post #31 of 53
8/26/08 at 9:00am
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Originally Posted by Ethan Riley
Well, some of the dvds will be available in a few days.
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Originally Posted by David Lambert
Paul: Aryn's thoughts are actually part of the problem Gord and I have with the whole concept. If "burn on demand" became the norm, then one of the problems we think we could see is that there would be little or no clean-up of the episodes...along with little or no bonus material, and obviously no special packaging (to the point where maybe we would just get 'em in a plain white envelope, or a cardboard sleeve at maximum). Why should the studios go to any trouble? It's almost TOO easy a solution.
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| It's like the idea of books on demand (which was actually being floated around quite a bit when I worked at a B. Dalton Bookseller about 20 years ago, and remains a concept even to this day): why fill up store shelves with books people may or may not buy? Just let someone order them from a catalog and they'll get it delivered in 4-to-6 weeks, as it is made special just for them. Heck, these days it would be a lot quicker than that, even cheaper than it would have been two decades ago, and now you could even just e-mail the customer a PDF file and let them laser-print it themselves at home. Why bother with bound books sold in stores at all? |
| Which brings me to another problem we have with it: it could ruin the experience of walking into a store and buying something. The whole "burn on demand" thing hasn't come up with a good enough arrangement yet that it could be do-able in a standard retail store. You pretty much have to get it from an online company at this time, like Amazon. While to some people that would be just fine, you also have to remember that NOT EVERY consumer is A) internet-connected, and B) credit-card-usable. People still like to, or could be restricted to, walking into a store and paying cash for this stuff. So if the product isn't available in a brick-and-mortar store, that's a problem for what is still a sizable segment of the population! Besides, I like to walk into a Best Buy or a Wal-Mart and shop around and see stuff I never thought of, pick up the back of a box and read it and decide if I want to do an impulse buy, etc. That experience would be gone with just about any type of indoctrinated burn-on-demand system. |
| Then we also come back to something I brought up in a thread that asked why TSoD doesn't cover sports releases, since they are shown on TV. Well, we gotta draw a line somewhere. Right now the place where this line is drawn will exclude burn-on-demand releases. Part of that reason is because of the vast amount of troubles consumers had with the early burn-on-demand releases (discs arriving empty, or with the wrong stuff on them, or not being compatible with their players/drives, etc.) and the whole thing just wasn't very reliable. |
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Originally Posted by David Lambert
Ah! Don't take this the wrong way, but consumers like you are the wet dream of the people in the industry who are bean-counters (and want to eliminate the cost of packaging),
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| It doesn't say what kind of discs they are, but they are certainly not "burned" discs; the backs look like any pre-recorded disc you've ever seen. They are not bluish or purplish. |