I much preferred mooching around Megastores/Zavvi to HMV, any day!
Not seen these 'Big' stores, have they bought the remainder of the Entertainment UK stock that Head failed to sell?
Agreed. HMV effectively have a good slice of a shrinking pie.I think in the 90s and 00s it was in fashion to have a massive collection of DVDs to watch, but how often do you watch those discs? Realistically I might watch my favourite DVD twice a year at most?cwathen wrote:I think that's certainly what Apple and their ilk would like you to think. They've gotten people used to buying DRM-locked digital copies of things which only last for finite amounts of time and/or cannot be easily transferred to another device/person. Of course that's a much more profitable model for them than nasty old CDs and DVDs (and tapes and videos before them) which can be played without extra charge for as long as the media lastsDVDs in shops and DVDs in the post are generally on borrowed time anyway. Even downloads are apparently on the way out, as the future is said to be streaming.
Well, according to Apple anyway.
It's so much more cost effective to stream movies and programmes, and the technology will be up to it very soon. A box like Apple TV gives you instant access to an enormous back catalogue of films, more than you could ever own on DVD, and you can rent them for about £4 a go. If there is a particular film you really love, you can also buy it and download it for about £5. That makes it £9 to permenantly own a film you love, with one 'trial viewing' first - still cheaper than a new release DVD from somewhere like Play.com
The DVD and Bluray market will crash, and it will happen soon. Even 'Youview' is likely to have a streaming movie service from Netflix or Lovefilm - that will change the market dramatically.