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Blockbuster is saving money but losing subscribers
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 4 October, 2007
Blockbuster is expected to announce a loss of subscribers during the third quarter of this year. The drop comes as their chief rival among brick and mortar video rental chains, Movie Gallery, has been faltering and may file for bankruptcy soon.
Over the last few years, online DVD rental pioneer Netflix has been steadily growing at the expense of traditional rental outlets. Last year Blockbuster ... [ read the full article ]
Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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duke8888
Junior Member
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7. October 2007 @ 06:05 |
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Quote:
Originally posted by FredBun: DRGULA, this movie collector sounds intersting, how does it work and where can one get it.
www.collectorz.com
You enter the names of the movies and then select which databases to search online and it goes out and downloads all the info and the cover art. It's really nice, you can set it up anyway you want and print out in different formats.
I wish that they would have an option to print out covers that would be neat.
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Senior Member
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8. October 2007 @ 07:33 |
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just go to ccovers.com, you can print out all the covers you want, its free and a great site.
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Senior Member
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8. October 2007 @ 07:34 |
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sorry, I mispelled, its cdcovers.com
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Senior Member
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8. October 2007 @ 07:36 |
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DRGULA
Newbie
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8. October 2007 @ 07:52 |
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duke8888
Junior Member
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8. October 2007 @ 08:04 |
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Originally posted by FredBun: just go to ccovers.com, you can print out all the covers you want, its free and a great site.
Yes I use them quite often.
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robtwilk
Member
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9. October 2007 @ 21:22 |
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Originally posted by robtwilk: It sure sounds like a few people on this thread are openly admitting they are copying rented DVDs. You would have a hard time convincing anyone you watch that many movies in one day.
I would throttle you too if I thought you were copying rentals.
I rent from both and I know BB throttles the in-store returns. I even sent them an email stating so. They were sending out a new DVD shortly after getting yours at the store - now they wait a day or two.
I own over 1,000 DVDs and a bunch of Blu-Ray and HD-DVD (bought over the last 8 years). I know my bank account is suffering because of my hobby. How the heck does anyone own 20,000 DVDs?
I don't see where anyone is admitting that, and don't tell me you never copy a dvd in your life otherwise why would you be on this website? Don't say for the articles. LOL>
Actually it's for the humor I get from people's comments. Of course I have copied DVDs in my life. I own several versions of DVDXCopy that I bought at Fry's (legally). I made backups of movies I own, NOT rent.
This thread is about Blockbuster. People are admitting they are copying movies they rent. No-one is renting 8 movies at a timne and returning them the next day, renting 8 more and repeating the process. They are either copying the rentals or testing the U.S. Post Office's efficiency. Which one do you think it is?
I have a home theater and two kids - we watch about 3-4 DVDs a week from BB or Netflix, then return them. When I want a really good movie I BUY it from Amazon.
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robtwilk
Member
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9. October 2007 @ 21:24 |
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Quote:
Quote:
Originally posted by FredBun: DRGULA, this movie collector sounds intersting, how does it work and where can one get it.
www.collectorz.com
You enter the names of the movies and then select which databases to search online and it goes out and downloads all the info and the cover art. It's really nice, you can set it up anyway you want and print out in different formats.
I wish that they would have an option to print out covers that would be neat.
I use DVD Profiler and find it the best out there for my DVD collection. It now lets you print DVD cover inserts. The latest version has been really improved.
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Cornholeo
Newbie
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10. October 2007 @ 00:34 |
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I subscribe to BOTH, as each has it's own peaks and valleys, mostly due to slow mailings and cracked and broken discs from each. I think Quote: BUSTER
is cutting it's own nose by reducing the number of IN-STORE return rentals, yet INCREASING the price for the SAME amount of online rentals. where's the logic in this, other than to gain a BIGGER profit margin? Didn't they realise most subscribers would bring in the discs to maximize the rate of rentals versus bulk mailings(DUH !),which drastically reduces damage from the postal service? And Quote: NETTY
is no better, as they claim to have huge disribution centers within proximity of the subscriber, yet I receive some of my movies as far as MINNESOTA, and I live in the DIRTY SOUTH!!!.that 2-3 day turnaround,coupled with the 2 day weekend, means I can only receive 2 rentals on a given week, unless of course I send them back unwatched along with the usual BROKEN or STRATCHEDdiscs I usually get at least once a week! Maybe that's what weve come to expect of them....But the ONE THINGthey do get right is the REMOVAL of the fees from your BANK ACCOUNT each month.
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DRGULA
Newbie
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10. October 2007 @ 05:50 |
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Quote: Actually it's for the humor I get from people's comments. Of course I have copied DVDs in my life. I own several versions of DVDXCopy that I bought at Fry's (legally). I made backups of movies I own, NOT rent.
This thread is about Blockbuster. People are admitting they are copying movies they rent. No-one is renting 8 movies at a timne and returning them the next day, renting 8 more and repeating the process. They are either copying the rentals or testing the U.S. Post Office's efficiency. Which one do you think it is?
I have a home theater and two kids - we watch about 3-4 DVDs a week from BB or Netflix, then return them. When I want a really good movie I BUY it from Amazon.
I feel that if I own the movie on video, then I own the movie. As for the amount of movies I rent, with the garbage that is on TV what else is there to do?
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robtwilk
Member
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10. October 2007 @ 09:47 |
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Quote:
Quote: Actually it's for the humor I get from people's comments. Of course I have copied DVDs in my life. I own several versions of DVDXCopy that I bought at Fry's (legally). I made backups of movies I own, NOT rent.
This thread is about Blockbuster. People are admitting they are copying movies they rent. No-one is renting 8 movies at a timne and returning them the next day, renting 8 more and repeating the process. They are either copying the rentals or testing the U.S. Post Office's efficiency. Which one do you think it is?
I have a home theater and two kids - we watch about 3-4 DVDs a week from BB or Netflix, then return them. When I want a really good movie I BUY it from Amazon.
I feel that if I own the movie on video, then I own the movie. As for the amount of movies I rent, with the garbage that is on TV what else is there to do?
That is the fundemental arguement - many members of this website and others that support this topic feel that we are buying the movie, not the medium it comes on. The establishment wants to stop it because of pirating, but I don't believe they really care if we make a backup of our own movies. They only care that if they make copying wrong for everyone, then they have protected themselves against pirating.
My kids have ruined more DVDs and Console games than I care to remember. It's not fair the medium is so fragile.
Back on topic: BB and Netflix should at least use stronger packaging - which might reduce the damage to their DVDs. I too have received scratched and broken DVDs that won't play.
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Senior Member
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10. October 2007 @ 13:44 |
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ditto robtwilk
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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11. October 2007 @ 01:53 |
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If this is the case then the only way they will make a profit is to increase prices.
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Senior Member
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11. October 2007 @ 11:15 |
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In response to robtwilk-
Agreed. I feel that whenever I buy any disc/disk with software, music, movie, programs, etc. I own it. I paid for that particular copy of the software that I can copy for my OWN purposes. As long as I don't give out my copies, I have every right copy the software that I paid for. If I was just paying for the medium the software comes on, I would just save myself the money and trouble and just go buy a new blank disc/disk. I'm not because I'm buying the software, not the medium.
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DRGULA
Newbie
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11. October 2007 @ 17:43 |
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Originally posted by borhan9: If this is the case then the only way they will make a profit is to increase prices.
Don't believe everything the music/movie industries tell you. I worked for many years in the music/movie industry, working for one of the top companies (I won't name them but they have a rabbit for a icon) and they make a lot on each disc. It's the music artist that gets hosed, by the production company.
If you remember (I may be dating myself), but they claimed cassettes would destroy the music industry. Didn't do it, did it. Even Metalica admits to copying their friends cassettes when they were younger, but don't like it when it is done to them ........ Hypocrisy at it's finest!
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