Apple to Offer Monthly iTunes TV Subscriptions 353
sg3000 writes "Fans of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report, rejoice! Reuters is reporting that Apple will provide monthly subscriptions to two of Comedy Central's most popular shows. One question, as TV shows become available for sale on the Internet, will this make it harder to share clips online, such as through Google Video? In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true."
While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:2, Interesting)
Am I the only one thinking this is the first step to subscription music on the IPod
Re:While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:5, Insightful)
no, but you seem to be one of the people who are falsely under the impression that "subscription" means rental, which it does not in either the general case or the case of iTunes video passes.
here "subscription" has its tru meaning, as applied for example to magazines, in that you pay for something in advance (at discount) and receive the product periodically when it is actually published.
this is not to be confused with BS "subscription" services which take away what you already have when you stop paying.
Re:While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:2)
Honestly, I tend to think subscription and 'single purchase' models serve different markets. I use both iTunes Music Store (on my Mac) and Rhapsody (on my PC) for different reasons. I've been a Rhapsody user since it first came out, and I love that I can play anything in the Rhapsody library. One monthly fee, and I have access to the whole library.
However, even with the more recent ability to operate while offline, Rhaps
Re:While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:3, Insightful)
I think subscription services for music will be a tough sell. First, you have over a hundred years of history going against you. For over a hundred years, people have been able to buy music (Player Piano Rolls [wikipedia.org]). That's going to be a tough sell.
Conversely, video has traditionally been a "pay to watch" kind of thing. You went to the movies and paid your money to see the movie. TV, while free to watch, came with commercials. So I think video will be easier to convince people t
Re:While good - why not unlimited I-Tunes pass (Score:5, Insightful)
-1 Redundant (Score:5, Funny)
Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:5, Funny)
That's Slashdot. Summed up in a single sentance. That's so beautiful.
I think I'm changing my sig.
*sigh*
And, in an attempt to be on topic:
No, why would it make it harder to share. Uh, google video? WTF?
Oh right. That's how people share videos... *snickers*
Oh Rihgt.
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:5, Funny)
...
That's Slashdot. Summed up in a single sentance. That's so beautiful.
Um, I hate to break it to you but that was two sentences.
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:5, Funny)
That's Slashdot. Summed up in a single sentance. That's so beautiful.
Um, I hate to break it to you but that was two sentences.
Didn't you read what he wrote? "In your answer, ignore facts."
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:5, Informative)
Normally I wouldn't do this, but after seeing about 20 /.ers comment on these words, nobody yet (at least in the comments I've seen so far) have realized this is a tongue-in-cheek homage to the king of sarcasm himself, Stephen Colbert [colbertnation.com], of the Colbert Report.
Colbert totally rocks, I look forward to his show more than the Daily Show. For those that don't know, Colbert basically pretends to be a right-wing egotistical fact-ignoring pompous talk show host, but everything he says is either cleverly sarcastic, dripping in irony, damn funny, or all the above. So as per the original poster, some of his trademark lines are "I'm not a fan of facts" or "I don't like books, too many words". And of course, his consistent number one threat - bears.
In fact, I'm surprised more /.ers aren't a fan of him, as he was a total geek when he was younger. He played D&D alot, loved LotR and Sci Fi, and sometimes works this geekiness into his show. For example, once when he introduced a guest who's a poker champion, he said "Now, I've never played Poker, but if its anything like Dungeons & Dragons, I'll be up to my baldrics in scimitars before you can say, 'Cure Light Wounds!'". Also, back when he was on the Daily Show and Viggo Mortensen was on, they had Colbert backstage reading Aragorn's family history and list of aliases in a total geeky way, it was pretty funny. And of course, who can forget his epic Sci-Fi novel (still looking for a publisher) "Stephen Colbert's Alpha Squad 7: Lady Nocturne: A Tek Jansen Adventure"
So yeah, sorry to have to explain the tongue-in-cheek joke above, it's never funny that way, but seeing how many people didn't catch it was a Colbertism, it needed to be done. Wikipedia has a good list [wikipedia.org] of funny lines by Colbert.
And as one final comment, I referred to Colbert Report in one of my slashdot posts [slashdot.org] from a few days ago, but it was unfortunately modded way down into oblivion by some right-wing nutjobs.
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:3, Informative)
As a fellow Colbert junky thought I'd add some more info for those who don't know. The above quote is a reference to truthiness [wikipedia.org] which Colbert coined in his first episode and was actually named "word of the year" for 2005. Here [comedycentral.com]is a link to the video of that portion of the first episode where he talks about it. BTW, basically all the Daily Show and Colbert Report are avaliable free on the Comedy Central website a day or two after they show on
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:3, Funny)
As one of the proof-readers on this book, let me tell you all that you've got a real treat in store when it does find a publisher. It is 2,389 pages of pure genius--the thrill ride of my summer. And I'm not just saying that because I work for Stephen or because he threatened to fire me if I didn't.
-Eric
Re:Never have so few words been so profound. (Score:3, Informative)
He has two chapters from the book up on his website. [colbertnation.com] SciFi doesn't get much better than this...
Brilliant (Score:5, Insightful)
Thus the scientific basis for chiropractic, homeopathy, and items found in the Slashdot submission queue.
Re:Brilliant (Score:5, Funny)
There's really nothing wrong with a chiropractor treating back pains. The problem comes when a chiropractor tries to treat migrains, the common cold, ulcers, and even irritable bowel syndrome. Scientifically, you might as well drink chinese tiger penis soup to get a stiffy.
Re:Brilliant (Score:2)
Just goes to show there are a lot of quacks out there abusing other people's hard work and good information.
Re:Brilliant (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Brilliant (Score:2, Interesting)
Psychological voodoo (Score:5, Interesting)
More and more doctors are coming to the conclusion that most back pain that doesn't have an actual obvious physical problem is indictive of stress and/or psychological pain.
"Regular western medicine would rather fuse my spine"
There are bad doctors everywhere. It's your body, take charge. Find a doctor who is more in line with your thinking. "Western Medicine" is not an insult; it's a system based on provable scientific facts. If I do X, I will get result Y Z% of the time.
Chiropractors once they get beyond rubbing your back are quacks. Your spine can't be "aligned", and no disease is caused by spine alignment. What we do know is that people's minds control their body to a significant degree. And we know a lot of people are whiners about their pain so effective debilitate themselves because they have convinced themselves the pain is debilitating. What chiropractors do is essential convince people they are getting better. Because for the most part, since pain in the back is psychological, if you work on the psyche, you cure the body.
If you go to a chiropractor and you believe they're a quack and its the equivalent of a witch doctor saying "ooga booga booga", then they have no power to heal. So while I admit that too many doctors are pill pushers and don't listen to patients, part of that is that people have too much faith in doctors. They're like a mechanic for your car. You don't keep going back to a bad car mechanic who gives you bad advice...why would you go back to a doctor who gives you bad advice? My brother in law had severe neck/back pain for 2 weeks and went to a doctor who gave him similar advice. I told him that doctor was incompetent; unless he was in a car accident or something similar, he certainly would not need to undergo surgery. I told him to get more/better advice and while he was shopping around, the pain gradually subsided. The poor guy was stressed between work and family and it was clear to me the problems were psychological. He needed to relax, not fuse vertabrae.
Take charge of your life and body. And I guess if it helps you to go to the witch doctor to cure you, that's fine too. But prefer cause and effect explanations.
Win-win situation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Win-win situation (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Win-win situation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Win-win situation (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Win-win situation (Score:5, Insightful)
None of this is to say that copyright is bad, necessarily. Just don't act like questioning the market is blasphemy, when it's really no different than questioning a tax rate.
Re:Win-win situation (Score:3, Insightful)
And thriving black market is a sign of the market not accepting a given price.
Re:Win-win situation (Score:2)
If songs dropped to $0.10US each, I would not bother to pirate music. But, I don't think labels would bother releasing them, not when they are used to getting 10x that price right now (and even more for CDs in record stores). The problem isn't that music costs to much, it's that record labels have been getting paid vastly inflated prices for their songs for the past 50+ years.
Re:Win-win situation (Score:3, Insightful)
You really said it there. What the *AA types don't get is that they might actually be able to increase revenue by LOWERING prices. I mean, look at Wal-Mart. Look at Best Buy. In these two commodity/retail giants, offering products at margin-kissing low prices has provided them ridiculous economies of scale.
Now think what the same model could do IF YOUR PRODUCT COST YOU NOTHING! Okay, not NOTHING, but server space and bandwidth have nothing on actually paying money to people to manufacture physical goo
Sign me up! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sign me up! (Score:2)
So, in other words, it's music subscriptions that should be renamed, and in that case, the title is not misleading at all.
On the other hand, I have a "music subscription" with emusic.com, and I get to keep everything I download.
Re:Sign me up! (Score:2, Informative)
Which is precisely why I absolutely refuse to use it.
DRM is bad.
DRM is immoral.
DRM is in violation of the US Constitution in that it is by nature perpetual, and copyright is only supposed to be for a "limited time".
DRM is unacceptable.
DRM is based on the assumption that you are a criminal in the first place.
DRM is contrary to everything Free Software stands for.
How exactly do people still see iTunes DRM as acceptable? DRM is unacceptable
Re:Sign me up! (Score:5, Insightful)
How is that a hard concept to grasp? It's a product I want at a fair price that arrives in a form which does everything I expect it to do.
Re:Sign me up! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sign me up! (Score:4, Interesting)
Say a vastly better portable mp3 player comes out from another company. It's possible, but highly unlikely that Apple will ever offer any way to convert your files or that they will license FairPlay so that you can use your iTunes purchased tracks. The same for ever wanting to use different software... iTunes is the only way to listen to those songs.
Yes, you can technically burn them to CD and then rip them into mp3, but at that point you're dealing with what's essentially a third generation copy due to all the lossy compression.
Even then that assumes that Apple never changes the software. What if they decide that they no longer want you to be able to burn CDs and take the feature out of iTunes? I'm not certain, but I don't believe there's any contract protecting your rights in this matter if they want to suddenly make changes to the limited access you already have.
I'm reminded of a section in Neal Stephenson's "In The Beginning... Was the Command Line" where he describes the feeling of having lost a significant chunk of Word documents. Suddenly they went from being very real things that existed, albeit in the computer, to something that vanished into the ether. The shattering of the illusion that these are real, legitimate objects seems very likely to occur at some time in the future. Would you be willing to spend the same thousands of dollars (quite likely) that most people have spent on CDs or LPs only to have them suddenly become almost useless.
Perhaps some form of open format DRM might work since anyone who chose to could make a player that conforms to those specifications, but it's not likely to ever happen and even if it did it would still depend on content providers choosing to release product using those methods... and so far they've shown that they largely view DRM as a way to vertically market a product by providing the player, DRM, and software and trying to see to it that they only work within their own brand.
So, no, it's not that FairPlay is terribly oppressive, it's just that it's a massive loss of control over your purchase. A purchase that is virtual in more ways than one. I'd normally say that it doesn't matter though, as long as you're aware of the issues and decide to make an informed choice to just do whatever works for you. The problem is that it's a slippery slope. As more and more people start accepting these small losses of control it just escalates and before long the genie is completely out of the bottle and we'll never, ever get control back again.
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Insightful)
DRM is just fine. It's not "against the constitution" because you don't have a right to buy something without DRM. You have the choice not to buy it. DRM is simply another product.
DRM isn't bad or immoral. It's not anything, as it's just another product you can buy or not buy. It's just copy protection to combat piracy, which itself is bad and immoral, since that takes content without paying people for it. Blame the pirates for forcing content creators' hands.
DRM isn't b
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Informative)
Every eventuality starts on the fringe.
DRM observes neither the first-sale doctrine, nor the limited-time requirement. In other words, there is no mechanism in iTunes to sell 'stuff' I own. The right to resell material was upheld by the courts. And the 'limited-time' bit is in fact the 'our
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Informative)
Or extract small excerpts in the original quality for critical purposes. Or listen to the music on my MP3 player without further degradation of quality. Or watch an iTunes video on my Linux laptop. Few people want such functionality, but those examples are legal*, ethical, and prohibited by the DRM in iTunes.
You're buying into the DRM proponent's mindset. "Well, it doesn't
Re:Sign me up! (Score:3, Informative)
Article I, Section 8, Clause 8:
To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;
Re:Sign me up! (Score:2)
Or tvrss.net [tvrss.net]...
Rejoice, consumers! (Score:5, Insightful)
Free Internet TV (Score:2)
Still pirating as usual! Duh! (Score:2)
I already have cable (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I already have cable (Score:2)
in other news, I already have a computer, but there are computer shops everywhere. there are even computer shops on the internet - how the hell does that work?
Re:I already have cable (Score:2, Funny)
Hello, kind sir. I wish to extend my invitation to you as a member of the Fuckwit Association. We Fuckwits are proud to welcome new members to our foundation. As a member of the Fuckwit Association, you must:
I and other Fuckwits are now your brothers and sisters in the
Re:I already have cable (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I already have cable (Score:3, Funny)
READY.
HI I AM AC BOT
YOU HAVE QUERIED "APPLE"
SEARCHING DB...
POST#3457 FOUND IN CATEGORY "List of cliches to dismiss a post you can't argue with"
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Re:I already have cable (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I already have cable (Score:5, Interesting)
And much of that $70 a month to get the channels that offer those shows back via digital cable.
And that's not even mentioning the fact that I can see them whenever I want instead of having to remember to watch or record them on the TV's schedule.
If Apple were to extend this deal (~16 shows for $10, paid in advance) to some of their other shows, like Battlestar Galactica, I could actually see myself making my first iTMS purchase.
But of course, they probably won't offer that low a rate on longer and more collectible shows like BSG. And I really can't see paying much more than that for a movie that just isn't all that comparable to a DVD (320x240 vs 720x480, watchable on ubiquitous $40 players vs needs a computer or an iPod, comes on a nicely packaged DVD vs can't even be burned as a DVD, etc).
Really, it seems to me the iTMS got a lot of things right with music, and then turned around and got those same things irritatingly wrong on video.
They made the music decent quality, as good or better than most of the stuff being traded on the net at the time (using similar bitrates and a superior codec). But they made the video disappointingly low res, equivalent to stuff that was traded online in the late '90s, not the mid '00s (the h264 codec is great, and the ~768k bit rate they use is, if anything, overkill for their resolution, but the 320x240 resolution is just not competitive with what you can find on bittorrent these days [and as Jobs has said before in relation to music, the pirates are their real competition]).
And they made the music burnable to a standard redbook CD so it could be easily backed up and used with your old equipment, but they made the video unable to be burned to a DVD... (I wonder if the studios demanded the burned DVDs be DRMed and were bitten in the ass by their earlier mandating that consumer DVD burners cannot burn CSS encrypted DVDs?)
I wonder what balance of the causes of this was? Were the studios setting apple up to fail, or at least not succeed to fast for the competition to copy, after being frightened by apple's rapid success in selling music online? Or, was it largely a technical issue? Would letting the iPod decode 640x480 h264 have required more time/money/power than Apple felt they could spend to release the iPod
Re:I already have cable (Score:2)
And much of that 1% isn't even on decently priced analog cable anymore. Comcast has cut even basics like the SciFi channel form analog cable in my area, and hasn't offered any premium channels outside of digital for a while now. So paying $10 a month for each of the few shows I want is a much better deal for me than paying $70 a month to ransom the channels that offer those shows back via digital cable.
Re:I already have cable (Score:2)
So do I, but 99% of it is crap I don't WANT.
Give me comedy central, History, and National Geographic for $5/month, and I'd drop my cable subscription in an instant.
Re:I already have cable (Score:2)
Got any tips? Anything important that's not listed on the site?
Sweet... (Score:2)
I've looked at my viewing habits very closely, and the Daily Show/Colbert Report are the only important things I watch that aren't available OTA, for free.
I really believe HDTV stands a good chance of killing off (or at least seriously wounding) cable/satellite c
Re:Sweet... (Score:2)
Re:Sweet... (Score:2)
If you can't find them, keep in mind a DVD of National Geographic Programs can be bought for what $24.95 at the most? Less than you'd pay for a month of cable.
Harder to share? (Score:5, Interesting)
Totally easier to share, but that's hardly the point. The point is I pay for cable, and there is no way I'd pay for both cable service and downloads... so if what I watch is available for download at $10/season... I'd ditch the cable. I'm not offended by the idea of paying for media. I pay for cable, I chuck money tward PBS from time to time. I'm not that hip paying for DVDs as in contrast to downloads they take up a hell of alot less space.
Parents would also be interested as I'm starting to notice more switching to video rentals rather cable subscriptions.
Legal starting to get more convenient than illegal (Score:5, Insightful)
But, even with piracy, there's annoying costs involved.. It takes a user's time to find the shit. The user has to be skilled enough to extract it, run it, store it, convert it, etc.. Also, users have to rely on each other to package pirated media in convenient forms.
However, if one can pay a small fee to get ready access to their shows from anywhere, then piracy will die down. Once the actual media is more convenient than pirated media, piracy will be less of a problem. IMO, even most tenacious of pirates would rather have Google or Itunes store all their media so they could access it from their set-top boxes, Ipods, PSPs, cell-phones - all without having to take the time to convert it or store it on their own hard drives.
But then, since the media companies are so determined to prove piracy as a bigger problem than it is - as a display of greed not necessarily good for the media industry - they DRM the hell out of everything. So, most people that are used to controlling their own media just ignore everything with DRM.
Piracy, for consumers, IS A GOOD THING. The more consumers pirate, the more media companies will be FORCED to innovate and adapt. If the media companies were entirely in control, we'd probby be forced to listen to only the 10 most-popular songs on Clearchannel, watch reality tv with 1/2 the time being commercials, and call an 800 number to ask permission for every time we use the media.
IMO, what Apple is doing is a GOOD thing. It's just hilariously funny how Apple is doing it while becomming an unecessary middleman since the media companies have their heads so far up their own asses they can't realize that they are NOT in control of what the consumer wants - or even their own media once the consumer consumes it.
I support the principles of piracy.. I think it's morally acceptable to pirate when the pirated media is more convenient (with more features) than the regular media. The marketplace is about the consumer - not the producer. If I decide to put my Chiquita banana on a stripper's tit covered in chocolate and take pictures of it, Chiquita can't cry when I'm not consuming it like a normal monkey. I feel the same way about media companies..
If media companies had their way, they'd have control of our memories and erase everything they could re-sell us. So, we'd even forget we watched a movie or bought the DVD and blindly pay for it again.
Re:Legal starting to get more convenient than ille (Score:2)
I agree with you, but I know what a detractor would latch onto: "I think it's morally acceptable to pirate when the pirated media is more convenient (with more features) than the regular media."
Response: "Oh, so it's ok to copy someone else's credit card because it's 'more convenient' than using your own?!"
Yeah. People are assholes.
Going to reiterate your point about media being exempt from the economics of scarcity. It's nonexcludable, people. You can sit around and dry hump a 95 year copyri
What about those recording t.v. and fair use? (Score:2)
Re:What about those recording t.v. and fair use? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about those recording t.v. and fair use? (Score:3, Insightful)
First of all, make media (such as music, movies, television, etc., not books or e-books) have commercial copyrights expire at 50 years, personal use copyrights expire at 10 years, and educational use copyright non-existant.
-
Commercial use as in making money off of it, like using it in a movie, selling it to someone, etc.
Personal use should be self-explanatory. Maybe I should say home use. (Selling tickets to a home
It wont. (Score:2)
Just like you pay for the prerecorded DVD w/ extra footage, ect. You are paying for the convienence of the show already being encoded for iTunes and delivered over your internet connection rather than having to record it yourself.
Actually, (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Actually, (Score:2)
I heard a fun song on TV and wandered over to iTunes to look it up. I found the song and I noticed Apple was also selling the video. Well, I watched the video and, again, thought it was a cute video and I decided to buy that instead of the song. Same thing, right?
Wrong.
I don't own an iPod, so I burn stuff to CD so I can listen to music in my car. Well, I went to burn that video to a CD and got the "Sorry, you're not allowed to do that." message. Now,
Re:Actually, (Score:5, Interesting)
As a consumer, I agree.
As a developer... I disagree.
I wrote a nice replacement for Front Row that would do full screen on any of my attached screens, on screen menuing, browseable, etc...
It worked great! I ripped all my Firefly episodes and had them randomly playing on a "Channel" from my computer that is distibuted throughout the house. Wonderful for background stuff. I recorded a bunch of music videos from VH1/MTv/etc, and have a pretty good music video station that I run around the house when guests are around.
Problem! I can't play DRMd files. The Quicktime API won't recognize the files, nor deal with them. I submitted a bug report, since there were no limitations mentioned anywhere. After over a month of sitting around, I finally got a response: "It works as designed".
The Daily Show (Score:3, Insightful)
Argh! The Pressure! (Score:3, Funny)
"Hey pal, you said you'd do it
There is a word for this... (Score:5, Funny)
I believe the proper expression is:
Answer with truthiness.
Agendas (Score:3, Insightful)
The one factor in Apple's favor is that Steve Jobs is hell bent on being NUMBER 1, not just good enough, unlike Bill Gates who likes to be just good enough. The Borg is too large and the corporate culture is too much "set in place" for adequate change for a serious challenge to Apple's agenda and momentum. Looking at Apple's market share, both in terms of computer sales, iPod sales, online services, overall market share, Apple Computer is GROWTH COMPANY AND CASH COW waiting to happen! It's just a matter of time before maturity develops...
So long fair use. We hardly knew ye. (Score:5, Interesting)
Lots of Slashdotters are hailing this development as a move away from traditional TV-based distribution to online video sales. It sounds nifty on paper, but let's look to the future. If these online video stores end up becoming popular enough to supplant TV distribution, fair use is screwed. These videos are DRM encumbered, and breaking that protection is against the law. TV shows like the Daily Show and Colbert Report depend on their being a large pool of accessible content to discuss and parody. Once it's all online and DRM encumbered, they won't be able to use that content without breaking the law. Want to add background music to your home videos? I hope you didn't buy your music online. Even though this type of use isn't specifically protected under copyright law, it is still felt to be perfectly acceptable by the masses, and courts would probably back it based on the same logic that stopped Hollywood from taking time-shifting away from us.
The future looks bleak for creative works online. These developments call for an overhaul of our copyright laws, but it really doesn't look like that's going to happen. Should a work that is only available in a DRM encumbered form still be protected by copyright? If so, why? Copyright was granted to copyright creators for a limited term, but with DRM, not only do they take away fair use, but they also gain the ability to close up their work forever. Hopefully someone gets elected soon that sees and is willing to fix the many problems with our copyright laws.
Re:So long fair use. We hardly knew ye. (Score:3, Informative)
Using Apple's iMovie and iDVD, I'm entirely able to do this with purchased iTMS music without jumping through any hoops. So granted, I'm not using Windows, but I fail to see what you're griping about.
As for DRM ending fair use: why do you say that? There are ways to get "fair use" clips from purchased video without breaking the DRM; video screencaps comes immediately to mind (an approach that is awkward for converting
From my mouth, to Steve's ear (Score:2, Interesting)
watch out for that aspect ratio (Score:5, Informative)
Re:watch out for that aspect ratio (Score:4, Funny)
you'll still be able to get it for free... (Score:5, Insightful)
They're not really selling the bits, although they're pretending to. What they're selling is convenient, automated delivery, and super-convenient playback. It blends many of the best elements of the computer and a VCR. So the more available it is online, the more people will be interested, and the more will sign up for the automated delivery service.
This is the first really definite step toward the Holy Grail of convergence.
I might even subscribe. It'd take more than 10 bucks' worth of time to find and download these episodes anyway.
Good for Apple, but US only? (Score:3, Informative)
I've gotten tired of hearing the constant stream of "So-and-so is now selling something-or-other on iTunes" announcements lately, when absolutely zero TV shows are on the Canadian store.
I don't get why Apple only has permission to sell stuff only in certain regions - like lots of albums in the US store that aren't in the Canadian store. With physical media, it's not like if I zip across the border into Washington, the people at the store can't sell me a particular CD because they don't have permission to sell it to Canadians, so why is it the case with iTunes?
Re:Good for Apple, but US only? (Score:3)
You're not thinking markets
Re:Good for Apple, but US only? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't get why Apple only has permission to sell stuff only in certain regions - like lots of albums in the US store that aren't in the Canadian store.
There are two reasons for this. The first is that media publishers are greedy, rich, and have no ethics. The second is that politicians are greedy, bribable, and have no ethics. The reason Apple can't distribute the same music.shows in Canada as in the US is simply because since artists no longer hold copyrights (basically the big publishing houses force
don't care about sharing clips... (Score:2)
I still don't get it... (Score:4, Interesting)
I'll definately listen to a song more than once. We all will. But, these are topical news shows. They talk about things that happened today. You probably won't watch them ever again. And now you own them!
I'd take that $10 a month and get a DVR box from my cable company. Then I could record ANYTHING I want and watch it when I'm at home. I don't need to watch last night's TV shows on my portable device.
Obviously video subscriptions are selling... but it's not my cup of tea. If your most favoritest show in the world in the Colbert Report... you must be jumping for joy.
I'll turn on the TV at 11:30pm... or I won't.
I signed up for it... (Score:4, Insightful)
I've been downloading my favorite shows from BitTorrent sites, (including Mythbusters, Stargate SG1/Atlantis, Malcolm in the Middle, and The Simpsons), but I'd go nuts trying to download the Daily Show... Why? Because I'd have to find it every day. The other shows are all once a week.. I spend about a half hour Saturday morning grabbing
Now I'll be able to watch the Daily Show every day, without having to spend the time looking for and sorting out each episode with all the different naming conventions, and trying not to miss an episode. iTunes makes it easy, and is well worth $9.99 a month.
Hey, that's what hardship pay is for, right?
Re:Already available (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Already available (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.comedycentral.com/shows/the_daily_show/ full show.jhtml [thepiratebay.org]
Re:Already available (Score:2)
Re:Already available (Score:2)
I won't pay $10 for HBO (actually it's $12 here, but I wouldn't pay $5 either) and I'm sure as hell not going to pay $10 to watch ONE SHOW which is already included in my basic cable. I don't care how funny Jon Stewart is. The only reason he's funny anyway is because he says exactly what everybody's already thinking, so just say what you're already thinking out loud -- possibly into a mirror or an audio/visual r
Re:Already available (Score:5, Funny)
You, sir, are a scholar and a gentleman. Your calm demeanor and rational way of handling confrontation are an example of maturity to us all, which I am sure brings in the ladies. Please accept my apologies on behalf of your aggressor as he busts your hump and promptly pisses off as you commanded. I extend this token to you out of goodwill.
Signed,
Theodore S. Quogin, 1893
Re:Already available (Score:2)
Hell, if you value your time at more than, say, $20 / hour, you come out ahead anyway.
Re:Already available (Score:2)
Re:Already available (Score:2)
Re:Already available (Score:2)
If the president of Comedy Central doesn't respond to my question then he is a coward.
I think I'll just go make myself a nice B.L.T. They really are tasty sandwiches and an American original.
Actually, this is something new (Score:2, Informative)
Unlike traditional TV, preordering a show on iTunes allows the producer to gauge interest and demand. It's not the standard television "push" model that spends lots of money up front only to find that no one really cares after the fact. By attracting funding in advance by selling subscriptions, the production cost of the program can be partially offset. And you KNOW that you'll have an audience.
Admittedly that's not what's happening now.
Re:Completely wrong (Score:2)
Re:Completely wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Misleading title. (Score:5, Insightful)
As opposed to the bullshit newspeak definition of "subscription" we've been hearing lately.
Re:Misleading title. (Score:2)
Now THAT was insightful (Score:5, Insightful)
As opposed to the bullshit newspeak definition of "subscription" we've been hearing lately.
That was the most insightful thing I've read on Slashdot all month. In the real world, when you subscribe to something you get something you can keep - like magazines or a CableTV feed you can record (by law, since it has to include firewire output).
Newspeak has "subscription" taking on the meaning of the peep show, where you can see whatever you like - as long as you keep putting in quarters. The moment you stop you have nothing, and indeed can legally not even try to keep anything.
What a great summary of the ripoff that modern "subscription" services are. $10 a month for eternity is not cheap in my book.
Re:Truthiness!! (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact that it also works as a perfect description of the Slashdot crowd is just gravy.
Re:Why is this price acceptable? (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, any way you slice it a DVD is a better deal (high res, six channel sound, extras, etc.), but some consumers don't want to 1) buy a DVD or record a TV show on a DVR, 2) rip it, 3) encode it, 4) move it to their iPod, just so they can watch in while they're sitting on the train to work.
For some of them, amazing as it sounds, paying a buck or two an episode to instantly acquire a commercial free version for their iPod is worth it: even with the low res and DRM.
We live in an instant gratification world now, and that's why this price is perfectly acceptable.