Moderator: Andrew
Ehwmatt wrote:Behshad wrote:brandonx76 wrote:They skirt the main issue...no need to apologize, but if you're going to, then you should just go back to your previous pricing model...still a pretty good value though...
So after they lose the Starz contract, won't alot of their content go away?
Any movies that start off with teh Starz logo will go away, I think during the past 2 years Ive seen probably 4-5 that were Starz exclusive.
Just about any halfway decent movie I've watched off the streaming service was Starz. The movie content on the streaming service is laughable at best already. And I'm not even opposed to cheesy 80s movies. But man, I haven't even heard of the shit they have on there.
As far as them being able to do whatever they want with the pricing, tell me a business that increases its flagship/basic product by 65-70% in a month's time that survives (other than utilities/necessities).
At bottom, one of two things happened here:
1. Netflix knew their pricing was bogus all along, did it for a few years to rope people in and help expedite the death of competitors (e.g., Blockbuster), and hoped they could get you hooked on the service enough to tolerate the price increase. This is the smart phone/data plan model the cell phone providers obviously followed from day one.
2. They legitimately thought they could undercut competitors with their pricing and it backfired.
Neither is excusable and either will lead to Netflix being a business laughingstock within a few years.
Behshad wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Behshad wrote:brandonx76 wrote:They skirt the main issue...no need to apologize, but if you're going to, then you should just go back to your previous pricing model...still a pretty good value though...
So after they lose the Starz contract, won't alot of their content go away?
Any movies that start off with teh Starz logo will go away, I think during the past 2 years Ive seen probably 4-5 that were Starz exclusive.
Just about any halfway decent movie I've watched off the streaming service was Starz. The movie content on the streaming service is laughable at best already. And I'm not even opposed to cheesy 80s movies. But man, I haven't even heard of the shit they have on there.
As far as them being able to do whatever they want with the pricing, tell me a business that increases its flagship/basic product by 65-70% in a month's time that survives (other than utilities/necessities).
At bottom, one of two things happened here:
1. Netflix knew their pricing was bogus all along, did it for a few years to rope people in and help expedite the death of competitors (e.g., Blockbuster), and hoped they could get you hooked on the service enough to tolerate the price increase. This is the smart phone/data plan model the cell phone providers obviously followed from day one.
2. They legitimately thought they could undercut competitors with their pricing and it backfired.
Neither is excusable and either will lead to Netflix being a business laughingstock within a few years.
Theyre just gaining more power by adding videogame rentals to their services. That alone will bring over enough people to make sure they still stay strong.
I dont know what fiasco youre talkin about. Netflix simply realized that more and more people want to go over to STREAM ONLY , which is great that they separated their services. Again, for $8/m you get plenty to choose from , even after Starz is gone.
Ehwmatt wrote:Just about any halfway decent movie I've watched off the streaming service was Starz. The movie content on the streaming service is laughable at best already. And I'm not even opposed to cheesy 80s movies. But man, I haven't even heard of the shit they have on there.
Rip Rokken wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Just about any halfway decent movie I've watched off the streaming service was Starz. The movie content on the streaming service is laughable at best already. And I'm not even opposed to cheesy 80s movies. But man, I haven't even heard of the shit they have on there.
2 nights ago I flipped thru the New Releases on streaming Netflix, and out of 250 entries displayed in my queue, I literally only recognized 3 major "new release" theatrical release titles, and they were at the top of the list. The rest were either very old or predominately 2nd/3rd/4th string titles. Was pretty disappointed.
So is there a better all-inclusive streaming service? How about Hulu Plus? I've been using Netflix exclusively as a subscription service, with a combination of Redbox and Amazon for movies/TV shows I can't get there.
Rip Rokken wrote:Ehwmatt wrote:Just about any halfway decent movie I've watched off the streaming service was Starz. The movie content on the streaming service is laughable at best already. And I'm not even opposed to cheesy 80s movies. But man, I haven't even heard of the shit they have on there.
2 nights ago I flipped thru the New Releases on streaming Netflix, and out of 250 entries displayed in my queue, I literally only recognized 3 major "new release" theatrical release titles, and they were at the top of the list. The rest were either very old or predominately 2nd/3rd/4th string titles. Was pretty disappointed.
So is there a better all-inclusive streaming service? How about Hulu Plus? I've been using Netflix exclusively as a subscription service, with a combination of Redbox and Amazon for movies/TV shows I can't get there.
G.I.Jim wrote:Well, we cancelled our disc service today. Fuck Netflix and their fees! I'll stick to downloads only, and if they jack those up, I'll stick with Redbox and just say the hell with them altogether. I hope the damn company crumbles after what they've done to the rental industry. I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
G.I.Jim wrote:Well, we cancelled our disc service today. Fuck Netflix and their fees! I'll stick to downloads only, and if they jack those up, I'll stick with Redbox and just say the hell with them altogether. I hope the damn company crumbles after what they've done to the rental industry. I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
Ehwmatt wrote:G.I.Jim wrote:Well, we cancelled our disc service today. Fuck Netflix and their fees! I'll stick to downloads only, and if they jack those up, I'll stick with Redbox and just say the hell with them altogether. I hope the damn company crumbles after what they've done to the rental industry. I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
I wouldn't go so far as to say I miss rental stores. I certainly don't miss going to a store to rent a new release and seeing all 50 copies already taken out. By the end, they were charging $6 a rental. Fuck that.
G.I.Jim wrote:I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
Behshad wrote:Just go to Hulu's website to see what kind of (crappy) catalog they got.
Amazon have their Prime option, which for $80/year gives you access to all their streamable content. However, there arent many devices out there that can stream this to your TV or phone, so youre stuck with your PC/Mac.
Rip Rokken wrote:G.I.Jim wrote:I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
I do, too! Sometimes I'd get to know the people who work there, and enjoy talking about films and getting recommendations - plus, they'd stash away a copy of that new release for me before the masses came in and cleaned them out. It was fun, and I definitely miss it.
Behshad wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:G.I.Jim wrote:I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
I do, too! Sometimes I'd get to know the people who work there, and enjoy talking about films and getting recommendations - plus, they'd stash away a copy of that new release for me before the masses came in and cleaned them out. It was fun, and I definitely miss it.
And of course you asked them (the cashier) to sign your copy for you.
txfirefighter wrote:Behshad wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:G.I.Jim wrote:I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
I do, too! Sometimes I'd get to know the people who work there, and enjoy talking about films and getting recommendations - plus, they'd stash away a copy of that new release for me before the masses came in and cleaned them out. It was fun, and I definitely miss it.
And of course you asked them (the cashier) to sign your copy for you.
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Okay, B.....now THAT was funny!
Sorry, Rip!
Rip Rokken wrote:txfirefighter wrote:Behshad wrote:Rip Rokken wrote:G.I.Jim wrote:I actually miss going to Blockbuster and Hollywood. I miss browsing the aisles with my son and picking movies together. It was more of an experience than just picking a movie online. Maybe it's just me that feels that way?
I do, too! Sometimes I'd get to know the people who work there, and enjoy talking about films and getting recommendations - plus, they'd stash away a copy of that new release for me before the masses came in and cleaned them out. It was fun, and I definitely miss it.
And of course you asked them (the cashier) to sign your copy for you.
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Okay, B.....now THAT was funny!
Sorry, Rip!
I'm going to hit Welnack up to sign my pics from the Nikki Sixx event.
Don wrote:Amazon Prime isn't a bad deal if you make a lot of purchases through that site any way.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-201115 ... eStories.0
Thanks to a new licensing deal Amazon has made with 20th Century Fox, later this fall Amazon Prime members will be able to instantly stream such TV shows as "24," "The X-Files," and "Arrested Development" and such movies as "Office Space" and "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid."
The deal will bring the total number of "free" Prime instant videos to more than 11,000 movies and TV shows as Amazon continues its efforts to match up with Netflix in the digital streaming arena.
Amazon Prime currently costs $79 a year and allows members to get free two-day shipping on many products Amazon sells. Amazon is heavily pushing the program with enticements like video streaming because it stands to reason that Prime members are Amazon's most loyal shoppers.
Other popular Fox movies Amazon is citing in the deal are "Speed," "Mrs. Doubtfire," "Doctor Dolittle," "Last of the Mohicans," and classics like the "The Longest Day," and "All About Eve." Other TV shows include "NYPD Blue," "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Ally McBeal," and "The Wonder Years." Only "Wonder Years" is currently not available on Netflix for streaming or on disc.
Yesterday, The New York Times reported that DreamWorks Animation had signed a licensing deal with Netflix, "replacing a less lucrative pact with HBO." CNET's Greg Sandoval called the deal "more spin than win," arguing that Netflix was trying spin the limited DreamWorks deal into a worthy replacement for Starz. Sandoval says Netflix users won't get DreamWorks content until 2013.
Netflix purportedly has somewhere in the neighborhood of 20,000 videos available for streaming or nearly twice the amount of videos that Amazon offers. However, as Amazon continues to chip away at the numbers gap, Netflix users may be more likely to jump to Amazon because its streaming service is technically cheaper at $6.58 per month versus $7.99 for Netflix--and you get a Prime membership with free shipping thrown in.
Behshad wrote:Qwikster is gone before it even arrived.
http://news.yahoo.com/dvds-stay-netflix ... 14851.html
mikemarrs wrote:Lost nearly a million subscribers...![]()
http://money.cnn.com/2011/10/24/technol ... _earnings/
Don wrote:For the shows that I like to watch, Amazon Prime does the trick. Since my family uses Amazon regularly for shopping, the free two day shipping in the Prime package makes it a new brainer for us.
Yes, they don't have the biggest selection of media yet but it is growing and the shipping isn't for everything but overall,the $79 bucks for one year works for me.
Behshad wrote:Don wrote:For the shows that I like to watch, Amazon Prime does the trick. Since my family uses Amazon regularly for shopping, the free two day shipping in the Prime package makes it a new brainer for us.
Yes, they don't have the biggest selection of media yet but it is growing and the shipping isn't for everything but overall,the $79 bucks for one year works for me.
As soon as Amazon comes out with an app for iphone/iPad/PS3, I might switch over from Netflix.
The 2 day shipping doesnt mean much , cause I always use their free supersaver shipping and still get items within 2-4 days
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