Wed Jan 17, 2007 4:49PM EST
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I'm an old-school Netflix user from the very first days of the service, and I was delighted to hear that it was rolling out—after years of rumor—a way to view movies online, without the hassle of shipping discs in the mail. (I don't know about you, but mine arrive broken more often than I'd prefer.)
Today I got the chance to spend some time with the service, and so far I'm quite pleased. Here are some thoughts about how well it works, and areas where I'd love to see some improvement.
The service is free for all subscribers. If you're on the three-discs-a-month plan, you get 18 hours of online viewing time each month. And online it truly is: You have to watch videos in a browser window, using Netflix's proprietary viewing software. You can't download videos to your PC, burn them to disc, copy them to an iPod, or even watch them on a TV (unless you hook your PC up to it directly). This is strictly an online affair, so you can't take the movies with you on the road, either.
The software installed easily on one PC and not at all on another. My laptop continues to give me a bizarre error code that I haven't been able to resolve, but on my desktop, it took less than two minutes to be up and running. (Update: I updated Windows Media Player and installed the new Netflix player software and now the laptop works fine.)
Netflix currently has about 1,000 videos for viewing online. And while that's much better than services like iTunes (which has a whopping 250 movies now), the selection still feels thin. Of 460 movies in my rental queue, only 10 are available for online viewing, and none of those are major studio releases. If you're here looking for Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings, don't hold your breath: Most of the releases are on the obscure side (I'm watching a documentary about Garry Kasparov and Deep Blue right now), but some classics (Chinatown) and bigger-budget films (The Sum of All Fears) are available. As another point of reference: Of the top 25 most-viewed titles so far, I've already seen 19 of them.
The video quality is surprisingly good. Shockingly good, really. After about a minute of initial buffering, I was playing full-screen video over a standard cable modem connection. I encountered no stuttering or buffering pauses, ever. You can pause the video, rewind it, jump ahead, or quit altogether. Only the portion you watch counts against your monthly allocation of viewing hours. The player has minimal frills. Aside from a play button and a slider for moving around within the video, you can adjust volume, and toggle between full screen and windowed mode. There are of course none of the typical DVD extras: No commentary tracks, extra subtitles, deleted scenes, etc.
Though I haven't spent long with it, so far I'm a huge fan of the service. I'm not sure I'd pay much extra for it unless all titles in the DVD catalog were online (I hate waiting for those "Very Long Wait" discs), but as a free add-on to my account, it's a great thing to have. I'm not sure how well it will work on a buggy hotel wireless connection (and since it won't install on my laptop, I may never find out), but I'm anxious to give it a try: No more traveling with a pouch full of DVDs? Sign me up.
I figure the biggest challenge will be getting a downloadable service running which people actually want to use. Amazon's Unbox has been a catastrophe, due to the onerous restrictions it puts on videos and how they are viewed. Can Netflix overcome the flubs that have plagued others to the point where online video has a bit of a bad reputation? We'll see, as the service rolls out to all subscribers over the next few months.
Want to see an online demo of the service? Here's a great video demonstration.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I've had Netflix for almost a year, and my wife and I love it! When I heard they were beginning to offer free online viewing time to subscribers, I was delightfully surprised! I'm currently unable to view them (the website says my account will be upgraded "By June of 2007"), but I'm glad to hear that Mr. Null approves!
I used netflix and blockbuster online, and I don't see why someone would keep using netflix, aside from the fact they "always did". I thought that blockbuster was trying to play catch-up with the new programs that they implemented like free rentals in store and trading mailed movies, but now it seems like netflix is trying to do the same, and this doesn't seem like it is worth it. Not being able to use it on latops and bad connections just doesn't make me want to go back to netflix.
Movielink.com does this right and has been 3-5 years now. You can download it, watch it a month later offline if you want. If you want to watch it as it downloads, you can do that too.
While I think Movielink is probably the best movie download service out there, the Netflix service would seem to me to offer a very bright future based on the number of movies they should have available in the near future. Netflix has already said they plan on making this work with all internet connected screens ASAP...Movielink doesn't seem to be moving in that direction. Netflix is also a no-brainer for those who are already renting through the mail as this is added at no additional cost.
The newest TiVo is now high-definition and is available for $300. Looks like your HDTV has a new bes ...
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1 Posted by amos_dupuich on Thu Jan 18, 2007 1:23AM EST Report Abuse
Don't be silly, Movielink has way more more than 1000 movies.