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Netflix's hot new video player

Posted May 20 2008, 01:43 PM by Kim Peterson
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Today we're seeing the future of Netflix. The company announced its $100 set-top player, available now and getting all kinds of frothy reviews (Wired calls it "just shy of totally amazing"). Hook the box to your TV and your wired or wireless high-speed Internet connection, and you can stream videos from Netflix's library.

Before we drill into the details of this thing, note that Netflix shares rose nearly 4% today, but closed up 2% to $31.63. Netflix shares have enjoyed a good run over the last year as the company grew subscribers and beat out Blockbuster in the DVD-by-mail business. But mailing DVDs has always been a short-term play. Now, we're seeing what Netflix wants to be when it grows up.

An important thing to know about the Netflix Player by Roku is that it doesn't download movies. It streams them over the Internet without storing a copy in the box. The good news: Once you buy the player (and maintain a Netflix subscription paying at least $9 a month), there's no charge to watch the videos. The bad news: Only about 10% of Netflix's library of 100,000 titles is available for streaming, and most of those are older movies and TV shows. That's mainly due to licensing restrictions, and you can bet Netflix is working on a fix. The company didn't shell out $40 million to build this service just to show "Dirty Harry" and "National Lampoon's European Vacation."

The comparisons with Apple's $230 Apple TV player are obvious, but Fortune says that's an, er, apples-and-oranges thing. Apple TV costs more and charges per rental. It also has fewer movies, but many of those titles are new releases that Netflix doesn't have. Apple's movies have higher video quality, too. Netflix's advantage comes in price: Paying $100 to get free access to 10,000 titles is very appealing. 

Developing a set-top movie player was a smart move for Netflix. Pricing it at $100? Absolutely brilliant. Netflix is creating other players with more bells and whistles that will be more expensive, but getting this one out first and making it so easy to use will energize its 8.2 million subscribers and attract new ones. 

Netflix has deep-pocketed and smart competition in this area. Apple, Amazon, TiVo, Microsoft, Blockbuster and others are deeply invested, and a host of small start-ups have jumped in, too. But Netflix's debut player shows the company has the savvy to stay in the game.

Here's what others are saying about the player:

News.com: "Setup is simple, and -- if you've got a solid broadband connection -- picture quality is acceptable and streaming performance was almost entirely lag-free."

Fortune: "Given the new competition, it will be interesting to see whether Apple rethinks its current pricing scheme: $2.99 to $3.99 to rent, $9.99 to $14.99 to own." 

TechCrunch: "Good for them. Instead of wading into a losing battle over cheap downloads and rentals (see Vudu, BlockBuster, AppleTV, Google, etc., which charge for each movie), they jump right to free. They know what the consumer wants." 

Thomas Hawk: "They'll sell a couple of them I suppose, but this thing will never really get off the ground in a big way. We've seen this movie before, it was called Akimbo." 

Ars Technica: "A lucrative portion of consumers are happy to rent -- not own -- their movies and TV shows, and the Netflix Player could very well score an early win for Netflix in the living room's digital distribution market." 

Disclosures: I don't own shares of any companies mentioned in this post, but I am a Netflix subscriber. And while Microsoft owns this blog, Microsoft does not control, censor or otherwise have any editorial influence over what I write. 

Comments

 

I am a Netflix customer also, I have my TV set as my Monitor for my Computer. This allows me to watch all the Streamable movies I want in my family room.  I do not see a need for this service.  I am also a Directv customer, they have started the On Demand service, which is Free.  I have my DVR hooked to my internet service and can watch whatever I want when ever I want.  Some of the items Directv offers may have a cost associated with it, but you can download it to your DVR but you do not pay for it unless you actually watch it.

This actually comes at a great time for Netflix. Blockbuster, Walmart and Amazon and others are pulling away from the online rental/download biz and AppleTV is not the game changer the Apple zombies, and Steve Jobs, hoped it would be.  As movie theater comanies (AMC Theater's $12 tickets) continue to raise prices to watch mediocre movies that should have gone straight to DVD anyway, $100 and a $9/month subscription is brilliant.  Let's hope they can get those licensing agreements in place.

Just another nail in the BlobkBuster coffin.  Although I'm not in a hurry to signup for this program, I do appreciate the additional choice.  For myself, the movies-by-mail thingy has been working quite well.  I haven't set foot in a BlockBuster in almost four years!  

However, I am eager to see if this will lead to HD movies.  Will there be a box that supports HD or uses HDMi connections?  How will my surround sound system perform on the little box?  Still a lot of questions; still a long way to go.  But, this is a great start and shows they are thinking ahead.

I personally think this will soon be outdated. The video quality will be horrible less than stand def. With everybody switching to tv's 720p and up. Why would you want to watch a movie in such poor quality? At least apple tv can have HD quality movies. It may be a cheap way to watch old movies but comcast on demand has the same thing.

Although this is a cool thing, let us remember why us rural epople subscribe to Netflix in the first place.  The nearest video rental store is 25 miles away and our broadband connections are not solid and not quite as speedy as those closer to town.  That said, we'll still get our movies in the mail.  

Very cool idea, but for all those people, like myself, who have invested a lot of money in hi-def plasmas, and Blue-Ray players, this is kind of worthless until they can get new releases in Blue-Ray format over the their set-top player.......    

I'd absolutely pay for this once they get the copyrights to more movies. Frankly, I'd cancel my Comcast cable service and just pay for this Netflix service, since I don't watch any regular tv, just movies anyway.  

I am definately willing to give this a try...on demand for good movies costs way too much and the ones that are free you've seen a million times.  I am a big anime fan and this would be perfect.

Netfix already offers this service online.  It is very easy to watch on the computer or hook the laptop up to the tv to watch on the bigger screen.  Why pay more when I already get it with my subscription fee now?

yea....the movies in the library are old...thats why i dropped netflix..

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