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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
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#1 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Hi all,
Didn't know where to post this. I just ordered a Vudu box simply because after doing the research it seemed like the best deal. Also I saw on their website where they are doing a Christmas sale where you can get the whole thing for 198.00. That includes the box, the remote, 2 wireless adapters, all the cables and 50.00 in movie credit. Can't wait to get this baby setup. Here's the website in case anyone wants one. Don't know how long the sale is for. www.vudu.com If anyone already has one, let me know how you like it. |
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#4 |
Blu-ray Count
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article about what it does to your "high speed" internet access...
Digital Tools Bad Vudu Lee Gomes, 12.18.08, 06:00 AM EST Vudu's service is fun--but the company needs to tell its customers exactly how it delivers all those movies. Before I tell you why you should think twice before buying a Vudu set-top box on account of the lack of disclosure at the heart of the service, I need to tell you how much I once enjoyed my own. .... The geek in me was struck by what I assumed was Vudu's clever use of video servers: How else, I reasoned, could Vudu effectively stream so many high-quality movies to so many customers? A few days later, I happened to be chatting casually with a Vudu executive and learned what is really going on. Vudu, it turns out, uses peer-to-peer technology to stream movies to its customers. That means different bits of movies are stored on different Vudus. When you want to watch a movie, it gets assembled from scores, even hundreds, of other Vudu boxes and is then streamed to you. You might be sitting in your den connected via VPN to your home office and, without your knowledge, your Vudu might be taking up bandwidth to help deliver The Dark Knight to some kid in Tucson. Users of peer-to-peer software like BitTorrent will be alarmed by this hijacking, because these protocols are notorious bandwidth hogs. They easily use up so much of the network that simple tasks like e-mail or browsing can slow to a crawl. The big problem is that the company doesn't clearly tell customers that it's doing this. I haven't found a word about this forced downloading on the box I bought or on the company's Web site. My bandwidth is my property, in much the same was my living room or front yard is mine, and I don't take to people using it without telling me. ..... The fact is that this sort of forced bandwidth sharing has, from the very beginning, been at the heart of the company's business plan and technology platform. It occurs every time any Vudu customer watches a movie. If Vudu boxes didn't carry that load, the service would grind to a halt. As a practical matter, I hadn't noticed delays on my own home network. Then again, fewer than 100,000 Vudus have been sold; who knows what will happen should the service get more popular. The company insists I have nothing to worry about and that the product is designed to not impede normal network usage. .... |
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#5 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks again for the info. ![]() |
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#6 | |
Special Member
Nov 2007
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#7 | |
Moderator
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It's the only sustainable model for Internet distribution. Given that it is using up the upload bandwidth (which people usually don't heavily use, and is generally tiny) it probably won't impact the home network or download access. The big question is, what if your ISP has a bandwidth cap? How can you control blowing through that limit? Gary |
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#8 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#9 | ||
Senior Member
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-papaholmz Last edited by papaholmz; 12-26-2008 at 06:02 PM. |
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#10 | |
Moderator
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But, speed of the connection is but one issue. The other is the total transfer and the caps being imposed (why should your ISP pay for the infrastructure for a new industry unless it gets a piece of the action?). Gary |
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#11 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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I personally have never used Vudu, and have no interest to. But, for anyone who does use it, and doesn't want their bandwith taken up when they are trying to use their computer, etc, couldn't they just disconnect the internet line from the Vudu box or unplug it/disconnect the power from it? I realize that this could be a pain to do each time, but if one were to simply get a power strip with an on/off switch, they could just use it exclusively with the Vudu box (or with the Vudu box + any other items that they don't mind power being disconnected to when the strip is turned off), and then only have it plugged in and turned on when they are actually using it? This would prevent their bandwith from being taken/used up when they aren't actually using their Vudu box. |
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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for example http://www.bell.ca/shopping/internet...pInt_NewAccess is 20GB/month (and you pay extra/GB if you pass that limit) if you DL 3 movies @5GB each you are @15GB, if an other 20 people/movies UL from you .5GB each then they need 10GB and you are now at 30GB just for movies with Vudu. They distribute the DL over many clients for 2 reasons 1) they don't need big pipes that cost a lot of $, 2) most ISPs have a much more restricted UL then DL (look at the link I posted DL=2mbps, UL=.8mbps) so if the DL is UL from 5-6 people at a time then the DL can be done at the top rate and not limited to 800kbps |
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#13 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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As for the bandwidth problem, The only way I know anything with a piece of equipment is by trying it out. Have you had one? If you had one did you notice that problem. No offense but I tend to not go on hearsay. I did ask if anyone had one in my OP. I wanted to know what people thought of it, if they owned one. Seriousy, if I listened to every bad thing I heard about electronic devices I wouldn't own anything. There are bad reviews about everything. ![]() Last edited by gearyt; 12-25-2008 at 12:52 AM. |
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#15 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Mine would arrive the same time as my mail too. That's not what I meant. I didn't think I had to explain but here goes. I got tired of not knowing what day they would get delivered. In other words you can't exactly plan on when you're going to watch a movie if you don't know when you're going to get it. |
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#16 | |
Power Member
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#17 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Don't sugar coat it, tell us how you really feel. ![]() |
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#18 |
Junior Member
Aug 2008
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Unlike the flogging I received when I posted a thread a few months back as to why anybody would want to purchase Blu-Ray titles when Vudu offers similar quality, I'll be direct and gentle with you.
First, I'd like to acknowledge those of you (few) that did write back to educate me. I have hundreds of Blu-Ray movies and just wanted to make certain I wasn't wasting money. I finally picked up the Vudu as a supplimental item. While it does have some occasional quirks and I'd like ot see some software features added, overall the product is great. And, now you can get it for $100. The first movie I watched hiccuped/skipped a couple of times, but since then each movie has perfomed really well. Most of what I've ordered has been HD streaminig (not HDX) and superb. I think for me, that's the ticket. It will be rare that I will plan to order a movie 4+ hours in advance for the HDX version. So, the streaming HD (or SD if unavailable) is really my goal. It would also be great to see the ability to share multiple boxes and/or content within a home rather than treating them as separate. I'd also like a way to make DVDs from purchased movies. They could easily implement this through basic software and a PC/Mac. Also, photo/audio streaming from a home network would be great! This hands down trumps the AppleTV quality, and these two other features would place it even further ahead. We'll see what the future holds, but for $100 (rather than $300 standard price), it's a bargain I think - espeically because there are no monthly fees. You only pay for what you watch. One last thing; Hollywood... get in the game and stop &^%$#@@ this up already. The music labels screwed everything up and missed their chance for great success melded with a successful guest experience. No Hollywood is doing the same thing. Make it simple; sell your own catalogs and offer the customer to purchase in any format. Forget exclusivity. This is the video game market. Make you content available to all providers. You'll sell more and people won't feel dumb that they can purchase content for one hardware device but not another. Or worse, have to purchase the same item three times (Blu-Ray, DVD, Digital Copy). Create Blu-Rays that are hybrid and contain HD, DVD and Digital Copy. No were getting somewhere. Didn't the Sony UMB fiasco teach you anything? Last edited by beast0117; 01-09-2009 at 09:36 PM. |
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#19 | |
Power Member
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sorry.... no free lunch |
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#20 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jun 2007
Omaha NE
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Would the studios really want you to be able to burn a copy? They don't want you giving away free copies to your friends. They want people to purchase their own copies.
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