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December 17, 2006 12:00 AM

Sony to Offer Movie Downloads

Windows IT Pro
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Sources close to Sony say that the company will soon enter the increasingly crowded digital movie download market, competing with companies such as Apple Computer and Microsoft. And as with Microsoft's Xbox Live service, Sony's offering will be made available for a video game console, in this case the PlayStation 3.

According to reports, the Sony digital movie service has been in the works for about a year and a half and will go public in early 2007. It will include movies from Sony Pictures and will eventually also include content from other studios. In addition, the service will enable PlayStation 3 users to synchronize the movie downloads with the PlayStation Portable (PSP).

Sony hopes the new service will help the PlayStation 3 better compete with the Xbox 360, which began offering TV and movie downloads in November. The biggest share of the digital movie download market belongs to Apple, which provides TV, video, and movie downloads via the iTunes Store. Currently, Apple offers movies from only Disney, but other studios are expected to get on board in early 2007.

In somewhat related news, Nintendo announced this week that it will replace 3.2 million straps used with the new motion-sensitive hand controller it bundles with its Wii video game console. The straps are notorious for breaking, and customers have reported numerous incidents in which the controller has flown loose and struck people and objects.

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Comments
  • Joe
    6 years ago
    Dec 20, 2006

    vandil, this isn't myth or anything, it's common knowledge. the average system lasts 3 years. when u say u have to replace a hard drive here or ram there, often it's a problem that stems from a higher source, such as the motherboard or power supply. it's a common issue, and one that i've had numerous first-hand experiences with. why, i've seen many-a-namebrand system fail shortly after their 1 year warranty expired, and others that lasted 6 years without any repairs. can you honestly say that a computer you've had has lasted more than 6 without a single repair? those situations are so very rare, that i like to congratulate the people that have those systems. many a macbook has failed recently, too!

    motherboards, hard drives, power supplies, optical drives and ram will often fail in most machines - a) because they are moving parts, or B) because they draw the most power in the machine and have to regulate it to other components.

    i haven't seen too many cpu's just fail outright without burning out tho.

    after the three year period, usually a system reaches the point where repairs are costing more than the price of a new low-end system. most people usually buy the low to mid-range system costing anywhere from $700-$1500 for a desktop, and at the three year mark, if there's a major part that needs replacing such as the motherboard, it's often difficult (or impossible) to get a replacement, or the cost is too high.

    as for individual hardware component upgrades, try to get a hard drive for a 5-6 year old computer...the lowest hard drives that are commonly available are 160GB and most don't run on older systems, or would cost more than what the system is worth, so it's a crapchute.

    old laptops? try to use a laptop with 16-bit PCMCIA with wireless-g....there are no 16-bit cards made anymore, and 32-bit cards run at a different voltage, so again, it's not even worthwhile for stuff that old.

    i'd rather have a new system and not pay for repairs.

  • Vandil
    6 years ago
    Dec 20, 2006

    @Waethorn
    "The average lifespan of a computer is 3 years."

    Way to create a market for your OEM business. Shame on you.

    Every computer I have ever owned that is an x86-Windows, x86-Linux, x86-Mac, and PPC-Mac still work fine.

    Granted, when I upgrade to a newer machine, the older one becomes an around-the-house server or a "new" computer for a relative.

    I can't speak for major, Windows-selling OEMs, because I've been building my own x86-Windows/x86-Linux machines for nearly a decade, but I have never had a machine flat out die. It's all in quality parts selection.

    Actually, the only OEM x-86-Windows/x86-Linux machines I have gotten are a pair of IBM ThinkPads that shipped with Win98SE. Today, one runs Linux, the other runs Windows XP, and even sport Wireless-G cards.

    And Apple's stuff are certainly powerhouse of craftsmanship. We have one department at our newspaper that still requires QuarkXPress 4.11 (for OS 9) for laying out pages and they use Blue & White G3s and Yikes G4s from 1999. These machines run full time, every single night, without hardware problems at all (save for the usual HDD or RAM module addition/replacement between OS refreshes).

    I even have a Beige PowerMac G3 233MHz at home still going strong as a WebDAV server.

    Not a single warranty on any of these PC/Linux/Mac machines. And the only things that have failed over the years were simple things any local Mom & Pop shop or tech relative could fix for cheap (replacing mobo batteries, replacing an HDD, replacing/adding RAM, adding a CD-Burner).


    Getting back to the theme of digital downloads, you can't re-download your DRM'd content after a hard disk crash (because people never backup their data). That's sort of OK, as you can't buy a DVD from Walmart, break it/lose it , then go back to Walmart and ask for a free replacement.


    The real problem is, they provide you with no backup solution and no transcoding solution (for indirect comp. with other devices, and future-proofing purchases).

  • Vandil
    6 years ago
    Dec 20, 2006

    @Waethorn
    "The average lifespan of a computer is 3 years."

    Way to create a market for your OEM business. Shame on you.

    Every computer I have ever owned that is an x86-Windows, x86-Linux, x86-Mac, and PPC-Mac still work fine.

    Granted, when I upgrade to a newer machine, the older one becomes an around-the-house server or a "new" computer for a relative.

    I can't speak for major, Windows-selling OEMs, because I've been building my own x86-Windows/x86-Linux machines for nearly a decade, but I have never had a machine flat out die. It's all in quality parts selection.

    Actually, the only OEM x-86-Windows/x86-Linux machines I have gotten are a pair of IBM ThinkPads that shipped with Win98SE. Today, one runs Linux, the other runs Windows XP, and even sport Wireless-G cards.

    And Apple's stuff are certainly powerhouse of craftsmanship. We have one department at our newspaper that still requires QuarkXPress 4.11 (for OS 9) for laying out pages and they use Blue & White G3s and Yikes G4s from 1999. These machines run full time, every single night, without hardware problems at all (save for the usual HDD or RAM module addition/replacement between OS refreshes).

    I even have a Beige PowerMac G3 233MHz at home still going strong as a WebDAV server.

    Not a single warranty on any of these PC/Linux/Mac machines. And the only things that have failed over the years were simple things any local Mom & Pop shop or tech relative could fix for cheap (replacing mobo batteries, replacing an HDD, replacing/adding RAM, adding a CD-Burner).


    Getting back to the theme of digital downloads, you can't re-download your DRM'd content after a hard disk crash (because people never backup their data). That's sort of OK, as you can't buy a DVD from Walmart, break it/lose it , then go back to Walmart and ask for a free replacement.


    The real problem is, they provide you with no backup solution and no transcoding solution (for indirect comp. with other devices, and future-proofing purchases).

  • Joe
    6 years ago
    Dec 19, 2006

    "They are ultimately a disposable commodity that will cease to be useful"

    Much like computers don't forget. The average lifespan of a computer is 3 years. That's why extended warranties are usually only offered up until then, and OEM-built computers only have a 1 year warranty since the parts are covered for 1 year and have a higher defect per lot count. That's also why OEM's charge more for the warranty over the lifetime of the parts - since it would cost them money to replace them.

    I agree with the point about backing up purchases, but I think the XBOX Marketplace has this right - charge less, and offer it as a rental instead. It's illegal to backup rental downloads just like it is to rip a rental DVD. There's copy protections in place to prevent that in both situations, too. If the console market started putting burners in their systems instead of just players, I'm sure that a DRM-enabled backup system to limit the number of burn jobs per original would be feasible. But of course, with the MPAA/RIAA being totally neurotic about DVD & DRM cracks, similar to the way the satellite industry has been bit with satellite hacks, I doubt that they would agree with any kind of proposal like that. The MPAA has become a victim of their own fears. The technology is there, and it CAN be "consumer-friendly", but the end result being a success or failure is all in the implementation of it.

  • hey
    6 years ago
    Dec 19, 2006

    Presumably, content on a fried console is replaceable, however, not in the traditional computer HD -> backup sense. Just like a mobile phone that is fried, you would have to request a refund for the content that you have purchased again. I've done it with a mobile phone with some of Verizon's Get It Now stuff. And extra step, but it is possible.

    However, I fully understand and agree with your point, and that is that a console is a money pit. A downloaded movie is not overly different from a game purchased on one console that does not work on a newer console. The whole console ecosystem is designed to be replaced every few years, and most everyone buying a console understands that. They are ultimately a disposable commodity that will cease to be useful.

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