--========================================================-->
These discs will not only make it through the digital age - they'll thrive in it.
Sure, the shiny digital disks look increasingly irrelevant if you read the headlines. Industry giants like ( ) and ( ) are going head to head in the nascent market for movie downloads. Amazon just unveiled the Unbox, and Apple's rolling out a service that lets people watch a flick as soon as it begins to download.
Apple is also trumpeting a forthcoming device, tentatively called iTV, that promises to stream movies wirelessly from computers to TVs.
| ||
So if we're getting movies on our iPods, our computers and our TVs (via our computers), why would anyone ever buy a Pirates of the Caribbean DVD again?
It supposes that we all own iPods and PCs, and are more than happy to plunk down a few hundred bucks for yet another set-top box - this time called iTV. Avoiding the 8-track curse The ability to burn is one reason why DVDs are still the best bet.
1 billion DVD players in homes around the world. A battle that's much ado about nothing I know what you're thinking.Movie studios and electronics manufacturers are ruining a good thing as their battle over the next generation format drags on and threatens to alienate consumers. Rest assured, there will be a truce in the tug-of-war over Blu-Ray and HD DVD. Sales of DVDs players will spike and the movie experience will outshine downloads even more. ( ) makes software that helps consumers burn discs, while ( ) sells copyright protection services to the entertainment industry. Riding the 'long tail' Jim Taylor, a former DVD evangelist at Microsoft and now the general manager of Sonic, says most consumers don't yet understand how restrictive movie download services are.
He predicts that Amazon will be a big winner because it will be able to burn discs as customers order them, thereby reducing inventory costs and boosting margins. DVDS on demand Indeed, it opens up a vast world of choice for consumers. Want to make sure Grandma sees that Discovery channel special you watched last week? No problem - go to the Discovery website, download the show, burn it onto a DVD with Discovery's blessing, and stick the DVD in the mail. Because it would seem those shiny, eminently portable digital discs have a long and healthy life ahead.
Read more on by money.cnn.com. All rights reserved.
Related news
Post comments
|
