Why Streaming Won’t Beat Discs In Five Years
Let me go on record right now–if the way things are right now remain in this state for the next five years, without significant changes in technology or socio-political factors, streaming WILL NOT replace DVD and Blu-ray within the next five years.
It’s a bold pronouncement, I know…but you don’t come here for weak sauce and milquetoast ideology. Plain and simple, unless there are significant changes in the way people live, work, and use the internet, streaming won’t replace discs any time soon.
Why? Three important factors:
1. Internet access. Even your standard tiny YouTube video weighs in at roughly two meg per minute. The highest download speed I’ve ever seen here is ten meg per second, and that’s for a YouTube video playing at roughly the size of your hand. And in many, MANY, places, Internet access is still limited to dialup or satellite high-speed with draconian usage limits. You can FORGET about getting all the latest movies on demand, not unless everyone suddenly manages to be able to get ten or twenty meg / sec speeds without limits and without outages. You’re talking about a HUGE revolution required to access most of the country.
2. Expense. To watch a DVD, you need a TV, often available for under two hundred dollars, and a DVD player, available for as little as twenty. Pretty much the same with a Blu-ray, only slightly more expensive. But to watch your movies streaming, you need a computer or other means of download, a high-speed internet connection (and satellite doesn’t count if you want to watch more than one movie a week) and a display option. For that, you’re talking at least an LCD tv, often over four hundred bucks. That’s a LOT more cash to put out, and given the state of things, consumer electronics aren’t going to be a super-huge market any time soon.
3. Difficulty of use. To watch a DVD requires you to open your DVD player, either via switch or onboard button, insert the DVD, close the player and press play. Not too much different from the VCRs of yore, just with a different media. But streaming video can, depending on the source and layout, require vastly, VASTLY more than just a click of a switch.
Until these issues are solved, and to solve them will require downright moonshots in the way we think, live and work, you can forget about streaming (or downloads) replacing the disc.
August 22nd, 2009 at 3:31 pm
[...] Optical. A definite player to consider for people who demand the best audio complement from the videos they are watching on their home theater [...]
August 28th, 2009 at 1:52 pm
[...] when I was talking about streaming media before, and how it’d never replace DVDs in the next five years without a whole set of [...]
September 3rd, 2009 at 1:05 pm
[...] is awesome, of course, but again, the serious problems come into play, like net access and computer capability. As long as the massive disparities exist [...]
October 13th, 2009 at 12:32 pm
[...] in under five years for a whole panoply of reasons. In case you’re new, you can find that article right here. But one wrinkle I hadn’t thought of that I just read about is that streaming video just [...]