Anime downloads (the org friendly version)
- BurningLeaves
- Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2007 7:10 pm
- Location: New York
Anime downloads (the org friendly version)
This might be old news, but blockbuster online has jumped on the bandwagon and begun to offer direct downloads of movie titles including <a href="http://www.blockbuster.com/catalog/movi ... ">Anime</a>.
The price is $9.99 but they don't really get too descriptive on what it is your downloading. The file size is listed as 890 mb so your not downloading an entire rip. Format is listed as 'Windows media player' which is a player not a format the last I checked.
Has any one ever paid and downloaded one of these before to check out quality, formats etc?
Personally I think if the quality is good, or comparable to a direct rip it'd be worth it for people in this hobby to look into. I don't think downloading a movie onto your hd could really ever take the place of owning the dvd to put on your nerd shelf *leers at nerd shelf* but theres been more then one occasion where I wanted, or needed something I had no interest in just to use in a vid, so at half the price of a dvd I think it could be worth it.
Also, I think in a way that though they blame the internet for killing the movie and music industry this just shows its not killing it its revolutionizing it. If this takes off in a similar way that itunes did the entire way we look at movies and anime will change, and if they do it right, with high quality decent releases at cut prices I think itll be a decent change, especially for us, thoughts?
The price is $9.99 but they don't really get too descriptive on what it is your downloading. The file size is listed as 890 mb so your not downloading an entire rip. Format is listed as 'Windows media player' which is a player not a format the last I checked.
Has any one ever paid and downloaded one of these before to check out quality, formats etc?
Personally I think if the quality is good, or comparable to a direct rip it'd be worth it for people in this hobby to look into. I don't think downloading a movie onto your hd could really ever take the place of owning the dvd to put on your nerd shelf *leers at nerd shelf* but theres been more then one occasion where I wanted, or needed something I had no interest in just to use in a vid, so at half the price of a dvd I think it could be worth it.
Also, I think in a way that though they blame the internet for killing the movie and music industry this just shows its not killing it its revolutionizing it. If this takes off in a similar way that itunes did the entire way we look at movies and anime will change, and if they do it right, with high quality decent releases at cut prices I think itll be a decent change, especially for us, thoughts?
- Kionon
- I ♥ the 80's
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- Bauzi
- Joined: Fri May 21, 2004 12:48 pm
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- Location: Austria (uhm the other country without kangaroos^^)
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I think if this has higher or equal quality to illegal download than this has a future. I think something like a small preview clip of the quality of the file would give customers much more trust. I won´t pay for such a movie, if I didn´t saw it first.
Hey this could be a nice gift for contest winners
Hey this could be a nice gift for contest winners
You can find me on YT under "Bauzi514". Subscribe to never miss my AMV releases.
- Scott Green
- Greenwhore
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- dokidoki
- c0d3 m0nk3y
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A review of the download rental process:
http://www.gearbits.com/archives/2008/0 ... r_tes.html
http://www.gearbits.com/archives/2008/0 ... r_tes.html
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
Copy pasted from the link above.
quote
Apparently, you will also need a special player app (a remnant of the Movielink service Blockbuster acquired last year), as this helpful note indicated on the download page:
YOU NEED THE BLOCKBUSTER MOVIELINK PLAYER The BLOCKBUSTER Movielink player is a free program that allows you to download and watch movies. Click on the button below to start installing the player.
The MovieLink player looks to be using Microsoft WMV DRM and it requires the massively bloated .NET Framework 3.0 to be installed as well. Gee...thanks.
So, DRM-laden, non-portable (other than on a laptop), time-limited, doesn't work with Firefox, and can only be played on Windows PCs...I'm having a hard time figuring out why someone would subscribe to this download service instead of just getting DVDs via mail (something Blockbuster already does quite well).
unquote
Laughter ensues.
I am sooooo not surprised. Oh well at least they tried.
Of course their offer sucks donkey balls.
Even if offered for the exact same price as a physical rental (which is not a 24 hour rental I might add), it would still count as worthless.
Even if I didn't mind their sucks ass DRM garbage they utterly fail with the 24 hour crap. Hey you can make it a week just as easily eh, and it's not like anyone is waiting to use my digital file, it's not like I need to return it. So what's with the worthless 24 hour duration?
If I'm going to get service via my computer, I think I will stick with Zip.ca, at least they ship the physical dvd, it's an actual retail copy dvd, and I can watch it as fast as I want, on any machine that plays a dvd.
That and they rent for a great deal less that Blockbuster.
I haven't seen the inside of a Blockbuster outlet in years now actually.
Doesn't appear they will be seeing me on their site in the future either.
quote
Apparently, you will also need a special player app (a remnant of the Movielink service Blockbuster acquired last year), as this helpful note indicated on the download page:
YOU NEED THE BLOCKBUSTER MOVIELINK PLAYER The BLOCKBUSTER Movielink player is a free program that allows you to download and watch movies. Click on the button below to start installing the player.
The MovieLink player looks to be using Microsoft WMV DRM and it requires the massively bloated .NET Framework 3.0 to be installed as well. Gee...thanks.
So, DRM-laden, non-portable (other than on a laptop), time-limited, doesn't work with Firefox, and can only be played on Windows PCs...I'm having a hard time figuring out why someone would subscribe to this download service instead of just getting DVDs via mail (something Blockbuster already does quite well).
unquote
Laughter ensues.
I am sooooo not surprised. Oh well at least they tried.
Of course their offer sucks donkey balls.
Even if offered for the exact same price as a physical rental (which is not a 24 hour rental I might add), it would still count as worthless.
Even if I didn't mind their sucks ass DRM garbage they utterly fail with the 24 hour crap. Hey you can make it a week just as easily eh, and it's not like anyone is waiting to use my digital file, it's not like I need to return it. So what's with the worthless 24 hour duration?
If I'm going to get service via my computer, I think I will stick with Zip.ca, at least they ship the physical dvd, it's an actual retail copy dvd, and I can watch it as fast as I want, on any machine that plays a dvd.
That and they rent for a great deal less that Blockbuster.
I haven't seen the inside of a Blockbuster outlet in years now actually.
Doesn't appear they will be seeing me on their site in the future either.
-
- Joined: Mon Jun 30, 2008 2:15 pm
- Location: England
- Sukunai
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2006 1:00 pm
- Location: Ontario Canada
It would appear that anything I say is so powerful it immediately becomes important enough to repeat if through my flunkies here at the org
"I buy Anime to support the company's, but also because of the artwork on the boxes and the disks etc. So I'm not interested in legal downloading."
Any decent printer can copy nearly anything almost up to currency. Product artwork is absolutly no challenge.
I only buy physical retail media because I'm worth it.
"I buy Anime to support the company's, but also because of the artwork on the boxes and the disks etc. So I'm not interested in legal downloading."
Any decent printer can copy nearly anything almost up to currency. Product artwork is absolutly no challenge.
I only buy physical retail media because I'm worth it.
- Vivaldi
- Polemic Apologist
- Joined: Sat Sep 29, 2007 9:39 am
- Location: Petting mah cat..
After a point, the effort required to make a box with the correct dimensions and artwork printed on it, and burning your anime to DVDs with the correct artwork labels on them, is worth more time and money than it would take to just go out and buy the darn things.Sukunai wrote:It would appear that anything I say is so powerful it immediately becomes important enough to repeat if through my flunkies here at the org
Any decent printer can copy nearly anything almost up to currency. Product artwork is absolutly no challenge.