Studios Flirt With Offering Movies Early in Home for $30 (variety.com) 128
It looks like Hollywood studios are not kidding around the concept of making the movies available in the home mere weeks after their theatrical debuts. Variety has a new report this week that claims that six out of seven Hollywood studios are in discussions. From the report: However, the companies, particularly Fox and Warner Bros., are showing greater flexibility about timing. Initially, Warner Bros. CEO Kevin Tsujihara had kicked off negotiations with exhibitors by offering to cut them in on a percentage of digital revenues if they agreed to let them debut films on-demand for $50 a rental some 17 days after they opened. Currently, most major movies are only made available to rent some 90 days after their release. Some studios offer films for sale electronically roughly 70 days after their bow in theaters. Other studios, particularly Fox and Universal, felt that $50 was too steep a price to ask consumers to pay. They are now trying to get exhibitors to agree to a plan that would involve a lower priced premium on-demand option that was made available at a slightly later date, according to three studio insiders and two exhibition insiders. Fox and Warner Bros., for instance, are considering making films available between 30 to 45 days after their opening, but at $30 a rental, a price they believe won't give customers sticker shock. Universal, which is seen as being the most aggressive negotiator in these talks, would like the home entertainment debut to remain in the 20-day range.
Re:Hahahahaha (Score:5, Insightful)
If they make it soon enough after the initial release it would totally be worth it.
$30 is ~ what you would pay for two tickets during non-prime hours, without the popcorn, soda, and goobers. If this were a family movie I could have my wife and kids plus whatever relatives and friends (especially their kids) in front of a current in theater movie with all the popcorn my hot-air popper can make and all the 3-liter soda and candy they can handle during that time period for less than the cost of three tickets.
The biggest problem I see is the spills directly affect furniture I own and I don't get the public performance benefit which counters my wife's pause button abuse issue.
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If they make it soon enough after the initial release it would totally be worth it.
While your math adds up, I still can't get past the logic. Is the movie somehow worse if it's viewed two months later? $2 from Redbox still gets you the same movie experience you described, it is just a little later.
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Is the movie somehow worse if it's viewed two months later?
Yes, as by then you're likely to have seen or heard spoilers... On the other hand, if a movie is over hyped garbage you're likely to have heard this from your friends and might not bother seeing it at all.
I always disliked how some countries got movies much later than others, as you'd end up reading all kinds of spoilers online before you could watch the movie yourself. This has actually improved a bit later - not for the benefit of consumers, but because the studios are greedy and know that word of a lousy
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Don't see why. It's axiomatically of no effect today as people will go see late showings and I'd bet money you yourself have watched movies multiple times despite knowing the story.
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If by "watched movies multiple times" you mean "taking a girl to see a movie" then sure, but watching the movie was not the primary goal of the exercise...
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I personally follow your logic. I am much more likely to buy a BluRay later on and be happier because I get to keep it for about the same price or less than the rental. In fact a significant part of my movie collection is from the bargain table where they sell the former Redbox rentals and the like, I rarely pay normal retail for anything.
A house full of kids and family is a different thing. I consider what I described as an event, not a habit or one-off viewing. I can buy disks for my own thing as a ha
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While your math adds up, I still can't get past the logic. Is the movie somehow worse if it's viewed two months later? $2
Worse, no, but it's also not topical. Part of the experience of seeing a movie when it premieres is being part of the buzz surrounding the discussion of the film. Humans are a social animal (realizing this is slashdot, I feel this must be pointed out), and sharing experiences - such as books or entertainment - is part of the enjoyment of the entertainment.
So, no, the movie is no worse, but the overall experience is diminished. For a second weekend showing, I'd be in for $30, maybe even $50, for a blockbuste
Re: Hahahahaha (Score:2)
I think there's an increasing number of movie fans fed up with movie theatres - I know I am. Talkers, texters, belchers, fidgeters - the sense of entitlement sweeping the culture have turned a lot of theatres into Medieval Times. That may sound like a lot of money, but it's significantly less than a "night out" for two surrounded by assholes. Would I drop that much to see it early? Naw, I'd struggle to think of any movie nowadays that justifies it. It's just a question of how many would. I can see why they'
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$30 is ~ what you would pay for two tickets during non-prime hours, without the popcorn, soda, and goobers.
Maybe if I was intentionally trying to go to the most expensive theater in town.
I can easily purchase non-prime hour tickets at a value theater for $3.50 per ticket ($6 later in the evening) and even just picking a random theater few will break $10 each.
Granted - ticket prices vary by region of the country you may be in but if the movie studios aren't planning to ALSO vary this $30 rate they still are going to have to compete against cheaper tickets in those regions.
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I'm in Houston. I do know of one theater (if it's still there) in Texas City that's rather old where I could get tickets for about $6 in the middle of a weekday while everyone else was at work, otherwise they were about $9 which was still cheaper than everything else. $3.50 isn't going to happen around here on anything that's not about to come out on DVD in a week or two anyways. The Texas City theater was old enough to have non-reclining old-fashioned narrow chairs, older sound systems, etc. My parents
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For a family with 5 or 10 kids, it's definitely a great deal. For me though, I'll stick with $5 movie tickets and eat in advance.
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You missed an important bit of revenue, no commercials. The two reasons they want to charge so much, claims of more than one person watching at a time and of course no commercials to sell. The delay is about cinemas owned by the studios, there is marketing hype associated with going out to the dinner and the cinemas, part of the marketing bull, along with psuedo celebrities as stars (professional liars as somehow being super special in human society). Reality is their biggest competitor is rapidly becoming
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I can't stand when the movie ticket says the movie starts at 8:00 and they don't even start the "reel" until 8:20. I don't mind watching "on-reel" previews, but the slide show with Jim-Bob's used Jalopies and Local Yokel Coffee should stop at 8:00 and the "reel" needs to play.
(yes, I know it's not really reels anymore)
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Why not wait 6 months and pay $1 at the Redbox? Or if you can't be bothered to travel to a Redbox rent it for $5 off Amazon?
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Not earlier, but better for sure. Even if the pirates only get 720 off component.
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I'm guessing you have never came close to a physical act that could lead to kids.
Getting a movie for $30 - $50 at home on my very nice home theater setup is worth it under many scenarios. Consider the logistics and cost of:
- Getting 2 or more kids out the door
- To the theatre
- Parked
- Grouped together
- Past the concession stand with less than a 2nd mortgage worth of snacks
- Seated with 15' of each other after shuffling 20 seats with understanding strangers
- STFUed
- Working out a "I need to potty" strategy
-
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You're projecting. If you think that the logistical challenges associated with taking a couple of children to a movie theatre means that having kids is "your greatest mistake", then having kids would likely be _your_ greatest mistake, and the world will be better off if you can avoid making it.
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It's still a fucking rip off. As it is now, I wait for the disc if I want to watch in high quality. Otherwise, I wait for it to hit as a 'free' title on a streaming service.
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Yep, I'd rather pay a couple of bucks for a used dvd/bluray and spend the other 48 bucks on 24 other movies/shows.
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$30 is the price for 2 seats.
2 seats in a theatre. With a 75 foot screen and high-tech sound.
If you are a family with kids the $30 is a great value
$30 to watch a newish movie in your own home is terrible value when compared to literally every other in-home viewing option. This will interest some folks, but I suspect not very many.
It's not about the screen size, it's field of view (Score:3)
2 seats in a theatre. With a 75 foot screen and high-tech sound.
That you have to sit 100 feet away from. And the "high tech" sound is all about that base, bout that base, bout that base.
I have a projector. When I watch a movie at home the screen is filling as much of my vision as a pretty large movie theater.
I also honestly have MUCH better sound, and that is with a middle of the range receiver with cheap speakers (but there are five of them plus a subwoofer).
$30 to watch a newish movie in your own home i
Re:It's not about the screen size, it's field of v (Score:5, Interesting)
Spend enough money for your kitchen equipment and ingredients, and why eat out anymore? Even if you suck at cooking, there are plenty of options for eating a variety of cuisine of decent quality at home.
Here's why.... people get stir-crazy and want an experience... an event... a reason to get out. True, not all theatres are a pleasant experience, but we have a few in my town with huge leather reclining seats, wide isles, and other and massively overpriced VIP options. So sometimes an 'experience' means leaving the house and sharing it with random strangers.
Oh, and 'bout that bass, I'd probably be evicted from my apartment if I decided to get 'dat bass. So pushing my culinary comments aside, for a lot of people, a big ol' theatre is still a better experience than in-home viewing.
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Spend enough money for your kitchen equipment and ingredients, and why eat out anymore? Even if you suck at cooking, there are plenty of options for eating a variety of cuisine of decent quality at home.
You don't even have to spend that much on equipment or ingredients to get better food.
Here's why.... people get stir-crazy and want an experience
For dining out it makes more sense because you do not have to wash dishes, and SOMETIMES you get better food than you could have made yourself.
For movies there are
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Bay area? I live in Ontario Canada, you insensitive clod. :)
And agreed - but a lot of people live in condos, apartments, and semi-detached homes where the extra bass won't always make you friends with your neighbours... my point was that not everyone lives in a single home, so sometimes the sound is more impressive, (if not better), in a theatre.
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When we take kids to the movies, we have to use earplugs because they never turn it down to child-safe levels for children's movies.
In my area some theaters have once-a-week baby-friendly viewings during the day. Generally has about 20-30 mothers toting a baby or young toddler, and they reduce the volume and keep the lighting brighter. I took a day off to go with my wife and it wasn't bad. Maybe they have a similar offer in your area? The caveat of course is that there is the occasional baby crying.
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If you're willing to pay $30, unless twice as many people will pay, why would they charge less? To make less money?
Re:It's not about the screen size, it's field of v (Score:5, Insightful)
That you have to sit 100 feet away from.
You know there's multiple rows of seats to choose from right? There's a range to choose from you might find enjoyable. I suspect you hate the theatre in general for some reason though.
I have a projector and I like to rub my balls on my awesome sound system.
Good for you.
That made no sense and I could not parse at all what you were trying to say, except for the general concept you were trying to get across of "you are wrong".
I think maybe you're somehow overly offended by my post and your rage has left you unable to parse basic english.
But as noted, you don't even understand that sitting closer to a smaller screen gives an equivalent effect and you consider movie theater audio to be "high tech".
Like I said, some people (apparently you judging by your over-the-top reaction) will like this kind of service, and that's fine. But most people don't have a sound system that they would rub their balls on.
You seem not to be familiar with theaters (Score:2)
You know there's multiple rows of seats to choose from right?
You mean seats that are actually level with the screen, or seats that are closer and make you look way up and are WAY TOO LOUD?
Yes I know about the range of choices.
You do realize at home you can sit closer or further from a TV also? Only you get to also select the hight you see the screen from?
DUH.
Good for you.
Not just good for me, good for everyone. Even the cheapest projector gives a really good picture these days. And it means you can set u
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How much did you spend on your much better sound, amortized over the number of movies you watch?
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How much did you spend on your much better sound, amortized over the number of movies you watch?
I'm not sure what he spent, but lets say it is a very high quality $4k sound system. If he is a typical American he is watching around 1400 hours of TV per year, but lets say only 500 of that is TV where you would appreciate the sound system (the rest is news and talk shows I guess). So if he keeps the sound system for 10 years, it has cost him about $1.50 per two hours of movie / sports / high budget TV content where he is enjoying the extra sound quality.
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How much did you spend on your much better sound, amortized over the number of movies you watch?
I bought my speaker set for say $200 total about 20 years ago... so yeah. You could easily spend much less on speakers today for a really good quality, so long as you do not also buy Monster cables.
I did finally upgrade my also 20 year old receiver to support newer HDMI standards. That was about $200 and I expect to use that for at least ten years (modern electronics as we all know not being nearly as durable so
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$200...really good quality. Yikes.
Assuming 5 channels...Average $40/speaker. I don't think you can get any cheaper than that. You can't home build a good speaker for $40, the bass element alone is more. You can't home build a single sub and 5 mid/highs for $200.
$200 will get you a really good quality set of headphones (or pieces of shit beats if you're stupid).
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Fair enough. I imagined you were one of those fools who spent $2000 on audio cables alone.
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That's nice. I don't. I know exactly one person who does.
Me too, although that puts me in a minority. I think my upstairs neighbours would get upset if I cranked it up to the level of bass I can physically feel; like I get in a cine
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2 seats in a theatre. With a 75 foot screen and high-tech sound.
I like the experience of watching a movie at home better than in the theater. I have a plenty big screen and like my sound system. I also have better snacks and no one talking turning the movie.
$30 to watch a newish movie in your own home is terrible value when compared to literally every other in-home viewing option. This will interest some folks, but I suspect not very many.
I think you'll find that people with good home theater set-ups, and people for whom $30 doesn't even register as an expense overlap considerably. Not everyone is a broke student, after all.
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I think you'll find that people with good home theater set-ups, and people for whom $30 doesn't even register as an expense overlap considerably.
I'm certainly in that overlap, but can't imagine a scenario where I'd be willing to pay that much for the advanced release. I think the intersection of people who don't plan to see the movie at the theatre, want to see the movie ahead of the otherwise public home-release date, and will spend $30 to stream something once, is small.
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I think the intersection of people who don't plan to see the movie at the theatre, want to see the movie ahead of the otherwise public home-release date, and will spend $30 to stream something once, is small.
As a parent, I doubt it is that small. I like talking about recent movies with friends and coworkers, but don't like spending $100 on a babysitter. So $30 to watch the latest Marvel movie at home would be golden.
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Netflix - $10/month (Score:1)
Meanwhile, Netflix is producing originals from Scorcese, Will Smith and Brad Pitt all for $10/month. I'll wait until these $30 movies hit Redbox for a buck.
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I'll wait until these $30 movies hit Redbox for a buck.
It's amazing the studios just don't see the beauty in a $1/view world. I mean Redbox does this with physical media, and get people to actually leave their homes to get the movie. Image the profit if they did what Netflix used to do, which is offer box office movies "people want to see". That last part being the reason pirating exists for the most part.
Let Netflix, HBO, Amazon, etc keep their original content stuff, and someone (maybe Redbox) build a streaming service that pulls from Zettabytes of stored bo
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Actually reasonable (Score:2)
Why Not On Release Day And For A Regular Price? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Or should my basic rights as a lawful, paying customer be upheld EVEN if pirates exploit that?
What exactly is this "right" you have to access content produced by a private company?
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What's the point of keeping people who like to see films @home waiting for 20 - 90 days anyway?
Obviously, it is to pressure you to go to the cinema and spend more money.
And I think it works. I know a lot of people who feel that they have to be the first to see a movie when it comes out. They will go to the cinema to do it.
Direct to video (Score:5, Insightful)
This will finally erase any remaining vestiges of differentiation between "true movies" and "direct to video"/TV shows etc. Which, in turn, in due time will eat into their profits. At the same time, they don't have much choice, do they?
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It's not like they show a trailer for some big movie and the voiceover proudly announces "This one is NOT going straight to video! That means it's good probably!"
One more time? (Score:5, Insightful)
Didn't we discuss this 2 or so weeks ago? Here's a summary of my conclusions (to save everybody time).
Your local theater chain is going to hate this idea, few people will pay this much to see the movie at home instead of the theater, somebody will figure out how to pirate the film from their living room with much better quality and have a full resolution torrent up within 3 hours of the film's release... I think distributers are fooling themselves thinking this will rake in more revenue...
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Didn't we discuss this 2 or so weeks ago?
This time with feeling!
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-I don't care what my local chain thinks
-I know a lot of people with families that would FAR rather pay $30 for their family to watch a movie at home (with pause and rewind) than pay $60+ to go to the movies
-These same people already pay for their home theater to be the way THEY want, which includes no sticky floors and annoying assholes that disrupt movies.
-There are many films, like comedies, that some of us REFUSE to see in the theater. The jokes that come second, and you can't hear because people are al
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Most consumers don't pirate. A lot of those of us who do tend to do it less when paying is an option. [lifehacker.com.au] When I pirate, it's entirely because of extra hoops I have to jump through like having to sign up for cable to watch HBO to watch game of thrones, or "no you have to go to the movie theater to watch that movie you want to watch or wait a few months."
Some p
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somebody will figure out how to pirate the film from their living room with much better quality and have a full resolution torrent up within 3 hours of the film's release.
Even if that happens, pirating weirdly hasn't seemed to cut into the movie studio's profits. So, they probably don't care about that (exception being of course when they're asking for tougher copyright laws).
way too low (Score:5, Funny)
I would want at least $100 from the studio to waste my time watching their movies. $800 to suffer through anything with Tom Cruse in it.
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br>To be fair, his Sci-Fi based movies, of which there are several, have been pretty good. I almost missed seeing Edge of Tomorrow because the only thing my wife knew was "Tom Cruise". I make a Cruise exception for Sci-Fi.
More on topic, if I could pay $30 and see a movie within a couple of weeks of release, I'd be all over it. This fits that gray area between "movies I will definitely see in theater" and "movies I'll wait for because the theat
Cue movie theater buy outs... (Score:2)
Wait I thought it was $50 (Score:2)
There was some earlier Slashdot story that said something like $50 or $70.. glad realism is entering the picture here. Very happy to see some movies on release at home for $30, that actually may get traction.
A side effect may be further upgrades to people's home theater setups as more people take advantage of the tranquility of a movie at home without a bunch of randos.
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The funny part about this is that, before the release of Top Gun and the Pepsi ad which played at the beginning and "sponsored" the videoptape, new releases on VHS and Beta were pushing $90 in 1985 money. And that was so you could watch it on a 25-32" CRT. Amazing how things change...
Open Source is Evil (Score:2)
We are trying to do to movies what we did to software with open source. Reduce its value so much that the people working in the industry struggle to survive. In a capitalist society if you dont pay cash for something you dont value it. We devalued software development by going from license fee based software to open source. Now we want to devalue entertainment by going from Studio funded blockbusters to all Indy movies made on shoestring budgets where the actors have to hold day jobs (Just like those contri
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We are trying to do to movies what we did to software with open source. Reduce its value so much that the people working in the industry struggle to survive. In a capitalist society if you dont pay cash for something you dont value it. We devalued software development by going from license fee based software to open source. Now we want to devalue entertainment by going from Studio funded blockbusters to all Indy movies made on shoestring budgets where the actors have to hold day jobs (Just like those contributing to open source have to hold day jobs)
Are you kidding? There are no shortage of people who will do things in front of a camera FOR FREE in the hopes that people will see them. Some are attention whores. Some are hobbyists. There are probably other categories.
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If YouPorn, RedTube, PornHub and others are any indication, some are attention whores whores.
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We are trying to do to movies what we did to software with open source. Reduce its value so much that the people working in the industry struggle to survive
Huh? That's not what open source did at all. It shifted the value from copying software to creating software. People are still paid to write open source software, it's just that now most of them are paid by companies who want the features added (or the bugs fixed) directly, rather than by some middlemen that want to charge per copy.
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I don't see Red Hat out begging at corners; what's happened is that money isn't paid upfront for some sort of license fee, it's paid out for *support* of the code. If you decide the code is crap, you find an alternative & support *them*. This actually simplifies things by not sinking money into licensing at the beginning, and frankly how most enterprises operate anyway, with the removal of the upfront
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You can still get jobs. You just dont earn the same. 20 years back a good software engineer could make 100-200 dollars an hour and have a lifestyle similar to a doctor. That doesnt happen anymore. The salesmen you hate for charging for copies are the one who were protecting the ecosystem with a high barrier to entry. The extra margin left room for innovation. Right now everyone is just running to stay in the same place and new stuff only gets created in college labs or in a few heavily funded unicorns.
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We are trying to do to movies what we did to software with open source. Reduce its value so much that the people working in the industry struggle to survive. In a capitalist society if you dont pay cash for something you dont value it. We devalued software development by going from license fee based software to open source.
The fact that you think open source software is always free (as in beer) and doesn't create jobs shows how little you understand it.
Now we want to devalue entertainment by going from Studio funded blockbusters to all Indy movies made on shoestring budgets where the actors have to hold day jobs
That's how capitalism works. People pay for what they believe has value. Judging by the latest round of comic book hero movies racking in hundreds of million dollars you can save your crocodile tears.
(Just like those contributing to open source have to hold day jobs)
And what about those thousands of jobs created around open source software? Hosting providers, software developers who use open source tools, massive companies built on open sou
I'm all over this (Score:2)
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This right here is why multiculturalism tends to fail. It's much harder to have a shared bonding experience when you have absolutely nothing in common (religion, culture, ethics/values) with your coworkers.
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There's a whole world of people for whom the bargain side of everything matters more than the thing they got a bargain on.
My dad is like this -- he will always put up with inferior quality or drastically reduced choice if it saves him a buck and it really has nothing to do with his financial status. In fact, he often has broken or otherwise unusable things cluttering his life that he can't use but can't get rid of because he "spent good money on them"
Meanwhile, he spends so much time shopping for a low pri
Still too much (Score:2)
I'm obviously not the market for this. We still pay $1.50 to get our movies at Redbox. We maybe watch three movies a month, so about $5 a month on movies (sometimes less when we get a Redbox coupon). Paying even $30 a month would be extreme sticker shock for us. Heck, every Tuesday around here all the theaters have $5 movie day when all movies all day long are $5, even new releases. So it is just $10 for my wife and I to go watch a new release in the theater. $30? Not going to happen.
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It only means you're not even a potential user, that's all. Myself, I find that renting even for only $1.50 is just too much with the hassle of having to go rent the disc and then bring it back, compared to what Netflix offers for $10 per month while staying at home.
Makes sense for partys (Score:2)
If you are upper middle class family with 2 children and own a media room with a large (60 inch +) TV with fancy seats and a seperate speaker system, then it makes sense to get this product.
Your media room is close enough to theater environment, and it is cheaper to pay $30 for one movie than to buy 4 movie tickets.
And you can also invite friends over and have a party.
Think of it like a superbowl party, but instead it is a DeadPool 2 party.
Its was $50 couple weeks back (Score:2)
Are we in a negotiations stage? If so I would watch any good new release at home on the same day for $10 Give me old movies for $2 each and I'll buy 100's of them if they are cross platform watchable to replace my 800+ dvd collection. Hell even if I lost some of them in say HD crashed I wouldn't care cause @ $2 I'd buy them all again.
But the stud's want to be a get more blood out of a stone boutique business and charge $50 that only some people would buy vs selling for $2 that tens of millions would buy and
A counterproposal (Score:2)
I'd never pay that (Score:2)
Side rant: These fucking ads at the top of Slashdot is the worst fucking thing ever. It keeps flickering as I scroll and covering up the content. Get fucking rid of these, you asshats.
what's the difference? (Score:2)
Oh wait, that's car dealers! Sorry, my mistake.
Just another artificial limit like DVD region (Score:2)
Getting it early just translates to not getting it artificially delayed.
$30.00?? (Score:1)
Yes! (Score:1)
That will make them go on torrent sites even quicker!
It ain't the movie. (Score:2)
It's the whole thing that I pay higher prices for.
I go to a theater to lose myself in cobbled up surroundings I'm not responsible for and simply order goodies off the shelf instead of having to cook them so I can nibble as I watch whatever it is on a huge screen with bombastic sound when required.
I'm going to pay twice the amount to forgo all the things I like about movie going why?
If I'm forgoing the theater, I certainly don't care enough about the viewing delay to shell out twice what I didn't the first t
Anti trust laws (Score:2)
Five bucks (Score:2)
Final offer.
If you can't rip people off in the theater... (Score:2)
...rip 'em off in the home.
A few stories down in my browser is a story about how 18-24 year-olds aren't going to the theater. Why, oh, why would anybody balking at spending $10+/seat in a theater be happy to cough up $30 to watch the same movie in their home?
If that's the best that Hollywood executives can come up with as an answer to a problem of declining box office receipts, then there needs to be a mass housecleaning of the people running the studios. Apparently those currently residing in the boardr
I'm OK with it (Score:3)
I guess that means we get better quality torrents on the first day instead of waiting weeks for the bluray.
Ask consumers (Score:2)
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or you could wait for it to come out on disc and pay $15-20. You know how kids are. They want to watch over and over..(and over and over).