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Re: iTunes store counts 1 million COMPLETE IDIOTS !

Posted by NRen2k5 on 11/10/05 13:59

FatKat wrote:
> NRen2k5 wrote:
>
>>FatKat wrote:
>>
>>>FunkyDevil wrote:
>>>
>>>>I don't believe people hunger for $2 downloads of TV shows they watch
>>>>for free on TV.
>>>
>>>It's not that they're paying to watch - they're paying for the right to
>>>keep it so they can watch it whenver they want. It sounds to me no
>>>different than people paying for albums containing songs they could
>>>listen for free on the radio, or buying movies on VHS that were
>>>available on cable.
>>
>>It's very different. An album will play on any turntable; a VHS on any VCR.
>>An I-Tunes video will only play on an I-Pod (and 5 computers that MUST
>>have I-Tunes software installed).
>
>
> Yes, I made that similar point on a different thread as a reason I
> would not get an iPod. But those who've opted to get one have done so
> for the purpose of having those files for that specific use - watching
> on an iPod. How many other viewers would one need? iTunes video would
> probably look horrible on a normal screen; and how many people have
> more than 5 computers?

That's a bad decision completely lacking in foresight. What if the I-Pod
busts and Apple stops making I-Pod Videos next year?

>>And in two or three years when their I-Pod's are dying and their I-Tunes
>>videos are useless, these people will wish they had bought actual DVD's.
>
>
> I doubt they'd feel all that much regret since the DVD's, purchased
> new, would have been more expensive, and anyway, they'd still be able
> to watch their iTunes video on 5 other PC's. And just how badly would
> one feel not to be able to watch, 2 years or so later, a saved episode
> of a TV show?

You're making the assumption that people want to watch individual
episodes and never collect entire seasons. For entire seasons, DVD is
cheaper and much more practical, because not only can it be ripped to
MPEG4 to watch on the I-Pod, but it can be ripped to play on just about
anything else, or just taken as-is and played on any portable DVD player
like the one you have.

>>Not only that, but DVD's have 4× the quality of I-Tunes video, and most
>>TV shows would be cheaper to get on DVD than I-Tunes!
>
>
> Are you able to buy single episodes of TV shows? Video quality is
> definately superior on DVD's and while my portable DVD is still
> running, it's not like such devices don't ave longetivity problems of
> their own.

But at least a Fox DVD will play on a Panasonic DVD player, or a Sony
DVD player, or a Samsung DVD player, etc. etc. etc. An I-Tunes video can
only be played on PC and I-Pod Video.

>>>When movies were released on videotape years ago,
>>>their initial retail prices were outrageous. iTune video seems pretty
>>>cheap in comparison
>>
>>You're comparing apples to oranges. When VHS originally came out, it was
>>used mostly for movies. I-Tunes video is used for music videos and TV
>>shows. These are comparatively much cheaper productions. Coincidentally
>>they're also shorter, which means the files Apple has to keep are
>>smaller and the delivery is less expensive.
>
>
> But iTunes videos are still a fraction of the cost of a new DVD, so the
> example applies.

No, they're not. At $2/episode on I-Tunes, and with DVD's being sold per
16-episode season at around $35, the cost of I-Tunes video is only
"fractionally less" than the cost of the DVD equivalent. Not "a fraction
of" it. Fractionally less. We're talking like $32 compared to $35 here.

Obviously the advantage is, as you pointed out, that you can get a
single episode without having to get the rest of the season.
This benefit is overshadowed by the disadvantages of inferior quality,
being restricted to Apple products, and as I'll explain further below,
not having a physical copy of the media.

>>And I hope the "chunk of material you don't want" you mentioned is
>>figurative of recording time, not the actual disc itself, because you
>>can bet your bottom dollar that I want a REAL copy of something I'm
>>paying REAL money for (which I did REAL work to earn).
>
>
> Real copy?

Yes. A real copy. A physical medium of some sort, such as a disc,
cartridge or cassette. Something that, once I've copied it to whatever
other format(s) I'm currently using (under Fair Use doctrine), I can
lock it away in a safe place.

I'm not paying for some wispy data that can be lost in a computer crash
or an I-Pod crash and that is "protected" to prevent me from doing
things I want to (and am legally allowed to) do with it.

- NRen2k5

 

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