this is a tough call. i use streaming way more than i get DVDs, but i am very aware that i watch a lot of bad stuff on instant view. instant view is a lot like channel surfing. perhaps it's time to get reacquainted with my local video store.
yeah, there are so many things i want to watch that arent on streaming.....yet the full tv seasons and the random surfing surprises of streaming are such a joy!
Hm, well I had the 2 dvd plan, so this really just means I'll go down to 1 dvd for the same price, and since I'm always so slow at watching and returning, it won't really make a big difference in my life.
things are changing fast and furiously in terms of streaming. netflix is loosing it's hold and the rest of the pack is quickly catching up. it won't be long before we can subscribe to HBO via streaming, and for that i am very excited. the nice thing about netflix is that they are month to month, if they wanted a long term commitment my answer would be an easy no.
Inter-library loan works pretty much as well as the physical DVD netflix deal. You have to get off your ass and go to your public library, but other than that I haven't ever found anything it couldn't get. Most libraries even let you order online now, and they'll just email you when your DVD comes in. If you have access to a school library it works even better because of the Oregon and Washington Summit system. I guess there are late fees...
This might be another good reason for me to go into a BOOK CAVE. At my house we've been discussing disconnecting the internet. I go from one extreme to the other. Streaming television is so awesome in the winter, but so is a BOOK CAVE. I drool when I think of actually reading the books on my shelf. I have a lot of catching up to do. I want to go in a BOOK CAVE, at least for a week. I sort of feel like I have finally caught up with every mainstream movie, every TV show I could ever possibly want to watch. BOOK CAVE.
i love a book cave. there was just an article somewhere about how the dying breed of Legitimate Know-it-Alls (barzun, trilling, et al) were able to become the way they are because of "no electronic distractions." I really feel this. If I have 4 hours of freetime I might spend it all farting around reading the onion or writing emails, which, dont get me wrong, is awesome. But the Intellectual Dinosaurs of a Bygone Age spent their freetime ONLY READING. With that kind of time, you COULD read all of plato in the original greek, etc.
we live in a different time, and thats fine/normal/just how history works, but part of me does long for the book caves of yore. FOCUSED, LONG-TERM LEARNING, instead of the amazingly widely-varying but ultimately piecemeal educations we receive from the internet.
I will probably just switch to all streaming. It's what I use most. But I kind of agree with that tweet-- compared to how much cable television costs it seems like a great deal to me. Very different services, I suppose, but still.
Since they don't charge me for ILL privileges, I don't see that it is their job to physically transport DVDs around for me. That is what Netflix is for! ILL should be reserved for things that are actually impossible to get another way or at reasonable expense. Like all my German novels...
Netflix is smart. The result of this will be a ton of people downgrading or cancelling their DVD-based subscriptions and keeping/switching to streaming plans. The amount of money flowing into movie distributors via traditional channels goes down, the amount of money flowing in via streaming media goes up. Pretty soon more things are available via streaming.
i guess i don't think the price is too high, objectively, but it'd too high for me and now I don't know how to choose!! I guess streaming is the only real choice, then use library/remaining video stores for what's not streaming. Just is sad! So many movies aren't on streaming, will they be lost forever???
of course a lot of the movies we want to watch aren't held by netflix at all, so whatever.
That is exactly what my household is doing bookhouseboyP: cancelling the Netflix DVDs and dusting off the Movie Madness and Clinton Street Video membership cards.
Comments
alas
love that little bit of everything......
I guess there are late fees...
^INSIDER SECRETZ
At my house we've been discussing disconnecting the internet. I go from one extreme to the other. Streaming television is so awesome in the winter, but so is a BOOK CAVE.
I drool when I think of actually reading the books on my shelf. I have a lot of catching up to do. I want to go in a BOOK CAVE, at least for a week.
I sort of feel like I have finally caught up with every mainstream movie, every TV show I could ever possibly want to watch.
BOOK CAVE.
i imagine lying on a carpet
in front of an endless wall of books
there was just an article somewhere about how the dying breed of Legitimate Know-it-Alls (barzun, trilling, et al) were able to become the way they are because of "no electronic distractions." I really feel this. If I have 4 hours of freetime I might spend it all farting around reading the onion or writing emails, which, dont get me wrong, is awesome. But the Intellectual Dinosaurs of a Bygone Age spent their freetime ONLY READING. With that kind of time, you COULD read all of plato in the original greek, etc.
we live in a different time, and thats fine/normal/just how history works, but part of me does long for the book caves of yore. FOCUSED, LONG-TERM LEARNING, instead of the amazingly widely-varying but ultimately piecemeal educations we receive from the internet.
"How dare Netflix charge more than $10 for EVERY MOVIE IN THE WORLD."
Joking... ex-library staffer
of course a lot of the movies we want to watch aren't held by netflix at all, so whatever.
"whats a netflix?"
Gary in particular is very excited.