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Invelos Forums->General: General Discussion |
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Would You Ever Download Films |
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Registered: October 6, 2008 | Posts: 1,932 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting FilmAlba: Quote: ...So the only option left to me was sit on my ar$e or try to get into college again. It's all good. I was just joshing you. |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
| Registered: May 19, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,917 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting hal9g: Quote: So when we get our first 1 yottabyte hard drive? When we become One with the Force. |
| Registered: August 23, 2008 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,656 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting hal9g: Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: You'll be seeing petrabyte drives for home use on the shelves within 2 years.
The common spelling is "petabyte" and the estimated production time line is 2 to 5 years.
See HERE.
And 1024 petabytes is an exabyte; 1024 exabytes is a zettabyte; 1024 zettabytes is a yottabyte (1 trillion terabytes or a quadrillion gigabytes or a quintillion megabytes or a sextillion bytes [1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000] or 8 sextillion bits).
So when we get our first 1 yottabyte hard drive? Totally fat fingered that. Yeah, the technology has already been busted a few years ago for the ability to put a peta on a 3.5" drive, it's just a matter the manufacturing. We are closer to 2 than 5 for seeing this in, at the very least, business applications. The way drive space has been rocketing, I would imagine a yottabyte drive in 20 - 25 years. I may be over guestimating it, too. That's insane. | | | Reviewer, HorrorTalk.com
"I also refuse to document CLT results and I pay my bills to avoid going to court." - Sam, keeping it real, yo. |
| Registered: March 10, 2009 | Posts: 2,248 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting hal9g: Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: You'll be seeing petrabyte drives for home use on the shelves within 2 years.
The common spelling is "petabyte" and the estimated production time line is 2 to 5 years.
See HERE.
And 1024 petabytes is an exabyte; 1024 exabytes is a zettabyte; 1024 zettabytes is a yottabyte (1 trillion terabytes or a quadrillion gigabytes or a quintillion megabytes or a sextillion bytes [1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000] or 8 sextillion bits).
So when we get our first 1 yottabyte hard drive? sex ey? |
| Registered: September 29, 2008 | Posts: 384 |
| Posted: | | | | I don't think disc based or some form of hard medium will ever disappear. I think it's pretty much embedded into our brains that when we buy something, we want something physical that we can hold on to. This isn't true for everyone, no, but there will always be a market for it. And while we will see disc based sales drop in the future, the two will always coexist in my opinion. Or at least they will for a very long time.
Just look at CDs and MP3s. MP3s have been out for ages. They've really been a huge success with iTunes and whatnot, but CDs still exist and probably will for my lifetime. Since video on demand and video download type services are ages behind the music business and the fact that you can get a substantial and marketable difference in quality by increasing storage space (Bluray), unlike music (DVD music failed big time), I don't see discs disappearing.
Point I'm making is this. Bluray isn't the last video upgrade we'll be getting. There will be another upgrade down the road. And downloading HD video, either streaming or full downloads, are limited by internet speed and storage space even now. Standard Def works fantastic, but I think these technologies will always trail what the disc based media is bringing to the market.
So discs are here to stay, but it is a shrinking market.
As for me...I hate buying a digital only copy. I want something physical. At the same time though, I'm forced to buy a digital item sometimes. Games are often times only released via digital download if they are deemed to be not profitable enough to make a disc (or not large enough). | | | "The perfect is the enemy of the good." - Voltaire | | | Last edited: by Vittra |
| Registered: May 8, 2007 | Posts: 823 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Alien Redrum: Quote: Streaming and downloads are the way of the future, like it or not. And as long as it employs DRM that tells me what I can and can't do with it, it will get absolutely no support whatsoever from me, and hopefully many many other people. I will always want a physical product over a digital one. Always. | | | 99.9% of all cat plans consist only of "Step 1." |
| Registered: August 23, 2008 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,656 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Grendell: Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: Streaming and downloads are the way of the future, like it or not.
And as long as it employs DRM that tells me what I can and can't do with it, it will get absolutely no support whatsoever from me, and hopefully many many other people.
I will always want a physical product over a digital one. Always. Ah, but that's another discussion (DRM). I, too, dislike DRM immensely which is why I will never purchase mp3s from iTunes. I'm very curious to see how the DRM will work in the future, especially with Amazon offering many of their downloads DRM free. | | | Reviewer, HorrorTalk.com
"I also refuse to document CLT results and I pay my bills to avoid going to court." - Sam, keeping it real, yo. |
| Registered: May 22, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,033 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Alien Redrum: Quote: Quoting Grendell:
Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: Streaming and downloads are the way of the future, like it or not.
And as long as it employs DRM that tells me what I can and can't do with it, it will get absolutely no support whatsoever from me, and hopefully many many other people.
I will always want a physical product over a digital one. Always.
Ah, but that's another discussion (DRM).
I, too, dislike DRM immensely which is why I will never purchase mp3s from iTunes.
I'm very curious to see how the DRM will work in the future, especially with Amazon offering many of their downloads DRM free. you are aware that iTunes dropped DRM right? http://www.macworld.com/article/138000/2009/01/drm_faq.html-Agrare |
| Registered: August 23, 2008 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,656 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Agrare: Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: Quoting Grendell:
Quote: Quoting Alien Redrum:
Quote: Streaming and downloads are the way of the future, like it or not.
And as long as it employs DRM that tells me what I can and can't do with it, it will get absolutely no support whatsoever from me, and hopefully many many other people.
I will always want a physical product over a digital one. Always.
Ah, but that's another discussion (DRM).
I, too, dislike DRM immensely which is why I will never purchase mp3s from iTunes.
I'm very curious to see how the DRM will work in the future, especially with Amazon offering many of their downloads DRM free.
you are aware that iTunes dropped DRM right? http://www.macworld.com/article/138000/2009/01/drm_faq.html
-Agrare I had heard that, but couldn't find the article, so I figured it was wishful thinking on my part. It's good that they did, and it's good for the future, too. That said, it doesn't change my opinion on iTunes. Their business model is irritating (but genius) and the iTunes software is way too bloated for my taste. | | | Reviewer, HorrorTalk.com
"I also refuse to document CLT results and I pay my bills to avoid going to court." - Sam, keeping it real, yo. |
| Registered: October 19, 2008 | Posts: 409 |
| Posted: | | | | No, Idon't even rent, If I want tosee something I will but it. |
| Registered: May 9, 2007 | Posts: 1,536 |
| Posted: | | | | At the moment, there are too many restrictions. From Europe, you can't buy US online movies or TV-series (much like with music originally), and European suppliers are scarce, if existing at all. Buying Blu-Rays or DVD is easy though. | | | Hans |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 767 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Staid S Barr: Quote: At the moment, there are too many restrictions. From Europe, you can't buy US online movies or TV-series (much like with music originally), and European suppliers are scarce, if existing at all. Buying Blu-Rays or DVD is easy though. That's one of the main reasons why I don't download (or buy blurays). With a regionfree player, there's no limit to the titles available to purchase. Once affordable regionfree blurayplayers are available, I might consider it, but for now I'll stick to dvd. | | | Last edited: by marcelb7 |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 51 |
| Posted: | | | | The average consumer doesn't care about special editions, bonus-material, packaging, media etc.. Important is the price (cheap, cheaper, much more cheaper ) and easy availability of movies. Most friends of mine don't want to "own" a movie. They want to see it onetime and thats it. And this is the future of streaming and vod. Today the studios (I can only talk for germany) doesn't really like vod because they don't have the physical controll about the media. But this will change as you can seen in other countries (netflix came to my mind). DVD, Blu-ray and the next formats after this won't die, but the market will shrink with the growing of vod. A big problem today are the complete different formats used by the vod providers, e.g. my company use an different player than our competitors. Not very consumer friendly, every provider uses their own hardware. By myself I prefer pysical media like DVDs (not DRM infested Blu-ray) and will go with it. But I like vod for movies that I don't want to buy by several reasons. | | | Never argue with an idiot. He brings you down to his level, then beats you with experience.
Wir gegen die Gier - Joseph Weizenbaum (1923 - 2008): Nichts wird unsere Kinder und Kindeskinder vor einer irdischen Hölle retten. Es sei denn: Wir organisieren den Widerstand gegen die Gier des globalen Kapitalismus. |
| Registered: March 19, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,018 |
| Posted: | | | | I read the movie industry is working on a system called DECE to allow for portability of digital content (“Buy Once, Play Anywhere”). The DECE system is being presented at the ongoing CES in Las Vegas. Apparently all the major players in the industry are supporting DECE except Apple and Disney, who - as per usual - will be presenting a competing standard. | | | Last edited: by dee1959jay |
| Registered: May 29, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 3,475 |
| Posted: | | | | I can't see me doing this...I still use a rotary phone and listen to vinyl. |
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