It's a nice looking box with some great specifications. I'm surprised no-one has asked this and that it's not mentioned (or I didn't find it) but...
- Can the VUDU play external content - say from my PC such as my own music, picture or movies?
- Any plans for Wifi? I think consumers have enough wires in that area of the house already without needing a separate power supply for the router/wifi bridge and associated network cable that go with it. Thats why the Wii, 360 and PS3 all have Wifi either built-in or as an integratable add-on.
- Is it a closed system tied exclusively to your service?
- If it is a walled garden why do consumers have to buy the boxes, shouldn't they be able to rent the box? After all you have to factor the price of the box, non-portability of the bought movies into your total cost for buying a movie.
- When somone buys the movie does the movie stay on their account so they can download it again (lets say the box needs a hard reset or has a problem with the HDD)?
- Looking at the site (lovely design) it appears that movies can be bought for $19.99 or something like that compared to about $24.99 for the full physical hd dvd or $14.99 for the sd dvd - I compared Syriana - unfairly since I'm sure your version will be cheaper by launch. Will VuDu provide any form of price guarantees for the movies that can be bought through their service? Especially given (a) the lack of physical product that can be sold on, given to people or played anywhere a dvd is (a smart consumer could buy 5 decent progressive scan SD dvd players for your retail price) (b) You can only play content on your system bought through you (I assume)
The Crunchgear review doesn't to answer any of these questions but then I guess some sites don't really have to pay for the unit or the price of the downloads or think about the medium/long term issues with ownership - short term is of course irrelevant since for that you should just rent I guess.
CNET comes close by saying its 'affordable' but they didn't ask these questions either and, in your court, re: the Blockbuster/Netflix reference 75000 movies doesn't mean anything if you're only really interested in 5000 of them.
On the movie side I think you have a chance to get away from the 'more is better' mentality by going for the incredibly obvious 'better is better' that the cable operations haven't seemed to figure out channel wise.
And to that end my last question is, will you be implementing any collaborative filtering stuff so a consumer can rate movies and have the aggregated results of system wide ratings contribute towards suggestions for their future rentals/purchases? Or better yet import ratings from other semi-open online systems such as imdb?
~ Steph
- Can the VUDU play external content - say from my PC such as my own music, picture or movies?
- Any plans for Wifi? I think consumers have enough wires in that area of the house already without needing a separate power supply for the router/wifi bridge and associated network cable that go with it. Thats why the Wii, 360 and PS3 all have Wifi either built-in or as an integratable add-on.
- Is it a closed system tied exclusively to your service?
- If it is a walled garden why do consumers have to buy the boxes, shouldn't they be able to rent the box? After all you have to factor the price of the box, non-portability of the bought movies into your total cost for buying a movie.
- When somone buys the movie does the movie stay on their account so they can download it again (lets say the box needs a hard reset or has a problem with the HDD)?
- Looking at the site (lovely design) it appears that movies can be bought for $19.99 or something like that compared to about $24.99 for the full physical hd dvd or $14.99 for the sd dvd - I compared Syriana - unfairly since I'm sure your version will be cheaper by launch. Will VuDu provide any form of price guarantees for the movies that can be bought through their service? Especially given (a) the lack of physical product that can be sold on, given to people or played anywhere a dvd is (a smart consumer could buy 5 decent progressive scan SD dvd players for your retail price) (b) You can only play content on your system bought through you (I assume)
The Crunchgear review doesn't to answer any of these questions but then I guess some sites don't really have to pay for the unit or the price of the downloads or think about the medium/long term issues with ownership - short term is of course irrelevant since for that you should just rent I guess.
CNET comes close by saying its 'affordable' but they didn't ask these questions either and, in your court, re: the Blockbuster/Netflix reference 75000 movies doesn't mean anything if you're only really interested in 5000 of them.
On the movie side I think you have a chance to get away from the 'more is better' mentality by going for the incredibly obvious 'better is better' that the cable operations haven't seemed to figure out channel wise.
And to that end my last question is, will you be implementing any collaborative filtering stuff so a consumer can rate movies and have the aggregated results of system wide ratings contribute towards suggestions for their future rentals/purchases? Or better yet import ratings from other semi-open online systems such as imdb?
~ Steph
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