DirecTV Plans Netflix Competitor 85
jfruhlinger writes "DirecTV isn't sitting still in the long-simmering war between traditional TV providers and digital streaming services. A survey the satellite network sent to customers this week indicates that it may be planning a streaming service of its own."
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Of course it is. (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem, as I see it, is that they will include this service as an add on rather than an "instead of" service. I dropped DirecTV this past week because for $110 less a month I can get every show I watch on netflix, hulu plus and TED.
Re:Of course it is. (Score:4, Informative)
The problem, as I see it, is that they will include this service as an add on rather than an "instead of" service.
I think the limiting factor here is just that, that DirecTV is developing this product as an addition to their standard satellite package, rather than as a unique product, and as such are reducing the pool of potential viewers to only their current client base. Netflix is alternate entertainment provider agnostic and given the way DirecTV nickels and dimes you on EVERYTHING, somehow I doubt this will be cheaper than Netflix's offering.
Good luck DTV...
I dropped DirecTV this past week because for $110 less a month I can get every show I watch on netflix, hulu plus and TED.
I wish I was in your position. I need my football and hockey, and I want them in real HD at this point to appreciate them. I so want this DirecTV box out of my house, but as I live in a broadcast TV "white zone" which means I don't get any reception AT ALL, I am shackled to DTV, Dish or god forbid, Comcast if I want to watch the NHL and NFL.
Need? (Score:1, Funny)
Why do you "need" to sit around watching overpaid strangers chuck a little ball around?
Re: (Score:2)
Why do you need to suck cock?
Because it keeps my boyfriend from being so bitchy?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Because he isn't a sociopath, and enjoys shared experiences with fellow human beings.
Re: (Score:2)
I think the limiting factor here is just that, that DirecTV is developing this product as an addition to their standard satellite package, rather than as a unique product, and as such are reducing the pool of potential viewers to only their current client base. Netflix is alternate entertainment provider agnostic and given the way DirecTV nickels and dimes you on EVERYTHING, somehow I doubt this will be cheaper than Netflix's offering.
That may limit their potential market size but may also mean they can get more content - content owners won't be as afraid to license their content because they won't be so worried about cannibalizing their broadcast markets since they know that DirecTV customers are already paying to receive broadcast content.
Re: (Score:2)
Football and hockey?
Have you looked here [yahoo.com] and here [roku.com] ? There is hope to cut the DTV...
Re: (Score:1)
The problem as I see it is that this service will probably have the same crummy collection of old and/or b-movies and tv series that Netflix has...
Re: (Score:2)
netflix, hulu plus and TED.
Oh my!
Not if you're living in farking Mexico. Netflix, you're in Canada, go global just a little more, down South for example!
Re: (Score:2)
Oh my!
Not if you're living in farking Mexico. Netflix, you're in Canada, go global just a little more, down South for example!
I guess none of the work around/hacks for watching netflix overseas work in Canada or Mexico. Really, if those really don't work, then you'd be stuck with TED, or another torrent searching program like TV Trigger, or sickbeard, or one of many others.
Re: (Score:3)
_________ is planning Netflix Competitor
Re: (Score:1)
I hope youtube comes through.
Re: (Score:2)
Lower bandwidth caps. Problem solved.
Ugh... (Score:2)
I'm stuck with Wildblue as my ISP and seeing that I can barely stream anything from Hulu or Netflix without having to pause the show every 3 minutes or so to buffer I doubt that having another dish and paying another $70 a month for DirecTV is going make much of a difference.
Please bring real broadband to us poor rural folk! I like the 20minute drive to my mailbox (not that there is anything in it...) but I do not like the 8-16kB/s connection with random bursts up to 60kB/s.
Re: (Score:2)
The fact that it takes you 20 minutes to get to your mailbox just might have something to do with why you don't have decent broadband. That's 15 miles at 45 MPH.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Why should *I* have to pay for someone in the middle of nowhere to be able to stream !@$ Netflix movies?
Move to a city if you want faster Internet.
For electricity or phone service, I would agree (that having a minimum level of service should be required).
Even some level of Internet service, but that would probably be fulfilled by the phone requirement (e.g. I'd say email should be required, but again, not broadband so you can get netflix).
Re: (Score:2)
Get satellite
I have a co-worker with satellite in the boonies like you and he gets great downstream- slow upstream for about $70 a month.
Re: (Score:2)
Get satellite
What do you think Wildblue [wildblue.com] is?
Satellite internet is crap. There just isn't enough bandwidth available to get decent speeds out of it, not to mention the horrid latency.
Re: (Score:2)
My bad. "I'm stuck with XXXX" lead me to think it was a land line situation. You are never stuck with a particular satellite company. They can't take the sky away from you. There are other satellite companies.
Perhaps they mean, I am only willing to spend $50 a month and not $90 a month so I am stuck with this crappy company or "I signed an 85 year contract so I am stuck with this company".
Missing the point (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly. And streaming is wide open for abuse from adding commercials, pop-ups, and junk on the bottom. While admittedly a bit paranoid*, it creeps me out when DirecTv collects viewing stats from my receiver, which is why I now keep it disconnected from the telecom and net. This surely prevents using Directv streaming. At least Netflix doesn't use viewing statistics to target me commercially. Yet.
*If their data collection was used to provide us a better viewing experience, I would participate. But if it wa
Re: (Score:1)
Not really. Streaming is huge and DTV has access to provide on demand service, premium new releases AND streaming old movies if they do it properly. DTV is a pretty tech savvy company. I'm a customer and I've always been very impressed by their web experience, quality, and support. If they did it, I'd be shocked if it wasn't done well.
Re: (Score:2)
...and not-streaming is even more huge.
It represents a level of selection that other competitors are unwilling or unable to match.
It's insulated from most of the pricing and availability issues that plague streaming. Spinny disks allow an operation like RedBox or Netflix to fall back on the retail distribution channel if they find wholesale channels blocked by beligerent content owners. It is still more than sufficiently profitable (unlike say Dell trying the same thing).
Re: (Score:1)
It's also customer service. Satellite and cable customer support are consistently ranked at the bottom of satisfaction ratings.
Given this and the ubitiquity of Netflix's service, I don't see DirecTV eclipsing them any time soon.
Streaming Services (Score:1)
Are like excuses. Everybody has one.
OnDemand == Netflix ? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm a subscriber.. paying $84 bucks a month.
I don't get it. I'm not offered it. It would be free if I was a NEW customer joining.
Pisses me off.
And it's only 6,000 titles.
AND this is the first step of there being 15 difference services, each of which has a tiny slice of content locked up and each charges $8 bucks.
Plus commercials in the middle of streamed shows I bet.
Netflix is awesome as it is. Part of that is because there was no competition for content in it's market slice.
Re: (Score:2)
Same as when Dish came out with free HD, DirecTV was only willing to extend that to new customers, pissing off those that have been subscribing. I can't blame them as nobody in their right mind will go back to Comcrap after having satellite service, the worst outcome for DirecTV would be folks switching to Dish or dumping their pay TV completely.
Re: (Score:1)
The have actual satellites (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
That won't work for "Instant Gratification America". If I want to watch a movie, I want it now. Not tomorrow. Not a few hours from now.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Except the ol' Clarke belt is getting damn crowded these days. You can't just launch a shit load of satellites up there and then expect an 18" DBS dish to be able to tell them apart.
Re: (Score:3)
Tell me about it. I was watching an 18" by 40" "Cleopatra' in the middle of my 55" screen on Direct TV and it was STILL visibly pixelated from 15' away on the couch.
They have way over-compressed the signal. It's just not worth it. I've been considering canceling it for about 3 months now.
Spaceway 1 has a lot of free flex spot beam room (Score:2)
Spaceway 1 has a lot of free flex spot beam room.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
I've got a crazy idea. (Score:3, Interesting)
How about charging $1 for PPV movies instead of $4-6. There you go. Now ya don't have to waste a bunch of money on a service that is going to fail.
Re: (Score:2)
That's actually a very good idea. When a video-on-demand rental is 24 hours generally with cablecos, pricing them at a dollar would make them competitive with RedBox, and they would be more convenient since you wouldn't have to actually drive to a kiosk to get a DVD.
Re: (Score:2)
In fairness (Score:4, Interesting)
DirecTV has something in their favor over Netflix: a set of pipes. Satellite internet is AFAIK still expensive and inherently very high latency (Counterstrike players, day traders, and VoIP users need not apply; you'll never see a two-digit ping), but it's an option that would be especially lucrative in rural areas where dial-up or wireless tethering are the only options. They've already got the backhaul circling the globe, so it's really a matter of whether they can match Comcast/Time Warner/Cablevision + Netflix subscription at the price point. On top of that, they've already got enough pull in Hollywood for their garden variety broadcast licensing. It'd be separate of course, but they've got the precedent. If they can ensure that the service can scale while keeping the prices competitive with the other guys without having to deal with the bandwidth caps, then they could actually be a serious threat to the present system for large groups of people.
Change is inevitable (Score:1)
Predictions about the service (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Better prediction: DirecTV provides internet-connected wifi set-top boxes that get your DirecTV subscription over the internet, not over an expensive network of geostationary satellites that require a line-of-site dish on the roof and cabling. See: Sirius Satellite Radio, where the "satellite" in the name is becoming less relevant [siriusxm.com]. They can then add unlimited on-demand movies as a service, instead of just a few PPV channels where you have to wait for the time the movie starts.
Satellite will still be their primary business (Score:5, Insightful)
They will do like any other business, use the service to try and protect their core business. You think they will settle for selling a service that earns around $10 per month and destroy their own business that earns around $70 per month? Me thinks not.
Re: (Score:1)
Why does anybody want more competition? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
You know how competition works, right? If there are multiple competitors with roughly similar products the cost drops as the compete against each other for customers. It usually pushes the prices to somewhere near the marginal cost for each unit (depending on the barriers to entry and such). Competition in any market is usually seen as a good thing because of that fact.
Re: (Score:1)
No, the GP was actually right - in this kind of competition, prices go *up*, not down.
Why?
Because the situation today is that the law requires companies like Netflix to beg and bargain for content from the different movie studios and distribution companies. As Netflix and DirecTV and others compete, each will try to get "better" movies, "exclusive" movies, and so on, allowing the movie producers to *increase* the prices they charge these companies. Consumer will get higher prices and fewer choices - because
Re: (Score:2)
But *FOR THE MOST PART* (yes, there is the recent counter-example of Netflix getting a new show first), Netflix has been getting "older" content, which a lot of people complain about... but it (IMHO) is what has let them able to keep their prices low (compared to renting each movie individually).
How about they fix the service .... (Score:2)
... they already provide first?
It's ridiculous that I cannot watch the stuff that my DVR recorded on another device (unless I buy another DirecTV receiver). More ridiculous that everything shows up as a UPnP service on the home network, I just can't actually view any of it.
There have been many times I was going away for a weekend, or on flights, where it would have been nice to catch up with everything the DVR had recorded.
Re: (Score:2)
I'd have to say that this is more of a feature request. Just sayin'.