Per CNBC’s calculations…
🙋🏽♂️I found the problem!!!
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Per CNBC’s calculations…
🙋🏽♂️I found the problem!!!
The enshittification of streaming is enshittifitentional.
Major B&M retailers of physical media are either dead, dieing, or have phased out physical media.
What a perfect time to issue a deathknell to the whole concept physical ownership.
Streaming originals that disappear will come back in limited release. It'll basically be the Disney Vault of streaming. A company like Netflix would subtly drop references and nods to "removed" popular shows in their new shows to make you nostalgic for the old show. Then bring it back for a couple months.
You'll especially see them all fighting for the best Christmas specials, but they'll pull this shit with Stranger Things by the end of the decade. They expect people to plan-hop and will use limited releases and seasonal specials as their carrot.
I have a 4k BluRay player I picked up for cheap. But I only have like 2 movies for it.
Why would I want dvds when I can own digital media?
I've started buying DVDs and Blu-ray again after years of not doing so because there have been multiple instances of me purchasing a movie on some streaming platform and then it no longer being available. Also, there have been even more instances where it's less expensive to buy the physical product and then rip it than it is to buy the digital copy.
Because the current trend is to ensure the consumer owns less and less and just pays monthly for access rights.
Physical media cannot be altered afterwards. That's a thing Disney likes to do, for example.
Plus maximum video and audio quality. Some people don't watch movies on phones or laptops, you know.
There's still the public library.
For now.