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Originally Posted by RoboDad
which means that people will have to provide hard disk storage for all of those movies, and deal with hard disk failures, backups, and other associated headaches
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That has to be dealt with for music downloads, and the headaches aren't stopping the market for it expanding. And nowadays, people have to deal with the physical media, storage space, damage, keeping track of it, and the potential of losing it or outright theft.
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give people access to a nearly unlimited number of titles for near instantaneous access
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in less-than-DVD quality, and requiring copious amounts of time to download -- not exactly "on demand"
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I was writing about the near future, when quality and download time issues won't be as much of a factor. And when people are willing to wait for the mail for purchases and rentals today, an hour or so for a download, that could even start to be played before finished, may be not much of an inconvenience.
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unfortunately, such services place the viewer at the mercy of the cable company, ISP, the content provider, and possibly other "middle-men", any of whom could cause you to lose access, either by accident or intent
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Again, music downloads face the same issues, and are still thriving. Plus, with downloads instead of streams, loss of internet access would be less of an issue.
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you are aware, are you not, that DRM is a bad thing, and it really doesn't help your case when you use it as a "plus" for VOD
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You are aware that both BD and HD-DVD contain DRM, right? Its not so much a plus for consumers, and I'd rather it not exist, but since studios want it, the fact that online downloads can have it is a plus in terms of content availability.
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Download the most recent episode of a show, along with instant commentary, deleted scenes, etc. Watch it on your home TV
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unless you have more than one, or have a very expensive media server network set up
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When I was with Charter Cable, I had a Moxi DVR box. Moxi was working on a 4-tuner "main sever" box for a house that could then stream to other client boxes in the house. This was just for DVR content. I agree that prices will have to go down on storage and equipment before it becomes widely popular, but this is where I see technology going.
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then download it to your ipod or PSP
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sorry, but I've watched programs on my iPod, and I find the entire experience very unsatisfactory
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Then don't use it that way. Some people do like to use it that way though, and the video could be transferred to other things, like cell phones or TV setups in cars. I'm nust illustrating the portability of some of these options. Imagine bringing a 40-movie collection over to your friend's house to watch, in the form of a tiny device with HDMI-out. On your way over there you're listening to the 200 or so albums of music it's also holding.
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Look, I'm not saying that there is no place for VOD. All I'm saying is that it is foolish to assume that it will replace phsyical media.
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If you look at my other posts, I think it's clear I don't think it will fully replace physical media. It is likely to become the next notable competing format though, much like Itunes is more of a competitor to CD than SACD or DVD-A are.
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For people with high levels of technical expertise, or the money to pay someone who has it, VOD may provide a satisfactory model
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VOD is eventually going to be as easy to use as TIVO. When it reaches the level of the layman being able to turn on his cable box and select thousands to hundreds-of-thousand of TV show episodes, motion picture, short films, music videos, etc. to instantly or near-instantly access, what use does he have for a wall of DVDs the he watches each of only occasionally?
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But for me, and most other people who care at all about real convenience and image quality, VOD is not the answer. At least, not for the next 15-20 years.
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I think your timeline is off. Anyway, I can see HD-DVD and/or BD being around for the nest 15-20 years with no real new disc competitor.
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Using iTunes as an example when talking about bandwidth
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I wasn't talking about bandwidth, I was talking about business model. In fact, as a business model, I see the napster subscription model even better. What is a cable subsription but paying for a better selection? And why are you paying for all those channels you don't watch? Wouldn't it be better to pay to watch what you want, when you want it?
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Whatever improvements are made will be in the form of "opt in" improvements, much the way 1080p has been introduced. It isn't part of the ATSC broadcast standard, but many TVs now support it, and virtually all HD DVD and BD media will use it exclusively.
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1080p is the exception, because it's a logical progression. For LCD and other natively progressive screens, it's not even that much of a jump from handling 1080i. It's like NTSC TVs that can handle 480p. Any other notable improvements will have to improve the resolution, and that seems unlikely.
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But does that leave someone with lesser capabilities in the dark? No, they will simply see the quality that matches their TV, and many will never know the difference.
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If they don't know the difference, where will the impetus to upgrade? We're talking about a whole new format here, some new physical format competitor to HD-DVD or Blu-Ray. The only advantage it would have would have to be improved quality, and the only noticable improvement would have to be more resolution or more audio channels. Do you see people really wanting more resolution than 1080p, or more audio channels than 8.1 in the next few decades? Especially after everyone will first have to switch to HDTV and HD discs, meaning a lot of people will have
just switched when the hypothetical new format comes out?