martin2345uk
Established Member
I really miss my local blockbuster. All this "streaming" and "Netflix". I loved going to BB and just browsing the aisles. Sad times 

Yes, the cinema is still king - but very expensive (even with Orange Wednesday) and films come to TV so quick now anyway.
We don't have a 3D TV or even an awesome surround sound system, but we still get plenty of enjoyment watching films at home and having access to Sky store, Netflix, LoveFilm and more (well, I do write about Smart TVs!) offers a pretty good choice.
But, even then, it can still take ages to decide what to watch. Whatever happened to the days when you had just 4 TV channels and watched whatever film was on that night?![]()
There are times that ITV2, 3 or 4 will show a film I've already seen but I end up staying up until 2am watching it even though;
a) They repeat it every few days
b) I've seen it a billion times anyway
c) I could record it and watch at a time to suit me, but no, I have to watch it 'live'!
Blockbuster and other such companies were set up to fulfill a need that existed when there was not anything remotely like the number of available film offerings on television in those days.
Even moving into renting and selling video games won't work as most consoles now (or will) also be moving towards downloading games to a hard drive, or playing them in the cloud.
A thing to consider with all of this streaming (which a fair proportion of the public are probably blissfully unaware) is that it uses up their internet bandwidth allowance quite easily, not to mention will cause their internet to slow down when using such a service. Granted there are so many "unlimited" providers but most if not all have some "fair use policy" in there.
I don't download X-box games, I buy the physical product, the same for my films as with both I like knowing I have them right there and while the discs may get damaged they can be replaced at little to no cost (depending on what it is and who the supplier is).
You'd have them "right there" if they were on a HDD. And I'm pretty sure in most cases you'd have to pay again if a disc was damaged. With a HDD version all you need to do is get it from your back up.....which you should be making anyway. In fact I'm sure some (all) services let you download stuff again anytime once you've bought it.
You don't buy it though, you buy a licence to play it - something explicitly stated in the small print of all the T&Cs. You can make a backup of your optical media anyway and, as I alluded to earlier in this thread, it's far from difficult.
Read the T&Cs you'd not use any of these streaming services since they demand far too much. Netflix for example reserve the right to terminate or restrict your use of our service, without notice, for any or no reason whatsoever (italics being quoting their text verbatim) and, if you've been wronged, you cannot take them to court!
You'd have them "right there" if they were on a HDD. And I'm pretty sure in most cases you'd have to pay again if a disc was damaged.
I'm quite sure what you're getting at. You're only buying the licence to play it whatever medium it comes on.
And backing up discs is difficult because you can't just copy the disc because of all the copy protection they put on it. With a downloaded version it's as simple as copying from one place to another.
Only blu-rays.DVDs and CDs are not that well protected. DRM on a downloaded version may prevent copying from one place to another or may use the DRM to mean it cannot be converted or played anywhere.
I was getting at that whilst you're only buying the licence for physical media there isn't really all that they can do since you'll always have the physical copy whereas on a server the file can be removed at any time or the service could be offline and you'd have no recourse.
I have managed to "fix" every disc that has ever been damaged, the lads xbox does like scratching discs, the longest it has ever taken me was 5 minutes (literally)!
How can it be removed if its on your hard drive? If is a file it can be copied.