2005-02-01

mik3cap: (Default)
2005-02-01 07:20 am

From IMDB

NetFlix Founder Promises Movie Downloads This Year

NetFlix founder Reed Hastings says that although he expects to launch a video-on-demand service on the Internet sometime this year, he expects that studios will make only a limited number of movies available and that therefore customer interest will be modest. "We expect DVD, both standard DVD and high-def, to have an exclusive window through at least this decade," he told Home Media Retailing magazine. Nevertheless, some analysts predict that the VOD service may prove to be crucial to NetFlix's survival. Mark Mahaney, an analyst for American Technology Research, told today's (Monday) San Francisco Chronicle, "Two years from now, I think we'll be looking back more at how Netflix handled the challenge of video on demand than how it responded to [challenges to its online subscription service by] Blockbuster, Amazon and Wal-Mart."
mik3cap: (Default)
2005-02-01 01:40 pm

The Movie On Demand Market

The big players:

Microsoft, CinemaNow - 1000 pound gorilla gets in the game
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/jan05/01-06MSNTVCinemaNowPR.asp

TiVo, NetFlix - cutting edge favorites, easiest to use
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5915470/site/newsweek

Apple, iFlicks, iFlix - unknown quantities, will they iPod the market?
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20050120.html

Sony/MGM, Comcast - big on content, but heavy on cost?
http://www.cedmagazine.com/cedailydirect/2004/1204/cedaily041208.htm#1


The Johnny-come-latelies
Blockbuster, Amazon, Wal-Mart - do these guys have *any* hope? I think they're only going to round out DVD-space and nothing else. There's no way they can hope to build any infrastructure for broadband delivery the way these other teamups can.