False_Dmitry_II
Distinguished
Even if you do have to use something capable of their specific DRM there's surely to be an app for that for PC. And that means I'm covered in any number of situations. In my room? on my desktop. On the big screen? HTPC time. On the go? On my laptop. Like for the airplane example every recent-ish laptop I have seen has a native SD-card slot.
I'm certain that I'm not the only one who already has a setup like that which is nearly 100% flexible as far as usage goes. Also, unlike redbox, you only need to retrieve it, you don't need to bother getting back to it within the day.
One last thing, I think that at that price, it is too low for them to be able to afford at least an 8 gigabyte SD card per every single movie. Almost certainly, the $2 price is simply for the rental. Bring your own SD card, or we'll sell one big enough to you for a "low" one-time fee. After all, they said 'to give higher resolution' this means AT LEAST higher than standard def. So it has to have enough space to hold that. It'll also most likely be encoded in something like h.264 in order to make the most out of the space they do have, or barring that xvid. Any lower than that would make the SD cards way up there. If it is h.264, wave goodbye to any netbooks abilities to do it. (I admit I haven't actually tried to run that on one, but I suppose I should at some point)
I'm certain that I'm not the only one who already has a setup like that which is nearly 100% flexible as far as usage goes. Also, unlike redbox, you only need to retrieve it, you don't need to bother getting back to it within the day.
One last thing, I think that at that price, it is too low for them to be able to afford at least an 8 gigabyte SD card per every single movie. Almost certainly, the $2 price is simply for the rental. Bring your own SD card, or we'll sell one big enough to you for a "low" one-time fee. After all, they said 'to give higher resolution' this means AT LEAST higher than standard def. So it has to have enough space to hold that. It'll also most likely be encoded in something like h.264 in order to make the most out of the space they do have, or barring that xvid. Any lower than that would make the SD cards way up there. If it is h.264, wave goodbye to any netbooks abilities to do it. (I admit I haven't actually tried to run that on one, but I suppose I should at some point)