dl once and store it locally.Though MS is pushing DL once, store locally, and expire.
12/5/2007 3:13:17 PM
There are a couple problems with downloading all your content. For one, people like to own shit. They like to have big impressive collections they can jack off too with their friends. The other problem is reliable storage. Right now, hard drives are the best we got. Well, hard drives suck shit and prone to failure. For storing stuff I didn't pay for, they are fine. But the idea of having terabytes of data representing movies that cost $20-$30 a piece isn't as appealing. Let's say that hard drive dies, and you don't have a backup. Well, you're pretty much fucked and have to start downloading it all again at 600kb/s (if the content is still available). I don't want to have to maintain a redundant array of storage devices just to be able to reliably have access to my movie collection that I paid good money for. So until everyone has 40Mbps lines or we have cheap reliable storage, I don't see many people jumping on the "download all your HD movies" bandwagon.
12/5/2007 3:22:03 PM
its an awesome idea for rental but not purchase. but like shrike said, sucks downloading hd content on cable/DSL
12/5/2007 3:25:33 PM
I disagree. DRM right now is broken and the online scene doesn't seem very enticing but I think in the future systems will keep track of what you've bought and allow you to redownload them if your local copy is corrupted or failed.Not to mention, storage will be much larger and much more reliable.It would also be easier to push format updates to client systems without forcing consumers to buy new, expensive players. Take one of our friend's collection, for instance, and how it seamlessly works with the 360. Imagine if you could do that with legal downloads. There'd be no reason to dedicate physical space for junk.Also, bandwidth five years from now should effectively be double what we have now.[Edited on December 5, 2007 at 3:26 PM. Reason : >.<]
12/5/2007 3:26:25 PM
Yea, might as well throw that idea out the window since we are stuck with 5mbps for eternity [Edited on December 5, 2007 at 3:28 PM. Reason : beat me to it]
12/5/2007 3:27:49 PM
Well 5 years from now is 5 years now. HD displays are about to hit critical mass and people are going to want the content now. I think disc media still has a good 10 years left before we go 100% digital. I mean, look at games. Steam has been up and running for 3 years now and people still insist on getting boxes from the assholes at EB Games. Gamers are probably the earliest adopters there are when it comes to new technologies, and they haven't even embraced (legal) digital distribution yet.And I also feel that just like game publishers, a lot of the big movie studios will become very resistant to digital distribution. Just like how Valve broke up with Sierra, once some director with deep pockets realizes he can make, market, and distribute a movie all by himself, without any help from the likes of Warner/Universal/Paramount etc....., the shit will hit the fan.[Edited on December 5, 2007 at 3:54 PM. Reason : :]
12/5/2007 3:45:44 PM
12/5/2007 4:00:22 PM
^named Golovko.
12/5/2007 4:19:12 PM
man lets talk about hd stuff yo, i need more info on this stuff
12/5/2007 4:23:42 PM
So which do you guys think we'll see first:Mass adoption of download-only HD mediaORThe hoverboard from Back to the Future 2??
12/5/2007 4:30:28 PM
12/5/2007 4:37:08 PM
dlc ftw
12/5/2007 4:40:34 PM
12/5/2007 4:58:34 PM
12/5/2007 4:59:36 PM
12/5/2007 5:28:57 PM
all joking aside, I do actually believe that the future will be primarily online downloads.BUTyou're kidding yourself if you think that'll be a reality in the next 5 years. So it's not really a viable replacement for HD-DVD or Blu-Ray as someone stated earlier in thread.
12/5/2007 6:13:17 PM
when terabyte sized hard drives become standard thats when i believe that dlc with overtake it.
12/5/2007 7:11:17 PM
i'd only do online downloads if i could burn a copy
12/5/2007 7:16:11 PM
Woot! Blade Runner FINAL CUT HDDVD
12/5/2007 8:51:21 PM
12/5/2007 9:53:18 PM
12/5/2007 11:26:13 PM
^^stop comparing iTunes to HD movie downloads. You're talking about Gigabytes of data vs 2-3 MB. Not even in the same league. Broadband is just now becoming "standard", I don't think the general public is going to be switching to FIOS or a T3 anytime soon. The internet is "fast enough" for the vast majority of them. Not to mention the infrastructure is nowhere NEAR being there. And the storage also has to catch up. And DRM technology has to catch up. AND content-owning companies have to get their heads out of their asses.It ain't happening anytime soon, face it.
12/6/2007 8:03:52 AM
I think you're greatly underestimating the speed at which technology improves. Storage space, especially, won't be in an issue. Not to mention doesn't something like this already exist? Last I checked you could watch HD movies on demand via your digital cable box. There's obviously some kind of baseline here, it's just an issue of scale and it's silly to go "nope, no way, no how, not possible".Also, I swear people have been saying broadband has been becoming "standard" for about 3 years now.
12/6/2007 8:25:01 AM
"Make love not war?"
12/6/2007 9:05:05 AM
12/6/2007 9:25:54 AM
yeah... last I checked shitty quality iTunes 240*320 movies were considerably smaller than 1080p movies. Isn't that what we were talking about? Oh yes, it was.You're trying to argue that because TV shows have had some *relative* success on iTunes it means reference quality HD will be downloadable on a wide scale soon. Actually, you're saying that it will be the preferred method of delivery...Sorry, but I just don't see the connection.And I don't think some nerds downloading movies + shows on Xbox Live are going to jump start the switch to download-only.
12/6/2007 9:52:46 AM
You seem to think 5 years is "soon", which at the rate that technology matures, is idiotic. How you can say there's no way it'd be possible within 5 years (especially citing infrastructure) when there are already services like this that exist is assinine.Citing storage concerns is even dumber since 5 years ago, people were just starting to be able to burn single layer DVDs. Now people can burn a Blu-ray disc that's holds over 10 times as much data. Not to mention the absolute rock bottom price per GB currently available with hard drives.You can say "hurr, only 50% of houses have broadband to begin with", but I'd imagine even fewer houses have HDTVs. I'm going to go out on a limb and say there's a lot of overlap between those two groups as well.
12/6/2007 10:15:50 AM
12/6/2007 10:25:55 AM
yeah as soon as xbox live makes unlimited tv/movie downloads part of the annual and or monthly fee or if netflix does it (being that many laptops are coming with hdmi now). both hd-dvds and blu-ray will be gone.
12/6/2007 10:47:50 AM
http://holiday.ri-walmart.com/?utm_source=ml&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=holiday&utm_content=dec7[Edited on December 6, 2007 at 10:58 AM. Reason : st]
12/6/2007 10:54:19 AM
12/6/2007 10:58:08 AM
12/6/2007 11:15:26 AM
It's not even that a lot of people don't have broadband. Of the people that do, the average speed is under 2Mbps. We're actually living the good life here in Raleigh, when it comes to broadband believe it or not.Look, people are ok with paying for downloadable music because the convenience factor (and price) outweighs the sacrifice in audio quality, especially if you're doing most of your listening on the go. People don't watch movies on 2" screens though. They watch them on the $1000+ HDTVs and home theater systems. Asking people to pay physical media prices for download who's quality isn't up to par with the physical media will never work. That's the other issue with things like Steam, people figure if the price is the same, they'd rather have the box anyway. You guys are talking about replacing HD media with downloads when we don't even have a service that is a reasonable substitute for buying standard DVDs. You can cite technology, industry, or consumer mindset reasons, but anyway you look at it's just not going to happen anytime soon. If Blu-ray or HD DVD can ever break out of "niche" status (or even get there), they will have a life at least as long as DVD.[Edited on December 6, 2007 at 11:18 AM. Reason : important]
12/6/2007 11:17:59 AM
^my point, in a more eloquent format.
12/6/2007 11:19:35 AM
dude... i take it you haven't downloaded hd content on an xbox 360? really you should try it and then re-write that.[Edited on December 6, 2007 at 11:24 AM. Reason : ,]
12/6/2007 11:24:19 AM
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061222-8486.htmlYou guys should actually buy an xbox360. It would save you the trouble of looking foolish with some of the statements you keep making. The fact that Sony is rolling out its pay-download movie service for PSN highlights that companies see a reason to invest millions in this technology.You keep arguing "but people won't do it, it can't be done!" when I've already stated that it HAS been done, by me, last year.
12/6/2007 11:32:10 AM
I don't need an XBox 360 to know downloading movies works. I've been doing it on my PC from the day I got Road Runner!!! We're not talking about proof of concept here, we're talking about a mass market replacement to physical media.Ok, how about this. When 8 million people download a new release on their XBox 360s instead of rushing out to buy the DVD on day one, then we can have a serious discussion about the death of physical media. Right now, it's just a pipe dream.
12/6/2007 11:39:28 AM
12/6/2007 11:41:22 AM
12/6/2007 11:47:59 AM
guys, no one is saying it can't be done. Hell, I"m not even saying it won't be a reality at some point in the future. But the truth is, it's not a realistic alternative to physical media anytime soon. So while it may someday replace physical media, it is not an option now.And Golovko... seriously... you're the only one that keeps bringing consoles into this. You're just like an annoying little kid. OK, we get it, I love the PS3 and you don't like it. Move on with your life, if you've got one.
12/6/2007 11:53:41 AM
12/6/2007 12:00:02 PM
12/6/2007 12:00:11 PM
plz can knock off it guise
12/6/2007 12:02:36 PM
because the PS3 is a Blu-Ray player, remember? The best selling Blu-Ray player, in fact. I'd say that's not totally out of place to bring it up in a Blu-Ray thread.The fact that your Xbox can download HD media is great, but it's not an indicator that this is the future of HD Media. Notice I haven't said anything at all about PS3 for a while now, while you keep bringing it up again and again. Get some new material, at least.
12/6/2007 12:02:52 PM
you haven't said anything about the PS3 because the debate went from blu ray/hd dvd to digital distribution which funny thing the xbox does both HD DVD and digital distribution. The PS3 just does blu ray. (for now) stop fucking up the thread because someone mentioned a feature of the xbox360.
12/6/2007 12:04:44 PM
12/6/2007 12:07:12 PM
The only reason we're talking about downloads is because someone said "why buy either when downloads will replace them soon". I just don't think that's true.And see: yet again, you turned it into a pissing match b/w the PS3 and 360. NO ONE GIVES A SHIT. Enjoy your Xbox, and I'll enjoy my PS3. It doesn't bother me, why does it bother you so much?
12/6/2007 12:07:20 PM
12/6/2007 12:09:40 PM
Glad we changed your mind.
12/6/2007 12:12:41 PM
12/6/2007 12:14:17 PM