
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Re:Thank Big Tel/Cable (Score:4, Interesting)
On the onc hand, TV stations are broadcasting digital signals over the air (wireless!). These look beautiful in HD today and will only get more numerous and stronger, especially when analog signals go away in a few years and interference is no longer an issue.
For the few non-broadcast TV providers worth watching (e.g. ESPN, HBO), the Internet will become the platform of choice. The need for a special "set-top box" to receive cable signals will be displaced by plain old PC's connected to the Internet.
Anyone who has both Cable and Internet is basically paying for the same thing twice (especially if you get one of those stupid "triple plays" from the same provider). People will eventually figure out that Cable is a subset of Internet and stop paying separately for it.
Phone service, on the other hand, may survive as a distinct offering because of its importance in real life. No one has an emergency need for Cable TV, though, so it will fade.
This is the lesson of the PC revolution, repeated over and over: General purpose PC (with networking) displaces special purpose hardware. This is why Netflix (or its descendants) will be around long after Cable is a memory.
Local connectivity really isn't even the main prob (Score:2)
That wouldn't matter with a strong BitTorrent like distribution network. The speeds we have today from cable interest are fast enough for streaming 720p Divx video in almost real time.
Until commercial interests embrace network efficient distribution, there will always be enough bottlenecks somewher
Blockbuster lost my business (Score:5, Informative)
They have a grandfather clause (Score:2, Informative)
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I do miss in in-store pickups and just browsing the selection in person. Though, I had NCIS S
lost my business, too (Score:2, Interesting)
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I'm fine with Netflix but I really don't have that much of an option with Blockbuster, there aren't any that are nearby, I think it's 15 miles.
My only problem with neflix (Score:4, Insightful)
It would be nice if someone offered a service where I could just request a movie, pay my couple of bucks or whatever and have it mailed. If I didn't want anything that month then I wouldn't have to pay.
Re:My only problem with neflix (Score:5, Informative)
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The response to that is that Blockbuster's rates for new releases are ridiculous. It's been a while since I've used my Blockbuster account, so I might be a few percent off here, but Blockbuster is now charging close to $4.00 (USD) for DVD rentals. So you don't need to watch too many movies per month with Netflix to blow Blockbuster away for value.
My experience with Netflix is that they're one of those rare businesses that keep excee
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Re:My only problem with neflix (Score:5, Funny)
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That cheap, huh? Last time I rented a movie at Blockbuster it was something like $6.50 after tax.
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Netflix confirms it! (Score:5, Funny)
It would not be hard to beat netflix on-line... (Score:5, Informative)
The chink in the armor is the selection. While they have a massive collection of DVDs, the streaming selection is really poor. I would not pay extra for it as it stands. At home, It looks about the same as a DVD on a high bandwidth connection - here [multiply.com] for example, is a movie getting piped to a TV via my laptop. Bandwidth in hotels works better than I expected, and it is good enough for watching on a computer. I hear Blockbuster might have better selection... they should embrace the streaming!
Total Access kicks Netflix's butt (Score:5, Insightful)
Netflix constantly sent me random movies from my queue instead of using anything remotely resembling the order I'd prioritized them in. IIRC, they were everntually sued for that.
Blockbuster only seems to have tried that twice with me and a single email to their customer care address resolved that and got me an apology along with it.
I can also drop my total access movies off at the local LackLuster and trade them for free in-store rentals. And they ship my next online rentals the next day.
Not affiliated, just a happy customer.
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I've got to agree.. (Score:2)
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I think we may need to recognize that there may be some regional differences in both services. My local Netflix center is very good.
Damn (Score:4, Interesting)
Their website sucks (while Netflix's is fantastic), but they still have a larger catalog. I've never had any throttling problems at all. I hope they don't go under. I have something like 600 movies in my queue and no way in hell to pull it out without some nasty screen scraping...
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I'll stuff 8 DVDs in my mailbox monday and have the next 8 from my queue on wednesday. For me, that's perfect. I'm not sure what you don't find in Netflix's catalog, but i've found everything i've gone looking for. THey even have obscure things like random yoga videos, foreign and B movies...
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NO WAI! (Score:3, Informative)
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Amazingly... (Score:5, Insightful)
First time in my life a subscription service has gotten cheaper.
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I even bought stock. Why? Because, I once exclaimed if I owned a $1,000 of Netflix stock and were they to go belly up (back when media was saying doomed to die) that I'd actually be more bummed about losing the service than the cash.
Of note, I've dropped cable/sat and pretty much feast on Netflix+iTunes. Netflix's online offerings are more limited but quality is usually much better than iTunes downloads; and quicker start times. iTunes gives me more current TV shows. Netflix gives
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Blockbuster followed up and did exactly the same. Blockbuster's queue is far better than Netflix's too -- you get the movies in the order you queued them, almost no exceptions.
Their system for series dvds is kind of buggy though -- I got disc 2 of The Prisoner full series before disc 1, returned it, and I've never seen another one from it since, it shows as unavailable in my queue. Another couple series items had similar problems -- once it gave
What rock have editors/bloggers been living under? (Score:3, Funny)
What rock have editors/bloggers been living under? This may have been news say...4 years ago. Blockbuster launched a service like Netflix in 2004-ish (that's 3 years ago) and since then, well since then who cares, because pretty much everyone I know switched over to, um, digital downloads.
Seriously, a Netflix PR blog-vert in 2007?
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I think their total access program is awesome. I have tried all the services (Netflix, Blockbuster, Walmart). Netflix just delivered the best service. I move every 3 months for my schooling and internship program (Kettering University, formerly GMI, which goes on a 3 month school/3 month internship schedule). The best service, as it comes to delivering movies is certainly Netflix.
I haven't been subscribed for a few terms, but decided that I'd
Some companies deserve to die. (Score:3)
Re:Some companies deserve to die. (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is not that hard (Score:2, Informative)
* You rent a movie January 1.
* It is due January 8th.
* If you don't return it by January 15th, they assume you are keeping it forever. You get charged the price of the movie.
* If you return it before February 15th, the price of the movie is refunded and you are charged a $1.95 restocking fee.
They make this completely clear when their automated system calls you about your movie being overdue.
I still don't think this lives up to "no late fees," but as
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Anyw
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Not just Blockbuster (Score:2)
I'd consider blockbuster... (Score:2)
Blockbuster is ignoring it's strongest asset. The brick and morter is the best thing they have going for them, and they refuse to capitalize on it.
Other alternatives: (Score:3, Informative)
I rent my videos from Redbox.com [redbox.com]. I don't rent enough movies to really justify spending on a Netflix subscription and the idea of depending $4.50 on a DVD rental is absolutely preposterous. For $1 + tax I get to watch a DVD--a just price for someone who watches movies as infrequently as I do.
...and no, it doesn't run Linux...but it could.
Corporate vs. Franchise (Score:3, Informative)
Sadly, within two weeks of showing up, Red Box put the local Movie Gallery out of business, which had been my blockbuster replacement for games. Now I'm not sure where to rent games anymore.
Salvation (Score:2, Interesting)
Lovely Contradiction (Score:2)
I think someone's getting a little carried away. Blockbuster are huge, and they're not just in the US. Calm down and sleep on it.
Re:Lovely Contradiction (Score:4, Insightful)
We'll be talking about Gamestop's death eventually (Score:2)
The seeds are planted; now they must converge to the point of making physic
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Do we need Gamestop? Nah. But I'm not paying for digital only distribution. Give me my pretty box and disc please
Bye-bye Blockbuster (Score:2)
And he's right...
Blockbuster would actually be better off re-discovering itself. In fact, it might do better to sell off it's online service to Netflix and do a partnership where Netflix members could swap their discs. And buy themselves a bit more time.
But I've said for a while brick and mortar DVD rentals is dying. In fact, Netflix's model only has another 5-15 yrs before it goes the same. But Netflix is actively engaged in developing the means for TV on demand in order to keep it's future
Ignore the "Barack Obama" line (Score:2)
Forgot to remove it...
"Ron Paul" would be better than Obama though.
Can't be botherd (Score:2)
Blockbuster lost me when... (Score:2, Insightful)
I called their bluff and said fine take me to court over $20.
They didn't get that money, and they won't ever be seeing anymore from me. the SMART business move would be to send me a buy one get one free voucher, stating as a sign of good will we are wiping your late fee's and would love to have your business back. THAT would have probably seen me giving them repeat business. Now they get nothing.
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I ended up at the counter with the manager and the late fee being requested far exceeded the retail cost of the movie (which was available -- it wasn't some new release). I offered to buy it which was refuse
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You want to be _rewarded_ for failing to keep your end of the bargain/contract up? I mean, there is
Netflix over blockbuster for me (Score:2, Informative)
Anyway, Blockbuster had the edge in the "return to the local store" policy, but of the dozen or so movies we put in our queue, about half were unavailable through Blockbuster. All were available through Netflix. So I decided we would, for the time being, stick with Netfl
The way I see it (Score:3, Insightful)
Neither is good enough (Score:3, Insightful)
a. In native language
b. As complete as Hollywood section
will get my dollars. There is cinema everywhere - Korea, China, Brazil,
Russia - everywhere; but try finding these movies at Netflix. There will
be a few but for instance some of my favorite 1970's French movies are
not there. Many good movies are indies or equivalent - short run, never
been in wide release type. Again, hard to find. Some movies were dubbed
into other languages. Are these dubbed versions avaliable along with originals?
No.
I speak Russian. Can I find Eisenstein movies on netflix? In Russian?
These guys do not want my dollars so they don't get them.
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Ins
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All they'd have to do is redirect me to those servers
for downloading the movie I want.
I have not tried p2p but I doubt it is well-organized,
annotated, and has informative user reviews. I want a
polished service and nothing less will do. I am just
fine not watching movies except in theaters. But if
I could get what I wanted just when I wanted in the
format I wanted then I'd pay a subscription fee for
those rare "spur of the moment" downloads.
"No late fees" and no movies either... (Score:2)
I prefer Bllockbuster to Netflix (Score:3, Insightful)
2nd.) The blockbuster 500 yards from my apartment, will let me exchange my mail order movies for free ones
3rd.) as a result the best value for my dollar come from blockbuster.
Assuming I can get 3 new movies every 4 days via mail from either service I get 21 (rounding down) movies a month. However, with blockbuster, I get 21 more from the store. 42 movies block buster (approx $0.595 per movie), 21 movies netflix ($1.19/movie).
It's obvious which service will quickly fill up your disk drive while giving you an excellent value.
Re:Needless to say... (Score:5, Insightful)
But as I see it, even if the MPAA *did* blame it on piracy, the article is about Netflix *winning*, so right there is a built in counter-argument. That is to say, "If it's piracy, MPAA, then shouldn't Netflix be eating shit too??"
However, there is the argument that the MPAA is a buncha lying fucks, so in a way you have a point. Don't put anything beyond them, even if there is a possibly logical argument to the contrary.
Re:Needless to say... (Score:5, Interesting)
I know my statement appeared as a general hatred of the MPAA, without much forethought, but they do lose money with netflix compared to brick and mortar.
This whole argument depends on netflix and blockbuster both having sensible purchasing policies with demand analysis. I don't know that.
Re:Needless to say... (Score:5, Interesting)
About a year ago, I stumbled into a forum where film makers were talking about current distribution trends. Apparently, Netflix is considered a major distribution venue, and is quite profitable for films that normally wouldn't see a wide distribution. Some independant filmmakers see Netflix as a godsend.
There was some discussion on some of Netflix's constraints; Netflix will only carry DVDs that are at least 1 hour in length. This causes some documentary producers to stick 10-15 minutes of filler into a special edit for Netflix.
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I don't know what you are talking about, Mr. Nay-Saying Anonymous Coward. I have been using Netflix for four years. I use three profiles--one for TV series, one for American movies, and one for foreign movies. I *always* get either the first or second item for all three lists.
I do have my complaints with Netflix, though. The main one is the well-known fact that they throttle disk delivery. I understand why they do it from on economic perspective; but I don't think their practice matches their rhetoric. It
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Where do you think the "pirates" get their movies? Netflix makes it cost efficient. Blockbuster does not.
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Unless, of course, you use Blockbuster Online. Also, since each movie doubles as a free rental if you take the inconvenience to return it to the store, it's probably more cost-efficient.
Of course, you're then restricted by the somewhat lower variety at Blockbuster Online, and further by the much lower variety at any given Blockbuster store.
No easier way to, say, rent the Battlestar Galactica (insert your favorite TV show) DVDs. With some strategy in queuing, you'll basically always have the next one at
Re:Needless to say... (Score:4, Insightful)
For 17.99 a month you get 3 by mail at once, unlimited by mail per month, PLUS you can take them into the store and trade each in for store flicks, and they STILL mail you your next 3.
A pirate could kick ass on volume with Blockbuster. Not that I would ever look at it that way. I'm legit. Promise.
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Re:Don't they have a similar service now (Score:5, Interesting)
Exactly - I never plan on signing onto Netflix (Score:2)
Netflix, can you ever hope to match that?
I'm going to be pissed if my consumer choice is ruined and I can't get the service I get now because of this "competition".
When Netflix is the on
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Netflix and Blockbuster, both, are in a fight for their lives, but it is Blockbuster that has arrived late to the game Netflix is playing. Their Plywood & Drywal
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Maybe 10 years ago. Sure as hell isn't the case now. Got the unrated Requiem for a Dream there years ago. I almost wish I got the edited version.
The bad guy you're looking for now is Wal-mart.
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For comparable plans, Netflix and Blockbuster have the exact same prices. Both have a 3-out-at-a-time plan for $16.99, a 2-out-at-a-time plan for $13.99, a 1-out-at-a-time plan for $9.99, and a 2-movies-per-month plan for $4.99.
Given that, it's down to the small ways that they find to differentiate themselves. Netflix has streaming movies, although others have said the selection there
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