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| club42 (Member) 12 August 2007 17:34 |
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Quote: The devices can hold up to 14GB of data, which is enough for over 30 movies at DVD quality.
Hopefully thats a typo in the main article because under 2GB per movie would not be normal dvd quality. Still a innovative idea. I would like to see flash media for movies over optical in the near future.
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| H0bbes (Junior Member) 12 August 2007 17:35 |
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This is innovative, I gotta hand it to them. If it makes it to the US, it may fly especially if the price is reasonable.
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| Kazi (Newbie) 12 August 2007 17:57 |
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pretty frickin cool
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| vtowner (Member) 12 August 2007 18:18 |
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I'm sure someone will find a way to remove the DRM and then these people are screwed.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 12 August 2007 18:21
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| DVDBack23 (Staff Member) 12 August 2007 18:23 |
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Quote:
Quote: The devices can hold up to 14GB of data, which is enough for over 30 movies at DVD quality.
Hopefully thats a typo in the main article because under 2GB per movie would not be normal dvd quality. Still a innovative idea. I would like to see flash media for movies over optical in the near future.
I believe the movies will be in MPEG4 with average movie being 500MB :)
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| mspurloc (Member) 12 August 2007 19:04 |
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None of these marketing people have a clue as to what " DVD quality" means, obviously.
Hey, check out my youtube video! It's DVD quality!
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| c1c (Member) 12 August 2007 19:22 |
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Maybe the French are on some kind of different math system. DVD quality ha! Still a cool idea of the flash drive though, I like! Much better than downloading or even streaming. Go out and get some milk and cigarettes, hook up your portable drive and get a movie, then you can link it to all your friends standing behind you in line and split the cost 4 ways, or better yet burn it for all your family and share the cost of 1 'transfer' Can't see this working for big time hollywood blockbuster movies. I like the idea though.
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| PeaInAPod (AfterDawn Addict) 12 August 2007 19:53 |
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I love the idea, I would definitely pay for this service. Imagine, the movie(s) you want would never be out of stock.
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| MightyOne (Junior Member) 13 August 2007 10:52 |
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Kool idea.
Not sure if consumers are willing to put Forth the money for the drive.
a 14 Gig drive for $140. Is that a little steep ?
You would also need to purchase this so called docking station, or i assume it would come with the drive ?
Being in its "beta" stage...it could have great potential if consumers can get to the machines....but its not much different than going to a video store. I could see Video stores resorting to these methods next...and keeping there stock next to nothing. All fiber optics between stores. And of course the rental cost wouldn't be any cheaper.
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| SProdigy (Member) 13 August 2007 12:16 |
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Exactly. Why pay that much for the drive, and then the rentals? It would have to replace DVD (or for you optimists, HD optical formats) in order for it to have legs. You do have to buy a DVD player in order to buy/rent DVDs, so it's not that farfetched of an idea, it costs next to nothing for the retail stores and studios to implement it, so if the price to consumers were right (and Hollywood doesn't inflate the price, inflating their margin well over DVDs of today) then it may have a chance.
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| Unfocused (Member) 13 August 2007 21:03 |
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It can write the full 14 Gigs in under 2 minutes? What are they using for transfer, USB 2.0? That is pretty good speed.
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| borhan9 (AfterDawn Addict) 17 August 2007 18:58 |
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Quote: The rentals use DRM and remain watchable for 30 days after which they expire. The kiosks can load 6 movies onto the drive in under 2 minutes.
For this reason i would not go with this company.
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| PeaInAPod (AfterDawn Addict) 17 August 2007 20:04 |
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Originally posted by Unfocused: It can write the full 14 Gigs in under 2 minutes? What are they using for transfer, USB 2.0? That is pretty good speed.
I'd bet money there using eSATA.
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