Hollywood in turmoil as DVD sales drop and downloads steal the show -- Dan Sabbagh

The sale of DVDs has been falling since 2007, but the Digital Entertainment Group (DEG) reported that physical sales collapsed 19% to $2.2bn (£1.3bn) in the first quarter, while high-street rental also plunged by 36% to $440m, in a period when Blockbuster was in Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Online downloads and streaming through services such as Netflix, by contrast, grew quickly, although not enough to avert a 10% decline in the total home entertainment market to $4.2bn.

Ephemeralization of movies will lead to huge swaths of the entertainment marketplace collapsing, like Blockbuster. Redbox and its competitors have a way to go, but they are strictly transitional, too.

Just as big will be the death of DVD/Blu Ray players, as streaming becomes the principal distribution, and then TVs, as more and more of streamed movies and entertainment is watched on mobile devices and PCs.

Sell everything, like Sony, Panasonic, and all the others. They are walking dead.

Why "post PC" doesn't mean "sans PC" | Computers | MacUser | Macworld

Michael Gartenberg at MacWorld says even as we move into a Post-PC world we will still need PCs. Why? Because he says so, that’s why!

Even as some today hype the death of the PC, let’s be clear: the PC isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. Of course, the PC as we know it will continue to evolve—and a future generation of those devices will bear as little resemblance to today’s Macs as today’s Macs resemble Altair PCs of days gone by.

The current-day personal computer remains the ultimate Swiss army knife of information. If you want the Internet without any compromises, you need a PC. Need to access corporate apps and legacy information? That’s also a PC. Want to play the best and most sophisticated games? See PC as well.

Unless you are willing to live with a subset of functionality, you’re going to want and need a PC, even as that standard changes over time.

So, why so much hype about the post-PC world? Because historically, as PCs have become increasingly sophisticated, they’ve also become increasingly complex. Users become empowered by new features while simultaneously being forced to contend with complex systems that can obscure the task currently at hand.

This is one reason why devices like the iPad have become popular. No, they can’t do everything a PC can do today—but that’s not a bad thing. The iPad performs some tasks quite well, all while keeping those tasks simple—and that means an iPad can replace that second or third PC someone was thinking of buying.

As we transition into a post-PC world, the ability of devices to balance new technology and features against complexity for a given set of functions will help drive purchases. The key will be for users to figure out just what device best matches the appropriate skill set or need. Need to decode the human genome? There’s no app for that just yet. On the other hand, many tasks once suitable only for the PC are now very doable on other post-PC devices.

Yes, today’s tablets don’t replace today’s PCs, but we are talking about the future, right? In the future, our operating platforms will be based on the premise that we are always connected to the Web, and won’t rely on the 1990’s notions of desktop/folder/file system.

Limitations of tablets today are often a function of limitations of PC-centric or profoundly limited applications.

For example, I can’t use Tumblr productively on the iPad because Tumblr’s editor expects me to be using a keyboard with a up and down cursor. I can;t scroll down in the editor’s text box to get to the end of a post, for example. But Tumblr could fix that but providing a better editor application.

Likewise, the current news apps on iPad often block the simplest sort of sharing, because the apps don’t provide anyway to accomplish it, as was spoofed here.

But looking to the limitations of today’s tablets as proof that PCs are here to stay is like looking at Blockbusters and Borders in every mall a few years ago and making a case for their immortality.

DISH Wins Bankruptcy Auction, Buys Blockbuster Assets For $228M In Cash

parislemon:

Part funny. Part sad. Fully pathetic.

Here’s one great rundown of the history of this massive failure. Remember when Viacom bought them for $8.4 billion in the 90s? Then they IPO’d to raise another $5 billion? Remember when they tried to buy an also clearly failing Circuit City!?

The people running the company at the end remind me a lot of the famous old Iraqi Information Minister.

“We have them surrounded in their tanks.”

Everything Big Is Small Again: Blockbuster and Redbox

 

I saw a piece about the new CEO at Blockbuster, whose experience in moving toward smaller more agile stores at 7-Eleven suggests a change in the strategy at Blockbuster:

[from New Boss Aims to Apply Some 7-Eleven Tactics to Blockbuster by Andew Adam Newman]

[…]

“The trend in the convenience-store world was we were building larger and larger stores, but the bigger they were, the less convenient they were,” Mr. Keyes said in a telephone interview from Blockbuster’s headquarters in Dallas. “But we ended up generating more sales from a store that was literally half the size.”

Mr. Keyes hopes to make Blockbuster stores smaller on average, too, and to customize titles at each store based on rental patterns, much the way he said a 7-Eleven in one neighborhood might have stocked more Corona and another across town stocked more Coors Lite.

Well, there is no doubt that geolocational differences in viewing habits could be better handled by Blockbuster et al, but it will be difficult to counter the long-tail economics of the Internet just with the convenience of driving by the local corner video place to get… the same damn movies that everyone else ‘wants’ to watch. And ‘wants’ means the movies have been selected the most out of those available.

He’s going to have to have more movies, way more.

One idea:

I have been watching Redbox (a subsidiary of MacDonald’s) expanding into MacDonald’s and grocery stores. The company offers a automated (few employees) box full of movies, which allow the consumer to rent a movies for $1 per day. The boxes, however, are extremely limited in breadth and depth: few titles, few copies. But it is truly a time saver to get the movie at the grocery or at MacDonald’s, and to be able to return it to any Redbox. Its not only a timesaver, its greener: people can drive less.


redbox


So as James W. Keyes (the new Blockbuster CEO) moves to revamp and scale down the corner video place, one option is to convert them into gigantic Redbox machines. Imagine a local Blockbuster converted into an enormous video dispenser: twenty or so consoles in the foyer of the store, like ATM consoles at the bank, while behind, the entire volume of the store has been filled with videos… lots of videos.

If a Redbox device — which is roughly the size of a soda machine — can hold a dozen or so copies of a few hundred titles (total guess, by the way), then a Blockbuster-sized mega-Redbox could hold 1000 times as many. While this doesn’t approach the offerings available online — and note that Redbox does support online video rentals, too — it completely shifts the entire experience of video shopping.

The scale of the Redbox set-up is designed around hits: copies of the hot movies, right now. But in a long-tail economy, people want more variety, and will favor experiences that offer it. And it shouldn’t cost more.

And, of course, we get to avoid the experience of standing in line at the store, where the three stressed out part-time employees are trying to help people find a copy of Pan’s Labyrinth in the return box, or talking on the phone, instead of getting us out the door, and back into our idling cars at the curb.