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#3502 | |
Senior Member
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At this point I have been buying direct for a couple years. I think many will follow that path. We don't want to mess with a disc anymore but, I do hope they continue with discs for those that want that for many years....and I think they will. |
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#3503 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I read a tweet from an artist this weekend that stated that his recently released album will be his last ever physical release since his album leaked early. Many cds are digital only these days even from artists as big as Kanye West. I know physical movies will still be here for a long time, but I am also ready and do get some movies digitally. I'm more like 90-10 in favor of physical but if it ever went all digital I wouldn't be too upset. And you can actually sort vudu by release date as well. One thing I do not understand is why you all do not act like internet is pretty much a necessity for us all these days. We will all be connected for the rest of our lives. It's just odd to me that some of you post on a message board but refuse to connect your high end game consoles to the internet as if it will break them. |
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Thanks given by: | zodwriter (04-17-2017) |
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#3504 | |
Active Member
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Thanks given by: | flyry (04-17-2017) |
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#3505 |
Active Member
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Just speaking to the resale market of discs, it is a bad investment if you're acquiring them as an investment, but I have done much better than expected selling them. Granted many I only get like $4-$5 or so after fees, but I rarely bought a disc at full price and opted to wait for Black Friday sales, so I am not taking a tremendous loss and in some cases find myself breaking even
Digital wise, I obviously will never be able to sell those movies, but since it's just an icon in my Apple TV library I'd never really want to. I am not selling my physical movies because I want the money, but rather I no longer want cabinets filled with things I never touch. |
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#3506 | ||||||
Banned
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I still have no idea what you're doing wrong that has made your console useless without internet. I have never heard of anyone else having that issue. Could you upload a video of starting up your Playstation 3 without an internet connection? I'm really curious to see where the problem lies. Last edited by PenguinMaster; 04-17-2017 at 08:52 PM. |
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#3507 | |
Active Member
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The point being that physical discs are not guaranteed playable forever. So that is another similarity with digital. That says something about your preservation argument. Last edited by zodwriter; 04-17-2017 at 09:03 PM. |
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#3508 | |
Active Member
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#3509 | |
Banned
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If a disc is released that won't work without an internet connection then I won't buy it, those are just as bad as streaming. So far it hasn't happened with any movies or TV shows but I've avoided around a dozen video games. Last edited by PenguinMaster; 04-17-2017 at 09:36 PM. |
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#3510 |
Banned
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Yes. I currently have my Genesis, SNES, N64, Dreamcast, PS2, Xbox, Xbox 360, PS3, Wii, Wii U, and Playstation 4 hooked up. Despite support being dropped many years ago for most of those consoles they all continue to work great. All of the out-of-print games are also still available to buy.
That makes it far less likely that Vudu will ever drop access to a large percentage of their movies simultaneously. But it certainly doesn't guarantee that the old movies that aren't selling well will always remain available. Last edited by PenguinMaster; 04-17-2017 at 09:30 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Dynamo of Eternia (04-17-2017) |
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#3511 | ||||||
Blu-ray Knight
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I agree that living space and storage space is a factor. Hence options such as consolidating discs into multi-disc cases and so forth. That is one viable option amongst many. People who collect discs and prefer it over digital for concerns about long term access don't all necessarily have to keep everything in the original packaging. Quote:
And further, apparently you were a collector, kept the boxes and everything in great condition, but upon losing it all, went pretty much completely digital. That's a valid choice for you to make, especially under the circumstances. But you seem to be taking this all or nothing attitude between physical and digital (which your transition from one to the other wasn't even fully by your own choice, you lost your physical collection due to a disaster that you weren't expecting - it's not like you simply chose to get rid of your physical collection and go digital), and applying these as the only two valid, viable options for anyone and everyone else. Quote:
That said, the digital distribution of music has never really quite bothered me as much as movies and video games. This is for a few reasons... A lot of music has been sold DRM free over time. And even with things like ITunes back when they had DRM, you could still use the program to burn a CD if you want to, there by having a physical back up. And with most music files being DRM free they are more user friendly, easy to back up, and use without going back online again. And there's of course the ability to just buy an individual song or two rather than an entire album when you may not want all of the songs from it, which I think is one of the most appealing aspects of digital over physical with music (that and the ability to make and alter playlists since it is common for people to listen to several songs back to back, where as save for people going out of their way to marathon a specific series, most people probably don't watch more than 1 or 2 movies at a time). There are a lot of practical reasons why digitally distributed music caught on like it did. And even then, it still hasn't completely killed off physical media. Quote:
It may take the guess-work out of remembering the release order, but it would still require scrolling through a bunch of other titles to find them all, versus just keeping them all lined up together on a shelf. Quote:
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I'm not necessarily against the internet or connectivity in general. Beyond internet even simply being another variable in the mix, it is the dependence on their servers that bothers me. If they ever shut those down, there goes the ability to redownload content, patches, etc. This is where the need for internet is quite different than the need for electricity. It's not like old gaming consoles like the NES or Sega Genesis have to connect to some kind of Nintendo or Sega specific "electrical server" just to function. They just need the same general electricity that we use today. You can still plug those in and use them. And to be clear, I'm fine with options like online multiplayer. That doesn't bother me. And I'm fine with them connecting to Netflix and so forth. And while I don't care for digital distribution for the most part, I'm not 100% against the option to buy a game digitally that can otherwise be bought physically. But I'm not thrilled with add-on dlc (especially if it's paid, but even when it's free), and even less thrilled with games that basically come out "broken" and need a patch to function properly. Even if they offer a patch as a quick fix, IMO they should at least offer replacement discs to those who want them. I also don't like how with some game series that in the past have had a single player mode/campaign and/or a local multiplayer option, more recent incarnations of those series often skimp, if not entirely eliminate those options in favor of online multiplayer as the main or only option. The idea that I can connect to play with several friends remotely, but CAN'T play a simple 2-player game with the person sitting next to me on the couch in many instances (especially when that was an option for similar games in the past) is just ludicrous. And if the publishers and developers need to make more money than the $60 for the disc, then IMO release the games complete, and just charge more if needed. IMO dlc is almost entirely unneeded save for a very few handful of exceptions for games that couldn't reasonably logistically exist without it (I'm thinking of something like Rock Band here, and the thousands of dlc songs licensed for it). I can also see the argument for games made by indie developers that simply can't realistically release their game physically. Otherwise, internet connectivity has really become an excuse for game developers and publishers to rush out incomplete buggy games that they patch afterwards, nickel and dime the end user, and procrastinate. A while back when people were complaining about things like, for example, Capcom having on-disc dlc (content that is already on the disc, but you have to separately pay for online to unlock) and were "having a cow" over it, I laughed, and not because I think it was a good business practice on Capcom's part (I consider it to be a really awful practice)... but rather I was laughing at the idea that being charged the same amount of money for the exact same content would be perfectly a-okay if Capcom simply had it be downloaded instead of on the disc and were to release it at a later date after the initial game came out (especially since this was during the PS3/360 era, before physical games required full installation on the hard drive like on the current systems, and downloading it also meant taking up hard drive space that the content didn't otherwise take up when on the disc... an ironic downside for the option that people consider to be "better"). It's kind of like calling someone a jerk if they knee you in the groin with their left knee today, but considering it to be perfectly reasonable if they wait a month and use their right knee. While I don't specifically want to pay more money for games than I have to, I'd rather spend $80 or $100 for a game upfront and have it be as complete as possible from the start, and for those games to be able to be playable and usable without an internet connection except for modes and features that absolutely require it and couldn't exist without it, like online multiplayer. Online multiplayer, much like posting on a message board, is simply something that couldn't exist without the internet. But making internet connectivity a requirement to simply do things with current systems that we've been able to do with the vast majority of past game systems without the internet is just as absurd IMO as making a toilet that requires internet connectivity to flush when you really get down to it. I won't go into a ton of detail (as this post is really long as is), but a little while back I took my Xbox One with me to visit my sister. I didn't bother connecting it to her internet connection because we were only going to play some things that (I thought) shouldn't require internet, only to find that some really simple things that should not require internet became ridiculously complicated and in some cases completely unusable without it. In other words, as you put it, the system in a few respects did become a "paperweight" without an internet connection, but in respects of me trying to do things that should have never required internet to do in the first place. It's beyond absurd. I care about long term access, preservation, and accessibility. The problem is that companies can and eventually will shut down servers when it suits them. I figure that the ability to redownload PS3 and 360 digital content is currently on borrowed time. If me simply having internet access in-and-of-itself was all that I would ever need to guarantee being able to continue accessing and redownloading that content, I wouldn't be nearly as concerned as I am now. Last edited by Dynamo of Eternia; 04-18-2017 at 02:43 PM. |
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#3512 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I sold a DVD on offerup(from rogue one) and I dropped it while I was at the donut shop and some guy turned around shocked "is that a CD!? Oh wow old school!". That pretty much explains modern sentiment towards physical media. And you may not get older content from other consoles, but being offline with that you may miss out on PSN exclusives. IE the recent parappa remaster. And if you are so anti streaming you are missing out on some great Originals on Netflix. No reason one cannot support both, don't see why it is so black and white on here. |
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#3513 |
Blu-ray King
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Well I certainly don't have that stance. For one simple reason, AV quality is Identical. Games are games and I love them but films are more important and I have to have the best A/V. Soon that will be UHD Bluray.
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#3514 | |
Blu-ray King
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#3515 | |
Blu-ray King
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#3519 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The same with youtube trailer views. These records get broken every few months. Further proof of our streaming future? ![]() ![]() |
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#3520 | |
Blu-ray King
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