Microsoft Announces TV and Movies for Xbox Live
PreacherTom writes "In the latest of several recent upgrades to their online service, Microsoft has announced that their Xbox Live service will begin offering movies and television on demand starting on November 22nd. All subscribers (including those using the free service) will have access to movies from Paramount and Warner Bros. along with TV shows from CBS and MTV. Prices haven't been officially released as of yet, but MS has stated that they are attempting to be competitive with similar services from iTunes and cable companies." There is lots of commentary out there on this one, so Read More to reference the many other sites discussing this story. Besides commentary on the announcement itself, Eurogamer has Sony's snarky commentary on this move by Microsoft.
How can something be dominating when it has no competition? When the PS3 and Wii are released, then let the speculation begin?
Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
So, for someone who doesn't own a 360, nor play games... You just wanted first post right?
Sony "would never segregate or shut out any of our consumers from our entertainment experience because they didn't buy the top of the line system."
I think you just did Sony. I sure as heck can't afford your console and, seeing that I've bought multiple PSX and PS2 systems (mainly because your hardware is garbage and dies after a few years of use) which definitely qualifies me as one of your consumers, you've pretty much "shut out" or alienated me. I much prefer MS's approach. Although I prefer Nintendo's the most. Keep it simple, keep it a console, offer something intriguing and new.
Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
I wonder if that really is all subscribers, or all *american* subscribers?
That's a point! Anyway, they were first, so they positioned themseves very nicely in the market.
"an experienced, industrious, ambitious, and often, quite often, picturesque liar" - Mark Twain
This service is going to fail miserably. No one likes MTV, and if you miss an episode you don't need to go shell out money to XBOX when there is free on-demand, free constant reruns/encores, and free, legal viewings online via "overdrive". Isn't the market segment for most XBOX 360 gamers between about 14-30? The only thing that CBS has is maybe NCIS, survivor, and the amazing race. Again, these are all available for free at cbs.com where you can watch the entire episode once aired. The only way that this would take off is if the television shows were sold before they aired on TV...but I doubt that will be happening any time soon.
-Michael, AKA Frankie.
It seems to be US only judging by Major Nelson's comments. This seems rather silly when iTunes already has the US covered for downloadable content, it's as if companies don't want our money in Europe and the rest of the world. I'd gladly pay to download movies or TV shows such as Lost however they simply don't seem to be available in a legitimate form here.
;)
I've heard some European countries are able to get some content, however not the same as is being made available to the US. We'll have to see how this plays out but whilst Europe is left behind by the media and entertainment companies with the later releases of the Wii and PS3 and so forth it's really no surprise that Europe has a noticeably smaller console market than Asia/US.
I really do think Europe is just crying out for goodies like this and the first company to offer something in full, and not at greedy profiteering higher price than the rest of the world that company is going to be onto an absolute winner. If Microsoft really isn't to give Europe the same movies and TV shows as the US here then they're really only letting themselves down however of course, that's not to say it's necessarily Microsoft's fault, I'm sure the movie industry has a lot to do with this having historically left Europe 6months or so behind in terms of film releases alongside charging it more even without taxes taken into account.
Now if only I was in a position to setup a company which could offer films and TV shows to Europeans at the same time and for the same price as the US, if no one else wants to rack up fortunes from the extremely strong Euro and British pound then I'll gladly take the money!
This argument holds as much water, as saying that the PS3 is selling like crazy because all two PS3's at a store sold out already for pre orders. Being first, out of one place, does not make a race.
You make a very good point. However, I can see where they are coming from with their point of view. MS has had Xbox live for some time now on their last two generations (well both) of consoles. While the PS2 had online capabilities, there was no "centralized hub" from Sony in which to offer upgrades, expansion packs- well, anything at all. "Xbox Live" offered a centralized hub for updates at first, but has grown into something much, much more. No matter what your stance is on MS or the console market, you have to admit that MS has done a pretty good job. Hell, GameSpy and IGN basically offered more online content/features for the PS2 than Sony did.
Before I am labeled simply "pro-MS", let me say that I own a PS@ (and had a PS1) and will probably purchase other next-gen consoles as well. I am not a fan of a particular vendor, I am a fan of consoles, gadgets, and games.
I am actually hoping for Sony to launch a centralized portal for their systems. Nintendo (while not a Game Cube fan, I do have a DS) as well. I look forward to more options, (hopefully) competitive pricing structures (to keep prices down), and competition to keep content fresh and attractive.
Repant. Thy end is sheer.
Given that the Xbox 360 only has a 20 gig hard drive, I'm hoping these TV shows and movies will be priced as disposable rentals. Hell, use DRM to have them expire after 30 days, so long as you make them cheap enough on that basis. The few game demos that I have on my unit already eat well into that space.
Bill Clinton: Pimp we can believe in. - The Shirt!!!
I didn't see this mentioned yet, but Microsoft claims that this will be full-HD content. I think I'll probably DL a movie or two, just to see how it will look on my LCD before buying the HD-DVD add-on for the 360. It has the ability to sell as a test...but I don't see it becoming too popular beyond that. If you can't take it off of the Hard Drive, then you'll have to constantly be deleting files to make room. Microsoft has said that you don't have to pay for a file twice, so if you pay once you can DL it again later, but it's a real waste of bandwidth to DL like that.
I hear it's patent pending.
// MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
MS is going to let us pay for the ability to watch Television shows and movies on our televisions.
Phrased in that way you're exactly right. Phrased as "The Cable Bill / Netflix Killer" it has a much brighter future. I'm not saying thats going to happen, we have to see what kind of content selection and price they're going to offer. But as I said somewhere else, if they're able to provide me with the majority of the TV shows I watch and a decent movie selection (all in HD hopefully) then sure I'll shell out for that instead and save my $100/month Dish and Netflix accounts.
The shows are for use on the console only. Also, depending on what you get, some have 14 day expiration times. Given that a single episode of Robot Chicken cost 240 points for 480p ($3) and 320 points for 720p ($4).
They might as well be asking for bars of solid gold if they don't allow me to take the video wherever I want to go. Movie tickets around here are still less than 10 bucks and for that I get 2-3 hours of the whole experience. Pausing ain't worth THAT much to me.
The two consumer high-definition video disc formats are 1-layer Blu-ray Disc (25 GB) and 2-layer HD DVD (30 GB). The Xbox 360 hard drive is only 20 GB. How much video will fit on that?
The TV series Lost is Disney, not Sony. You might as well ask when the movie Cinderella is coming out on UMD. (You might have been confusing Sony with Sonny.)
Phrase it however you want. They will charge you not per Show or Season but per Episode (With Commercials no doubt). At that rate your $100 is not gonna go very far. Mine won't. even at a buck a piece, in a month that's roughly 3.333_ shows a day. Movies will be tiered, so it will probably be much worse than your current cost. Selection is another issue. Go to MSN music (Play-ForSome) and compare thier selection with itunes to give you some idea. (You better hurry though you only have until Nov 13)
I have TimeWarner (Brighthouse) with on demand (for most channells) and maybe 12 movie channells for less than $100 a month. No way, I'd give it up to pay MS on a per episode basis.
I don't want to appear biased, (but I am) I think it was the best for all of us when MS went to console market. The 360 looks great and I hear mostly good things about its games. But services like this remind me of all the MS products littering the technological scrap heap. (Not to mention my garage, WebTV, MSN companion, etc. I even have a space for a ZUNE to be filled obsolete music player. ) I would take this into consideration before you help them fold up two more good alternative companies.
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Heh... at 3.3 shows per day maybe you just watch too much TV.
Anyway, the comparison with TV isn't entirely valid. Sometimes people miss shows and don't want to wait for a re-run to watch it. Reruns may take months to appear and if a new episode of the same show airs next week you may need to watch the epiaode you missed before that. Sure, you can download the show off the internet, but that's not legal in many places and thus can't really be used as a valid argument. Then there's the option to watch the legal episodes from the netowrks website. But that has it's own issues. Not everyone really wants to sit at their PC to watch a TV show nor is it ideal for families. So that avenue only really benefits a small percentage of viewers.
Then, as others have mentioned, the HD movies can't be overlooked. This allows people to rent HD movies without going to the video store and without investing in an HD-DVD or Blu-Ray movie player... both of which are still very expensive. This is what I'm most excited about. This will allow me to rent HD movies while I wait for a cheap dual format (HD-DVD + Blu-Ray) standalone movie player to hit the market. Plus, if they start offering "still in theater" movies (like you see at hotels sometimes), that adds even more appeal.
I can finally watch TV shows on my TV! Thank you, Microsoft!
Ah, Zonk, just had throw a jab in a Sony into your commentary didn't ya?
Look it's logical fallacy 8: Prejudicial Language!
Fanatically anti-fanatical
I guess I was just commenting on your original "Another brilliant innovation" comment. Maybe you won't use it, and bully for you. At 3.33+ hours a day I'm guessing you're doing a lot of flipping which you're not gonna get from any pay-per-download service. My tv watching is more of the 5-6 shows per week variety. Using your math thats $24 a month for me. So, FOR ME, thats actually fairly innovative and saves me money.
I don't know where all the discussion of music sites and mp3 players came from, I thought we were talking xbox360 and tv/movie downloads. But without checking I'll believe you that iTunes has a better selection that MSN music. Also, Lowes is closer to my house than Home Depot... so theres that.
Of course it all comes down to selection and no one can make guesses on that until MS makes another announcement or the service debuts.
3.33 Purchases a Day != 3.33 Hours a day. With Music Videos and "half hour" comedy that can come to less than an hour assuming you aren't forced to watch 8minutes of commercials per show. (I would have to say my TV is on more than 3.33hrs a day, just not watching it for that amount of time. And Yes I Flip between things that are not Adverts.)
I don't know where all the discussion of music sites and mp3 players came from, I thought we were talking xbox360 and tv/movie downloads. But without checking I'll believe you that iTunes has a better selection that MSN music. Also, Lowes is closer to my house than Home Depot... so theres that.
I can only base my assumptions on past experience from a company. If you want to think maybe this time it will be different, well good luck to you.
From a broader perspective, I love on demand services, I use them frequently on cable and the internet. I watch more than 3 hrs a day of tv in my home, split pretty evenly between my wife and I. I pay less attention to her shows and she pays less attention to mine. But on any given day you can count on both of us watching an hour of Simpsons a good day. That plus the DailyShow, PBS and BBC news is already 3hrs. To each their own.
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I'm all in favour of Microsoft's new plan, it will be good to see some more media content on the Xbox Live Marketplace rather than just game trailers or promotional clips, however what makes me worried is the size of these things. Take for example you are the average user of an Xbox and you download a few demos first (Need For Speed Carbon alone is 1.1gb) and then you decide to rent 2 movies or so. I'd say you will very quickly find yourself running out of harddisk space on premium consoles, or cores that have been upgraded. Especially the way they are letting people buy and keep TV shows, it seems as if they will need to start upping the hard drive sizes pretty quickly if they start offering this amount of content, not to mention the speed of the network which already almost grinds to a halt during weekends due to the huge amount of traffic. It will be interesting to see how it works out and how much competition there will be between the Xbox 360, the iTV and anything Sony can produce in the entertainment section with the PS3.
Business Voyeur
From the article: Microsoft hasn't announced pricing. But the software giant says movies will be competitive with pay-per-view programming offered by cable companies, typically $4 to $6 apiece. And TV shows will cost roughly the same amount to download as they are on Apple's (AAPL) iTunes service, which is $2 (see BusinessWeek.com, 6/21/06, "Apple's iTunes Movie Muddle"). But iTunes content is 640x480, where as I hope my xbox360 will be happy showing me the shows in 720p on my HDTV.
To each their own.
That was my point this entire time...
I'm only halfway through my drive, at 11 of 20GB used.
That said, I completely agree that we need to have more space. TV shows in HD will fill up the drive fast. I just hope that there will be a way to transfer saved games and XBLA games from hard-drive to hard-drive, so that I don't have to go through the tedium of saving everything to memory card or re-downloading all my games. I'm pretty sure this is possible, since I've seen a 3rd party accessory that lets you dump hard-drive data to your PC as storage.
-- jchenx