Fri Oct 12, 2007 1:48PM EDT
See Comments (126)
Five thousand movies on your TV, instantly: that's the promise of Vudu, a TV set-top box that uses the power of peer-to-peer networking to deliver near-DVD quality videos to your living room at the click of a button, no PC required. I've had about a week to test-drive the Vudu; did it fulfill my dreams of home-theater nirvana? Read on.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Senseless technology. Be revolutionary and do what I do. Capture your movies with Movie Maker create .wmv's store them on your PC with a TB storage, hook your PC to your Hi-Def TV via DVI to HDMI and enjoy your collection this way. Don't be a zombie consumer. Be an original.
What's the point in paying $400 for this thing? From what I see, the $400 for the Vudu is only to pay for the convienience of not having to go to the local rental store or retail store. Get off your lazy butt and save yourself $400.
baronstone, What is the average salary of the P.R. department at VUDU? Are you hiring? How much money do you plan on shelling out on additional hard drives? You say you can back up your movies? If you own the movie on disk, what would you need to back it up for? DVD players don't crash, where were you headed with that thought? This product is garbage!!!!!!!!!!! See you in the unemployment line soon, my friend.
PS3 $399 - Plays games, movies, music, true 1080p hi-def via HDMI. Rent blu-ray movies from Netflix, and you're set.
I would rather stick with grabngovideo.com
"setup was pretty straightforward-I just hooked my framus into the rgushj6745u pot and licked the retuyh connecting it to the popsicle stick joy button". Are you that removed from human speech or just so arrogant to flaunt this type of language to normal people?
Who cares if there are 5,000 movies instantly avaialable, unless they are 5,000 movies I want to watch?
$400, and then you've gotta rent the movies too? Why would I do that? That's just silly, just like this thing. If it was free, then I might think about it. Otherwise, this thing will quickly find it's way to the historical trash heap like so many other silly devices. Just looking at the posts here, most people have this figured out right away. VUDU does have some shills here, though... employees, maybe? Sorry guys, the product is lame and isn't gonna fly. Time to find a new job.
why not just download the movies yourself and hook a computer to your tv? that's free, though arguably illegal
Netflix seems like still a good deal, although their mode of mailing dvds to your house needs to change. I would buy a box up to $500 and pay a $20 subscription fee to watch as many movies as I want, but to think about paying $3.99 for 1 movie, that doesn't equate. I think the technology will get better of course and maybe when it does I'll buy.
Advanced Home Technologies (AHT) has a feature-rich Allsii HD set top box and software. It's only in beta, but as a tech geek I definitely prefer their box over Vudu's. I read their Geek Box will available this year. anyone have any insight on this?
just in time for christmas! a machine that does something all your other machines already do. my advice is turn off the tv and turn on your pc. content is much better when hollywood doesn't dictate.
Wait for version 5.0 when the hardware is free and it costs $20/mo
I still use a VCR.
i love my series 2 tivo, that i paid 150$ for in 2004, along with the 299$ lifetime subscription. for once, an actual return on an electronic investment!!!! unbox has been great (i only cruise the weekly 99 cent sale), and while i can't watch the movies on it in hi-def, who cares, HD-DVD players will come down in price eventually.
this technology will be bought out by netflix...watch.
For those that complain about the author's stated price, this product will go through the same cycle that all new tech products go through. It may have a MSRP of $399 today, but as it gains popularity the price will go down and eventually could sell for $99 or less. The manufacturer has to try to recoup their R&D and production costs or they will quickly go under. Volume sales = volume pricing. How low the price goes, and whether or not the company is around in two years, will depend upon how agressively they market the product, how they manage discounting the product and of course the perceived value (quality vs. price) that they offer. Assuming the come through with HD sound and video quality and the price of the unit drops below $100, many of the naysayers here might change their tune. IMHO, I'm sticking with purchasing DVDs for 'stale' movies and going to the theaters for the first run 'gotta see' movies. The theaters, by the way, are the losers in this deal if Vudu takes off.
A big waste of money. You can buy a good dvd player and rent or buy dvds you want to view in spectacular quality of both video and audio. All that money and time for inferior merchandise that delets itself in 24 hours. Provide the download box free, then there might be some use for the thing--but to pay $400 up front--crazy!
It would be a waste. Considering you're still paying for a movie that doesn't have all the quality of a DVD or BlueRay. And you'll be stuck with a piece of equipment that cost more to keep it than to rent or buy movies you really want to see or keep!
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66 Posted by cuseboy19 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:32PM EDT Report Abuse
It will not catch on because the movies are not free. period. Only the rich will buy it. People want free or nothing. Sell the box and offer free-P2P movie interaction and you will see people flock to it in the masses, just add a little commmercial in the front end of the movie to bring in revenue for the production houses.