Posted on 09/19/2011 5:56:25 AM PDT by Usagi_yo
You’ll have two separate accounts. One for NetFlix streaming and one for Qwikster DVD’s by mail. The price for both will be the same as what you’re paying right now.
If you go to Redbox.com, you can reserve titles. They will then ship them to your local Redbox.
It’s a pretty good system.
They need to fire their CIO as well.
I got into Netflix via the iPad app. The original one. It was great. A very convenient tool to have when something triggers a thought on seeing a movie and being able to look it up and add it to a queue. But then some genius decided to take that capability out of the iPad app. Okay, so I have to use safari. Then that same idiot decided to use mouse over crap on their webpage and the conveience of using the iPad was lost.
Then the price increase, and now this! Screw you Netflix, we’re done!
>>One for NetFlix streaming and one for Qwikster DVDs by mail. The price for both will be the same as what youre paying right now.<<
Here’s the problem. Let’s say I want to watch, “The Mouse that Roared”. I have to go to Netflix, see if it’s streaming and when it isn’t, log onto Quickster to find and reserve it. This was one step before.
It’s too much like work.
I don’t even know what Starz is.
"Only to all you city folk. Here in the sticks we ain't got broadband and probably won't for the next 10 years or so. Streaming is out of the question for thousands of us. I love my DVD by mail, saves me the 50 mile round trip to the Redbox. "
Dittos: While I have the most expensive Time Warner Cable broadband service available to residential customers, living in the country, if too many of my neighbors are using data intensive applications like streaming or audio, my data hose just starts to dribble.
Donning my flame proof jacket, the stucture of the internet is not yet at a point where such huge k/m/g byte intensive applications can be used in any appreciable quantity without severely impacting those of us doing normal page searches and downloads.
There currently is no Fiber Optic service in my area and because of the small population per square mile (that's the only criteria) it is very unlikely it will ever come to this town.
As more and more people use the internet for their own movie theater on demand, the situation for non-Fiber Optic customers will continue to deteriorate regardless of how much they pay for residential service.
I admit to watching GBTV (and putting up with the occasional "Loading" crap) but ONLY because I cannot get it via TV (which of course shares the same hose as the internet but a different part of the spectrum).
I like my Blu-Ray player and see no reason to clog the internet with that traffic and I never get a "Loading" icon.
Absolutely. I'm going with the best least priced service. In fact, that is how the free market system works. With the savings, I can contribute to politics or help fund my own business with the capital it needs.
This is what I don't understand. Do you mean the two new separate charges will equal what I currently pay (as in approx. $5.00/month each, totaling $10.00/month) or will the monthly charge of each new account reflect the price hike just announced recently (approx. $10/mo for streaming + $10/mo for DVD, for $20/mo total)?
Is anyone clear on this?
Unless and until their streaming catalog is the same as their DVD catalog, then streaming alone is not worth it. And they’re losing Starz, so the stream catalog just shrank.
The BoD needs to fire this Hastings idiot.
There is no way that Amazon’s streaming prices compete with NetFlix.
I was sick about a month ago and decided to get caught up with In Plain Sight. That one show had three seasons streaming on NetFlix. Had I gone to Amazon I would’ve had to pay $24 for season 1, and $21 each for season’s 2 and 3. That’s $66 for one week’s entertainment and that didn’t get my son the war movie or allow my daughter to watch one of her shows.
Amazon’s prices are stupid.
Bottom line is they did a bait and switch. I took the bait, but when the did the switch I said goodbye FOR EVER. I don’t cater to businesses that use these tactics.
Starz is like HBO and Cinemax. They are a movie channel and some original series shows.
We watch several Starz movies a week.
We did exactly the same thing. Dropped the DVDs.
Now I Redbox everything. If it’s older movies, I go to the Library for free.
This reads like a parody piece. Quickster??? Reminds me of “Napster.” New Coke, move aside.
AmazonPrime is 79.00 a year and the streaming is free.
Maybe so. But right now, it is a royal pain in the a**, at least in our area and, I suspect, many others.
I don't care to watch a movie which chops up every 2-3 minutes while the streaming catches up.
I'll gladly wait a couple of days for a DVD which I can pop into the player and watch without technical interruption.
Also, I don't want to hook up my television set to an internet connection and wonder who may be spying on me or selling me sh*t I don't care to pay for. Nor do I care to have the family come crowding into a narrow little corner of the computer space designed for one user to watch some crappy little choppy streaming program on a 19" screen.
Dunno if you have "RedBox" near you. By me, I can't throw a rock without hitting one of their kiosks.
Costs a buck a night. Selection is usually OK, Mrs WBill and I don't watch movies all that often, so we're rarely a loss to find something we're interested in.
The "plus" is that we only get movies when we feel like it - rather than submitting a list online and slogging through them. Drawback is that movies need to be returned, which, like I mentioned, by us is pretty darn easy.
I'd like the selection that Netflix affords, but (personally) see no reason to pay $100+/year to wind up watching a handful of movies.
Dunno if you have "RedBox" near you. By me, I can't throw a rock without hitting one of their kiosks.
Costs a buck a night. Selection is usually OK, Mrs WBill and I don't watch movies all that often, so we're rarely a loss to find something we're interested in.
The "plus" is that we only get movies when we feel like it - rather than submitting a list online and slogging through them. Drawback is that movies need to be returned, which, like I mentioned, by us is pretty darn easy.
I'd like the selection that Netflix affords, but (personally) see no reason to pay $100+/year to wind up watching a handful of movies.
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