Wed Mar 12, 2008 12:20PM EDT
See Comments (65)
I had a chance to check out Hulu (a joint
venture of NBC and News Corp., the owner of Fox) last fall, while it was still
in beta. The site itself doesn't look all that different now. It still boasts a
clean, clear layout for easy navigation, along with a slick video player that
lets you zoom in to a full-screen mode.
Now that Hulu is open to the public, however, it's stacked with way more
content. The site hosts about 250 TV shows, including hits like "The
Office, "30 Rock," "House," "Terminator: The Sarah
Connor Chronicles," and "Heroes." It's also got a truckload of
older shows, such as "The A-Team," "Adam-12," the
unfortunate "Galactica 1980," "Hart to Hart," and
"Remington Steele."
Also new are a slew of free movies, including some hits ("The Big
Lebowski," "Dude, Where's My Car?" "Mulholland Drive,"
"Sideways," and "The Usual Suspects") and some misses
("All Dogs Go to Heaven 2," "Attack of the Puppet People").
For other movies-including "Alien 3," "Garden State,"
"Juno," and "Office Space" ("Did you see the memo?")-only
clips are available.
Another cool feature is Hulu's Flash-powered HD "gallery," which for
now offers about 20-odd movie trailers. The HD video quality (at 720p) is
excellent-clips load quickly with little in the way of pixilation or other
obvious artifacts. ABC streams
full HD episodes of "Lost" and "Desperate Housewives,"
but its streams are a little touch-and-go, especially for those with so-so
bandwidth.
Meanwhile, the standard TV and movie streams look OK, if not great. TV streams
look a bit pixilated, but the video itself looks smooth enough, with a minimum
of stuttering. Movie quality on Hulu is pretty variable-some of the movies I
saw were in their original aspect ratios, some were panned-and-scanned, others
were actually windowboxed (that is, big black bars surrounding the video). That
said, all the films-even the R-rated ones-are uncut.
As before, everything is free, and you can even edit clips from the show and
embed them into your own website-that way, you get the video, and Hulu gets
credit (and presumably, revenue) for the traffic.
Of course, there's a catch: non-skippable ads.
For TV shows, you'll have to deal with four to five commercial interruptions
for an hour-long episode, or seven-plus commercials for a two-hour movie.
(Clips also begin with a pre-roll ad.) The ads themselves are only about 15
seconds each, and for now there's only one ad per commercial break. (In some
cases, you won't see an ad at all.)
That said, I'm sure those commercial breaks will start filling up. And indeed,
from everything I'm hearing, advertisers are lining up to buy spots on sites
like Hulu.
While I would rather pay a couple bucks for a commercial-free TV episode (or
more for a commercial-free movie rental), it sounds like free, ad-supported TV
and movies may well be the wave of the future. Guess we'd better get used to
the idea.
Let's also keep in mind that Hulu isn't the first site to offer free TV
episodes over the Web. Other
networks have streamed shows online for months now. Indeed, some of the
bigger players-notably ABC and CBS-haven't signed on with Hulu.
What would I like to see from ad-supported video sites like Hulu? A more complete video library, for one, since most of the TV series listed only have streams for a handful of recent episodes (on purpose, apparently, to avoid "cannibalizing" DVD sales).
Also, why not allow downloads to portable media players? Services like the new NBC Direct already allow for PC-only downloads, but nobody is offering free, ad-supported downloads for iPods or other portable players.
Anyway, check out Hulu and report back with your thoughts. Like what you see? Can you live with the ads? What's missing?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
CBS hasnt signed on yet? i've been watching jericho and survivor online for well over a year... what CBS.com doesnt count? i dont know about ABC as they dont have a single show i watch. i just hope hulu is better than the video at NBC.com, it's complete garbage. at least the video at CBS doesnt pause constantly to buffer(i have a great connection) or skip to the last chapter after the first. i think this is a great idea, they still make their money, and i dont have to pay 30-40 bucks to watch an entire season of episodes i missed, and all i have to do is watch a couple minutes of commercials spread throughout each show. i already pay for DTV i dont feel i should have to pay 2 bucks per missed episode for something i will never watch again.
It's very slow. And it's not giving me any feedback that it is loading the video other than the status bar on the bottom of my browser. They'll have to speed it up if they want to be the wave of the future.
I think its great that networks offer tv shows over the internet, I think its always good to cater to your customers, but is it necessary in the U.S.? with Tivo DVR and many cable shows shown several times between new episodes not excluding DVD rentals. For example I loved the A-team would I go to Hula...or netflix DVD if available, probably netflix it eventhough Hula is free. Portability would be nice but I assume that those who know how are...already doing that.
Just love this whole 1980s retro scene at the moment. Hulu certainly helps me re-live those years. Hopefully Knight Rider 2008 will be picked up for the Fall (and they'll give the car and The Hoff more to do). In the meantime I'm enjoying the awesome new, digitally remastered Airwolf soundtrack that they've just released called 'Airwolf Themes' which you can download off Apple iTunes Store, or from their official website where there are great teaser samples, http://www.airwolfthemes.com/ I think Hulu's Airwolf pheneomenon is just the tip of the iceberg and really just setting us all up for an Airwolf revival movie too.
The F30 is not the smallest or slimmest model in the compact camera category, but it's one of the be ...
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Posted by jdzambrano1 on Wed Mar 12, 2008 1:01PM EDT Report Abuse
This is a great idea. Unfortunately, we live overseas and they will not let us access the video. We are the ones who cannot watch the programs because they are not shown here. We are the ones who need a service like this!