"Actor Morgan Freeman and Intel are starting a company that will sell movies over the Internet before they are released to DVD. "We're going to bypass what the music industry had to come up with, and that's to get ahead of the whole piracy thing," Freeman told reporters at Sun Valley after making his presentation, which was closed to the press."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050706/ap_on_en_mo/intel_movie_downloads;_ylt=ArSDbPND9Fj...NlYwMlJVRPUCUl
Wouldn't this just make it easier to pirate movies?
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"Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
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Originally Posted by BJ_M
sometimes even on the day of their theatrical release -
I read something about this a few months ago...
I don't think it'll fly -- especially the whole deal with releasing movies on the day of their theatrical release. Seriously now, what studio is gonna buy into this idea? It costs between $6 and $10 per person (depending on where you live, average is $8.50 here) to go to a theatre and watch a movie.
How much will they charge to download it? I doubt people will pay much more than what the price of a ticket would be, AND, what's to stop me from downloading it and then having 10 people over to watch it with me (all for the price of only one "admission")?"To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research." - Steven Wright
"Megalomaniacal, and harder than the rest!" -
Originally Posted by Xylob the Destroyer
I think in the future your going to see this and many other things like it. Those that don't are going to get left behind. -
Originally Posted by thecoalman
this would even reduce/eliminate some post-productions expenses (especially with more & more movie-makers using digital cameras) such as trasnferring to the various sizes of film for all the different theatres/projectors or even putting it on film at all."To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research." - Steven Wright
"Megalomaniacal, and harder than the rest!" -
theaters only use 1 size of film and projection setup for standard theatrical releases .. even for different audio formats - they are all on the same film 4 perf 35mm
only a few studios are using digital cameras yet -- though for scan or cine to digital - if not HD, the cost is pretty low .."Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650) -
My guess is WMV. Thats the only format I've heard the studios trust.
As for me, as much as I USED to love going to the movies, I now have to pay over $10, pay for parking, and then hunt for parking once I return home. So for me to go to a theater these days it had better be a huge production. I'd pay to download movies IF, and it's a big if, the viewing period is long enough. Screw this 24 hour thing Movielink does. They could start the clock once you're like 15 minutes into the movie.
For something like WOTW I'd still want to go to a theater.I don't have a bad attitude...
Life has a bad attitude! -
i hope (though i KNOW this wont happen) that they release them in divx/xvid/some other non DRM'ed to heck and back format........i dont quite like the whole pay per view idea...or the divx rental idea either (im a busy person, i have NO idea when i will be able to watch a movie.......sometimes i only watch one movie in a month, sometimes i watch five in a week..it all depends) If they did actually use a non drm'ed form, i would DEFINATELY go for it, even at ten bux a download...because then i could watch it whenever i wanted to and heck, even dvdr it and watch it on a tv properly.
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Originally Posted by whitejremiahI don't have a bad attitude...
Life has a bad attitude! -
Originally Posted by leebo
Probaly look great with no Macroblocking if it follows in the footsteps of this: https://www.videohelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=273599 -
But there have been instances of movies that were direct-to-video before.
I've seen them on the rental store shelves (noting that I never saw that title advertised before for theater release).
So why should this be any different?
Even so, I think the real competition is with the dvd mail rentals (Netflix and others).
Having a price point below $20 per month and renting upwards of 3 dvds with no penalty for late returns (by mail yet) - that is pretty hard to beat.
The sensible consumer will know which is their better deal.
Netflix-type rentals or d/l - whichever is convenient for them.Whatever doesn't kill me, merely ticks me off. (Never again a Sony consumer.) -
Originally Posted by thecoalman
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Originally Posted by junkmalle
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Originally Posted by thecoalman
Actually the real future will be subscription pricing. For $20 a month you'll be able to watch just about any movie every made any time you want. There will be no reason to keep your own collection. The music industry will do the same but at $5 a month. -
Originally Posted by junkmalle
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it will be a while, broadband still only has about a 50% market penetration in the US, much less than that elsewhere.
whereas many cable and satellite providers are now offering such an 'on-demand' service for movies and television shows & it's "free" (so long as you're already shelling out for digital service)."To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research." - Steven Wright
"Megalomaniacal, and harder than the rest!" -
Originally Posted by Xylob the Destroyer
If it wasnt so expensive in some countries - more countries would have broadband ...
Definition: Broadband access per 100 population
Country Description Amount
1. Canada 6.2 per 100 people
2. Sweden 4.1 per 100 people
3. United States 3.2 per 100 people
4. Netherlands 2.7 per 100 people
5. Austria 2.4 per 100 people
6. Belgium 2.3 per 100 people
7. Denmark 2.3 per 100 people
8. Japan 1.1 per 100 people
9. Germany 1 per 100 people
10. Switzerland 0.8 per 100 people
11. Finland 0.7 per 100 people
12. Norway 0.7 per 100 people
13. Australia 0.6 per 100 people
14. France 0.6 per 100 people
15. New Zealand 0.5 per 100 people
16. Italy 0.4 per 100 people
17. United Kingdom 0.3 per 100 people"Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650) -
Originally Posted by BJ_M
. Not extremely expensive considering the upload speed but if I didn't need it I'd probably still be on dial-up.
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here i get 4000/400 for $40CND , about $35 US
still cheap(er) compared to a lot of other countries .
Now that the powerline thing is happening -- the compitition between PL, DSL , Cable should drive prices down .."Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650) -
Originally Posted by BJ_M
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we only have shaw/rogers/sympatico as the big players i use sympatico dsl i get 3000/800 and im happy although i could use rogers 5000/800 but then that dl limit is gay.
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Originally Posted by CrisCr0ss
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Originally Posted by CrisCr0ss
you have about 40 companies in Toronto you can pick from for DSL - many do not have any caps ..
rogers is 60GB a month - thats not so bad, sympatico has no caps"Each problem that I solved became a rule which served afterwards to solve other problems." - Rene Descartes (1596-1650) -
I have 8Mbps/512Kbps and I pay around 90 a month or so. if I had a download limit every month i would die. I download well over 200GB a month.
The real answer lies in completely understanding the question! -
Morgan Freeman better call your ISP and have a word with 'em!
Seriously:
this is great... its iTunes for the eyes...
Especially if they keep the model "you can keep it 'forever' on the machine(s)
its authorized on"
This beats the offerings to date by a signifcant amount of yardage
Video On Demand up until now is like
"this tape will self destruct in 7 seconds"
remember mission impossible?
Microsoft DIGITAL RIGHTS MANAGEMENT? great if you fancy handcuffs..
I think this could be a step in the right direction! -
The movie industry won't be interested in a cheaper product for us. Even though their costs would plummet if they released it for sale on the internet they still would not lower the price. It would still cost you about $20 to own the movie or $10 to "rent it".
The won't learn from the music industries mistake which was: The music industry had about 10 songs on a cd for bout $10 bucks. So they figured, hey we will eliminate virtually all costs and charge the consumer the same amount, they are idiots, they won't even notice. So they sold their "music" for 99c a piece.
If only they would learn...
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