Snail Mail Still Winning The Bandwidth War

Snail Mail Still Winning The Bandwidth War

“LR_none writes 'Today's New York Times has this short piece suggesting snail mail is the leading broadband technology, at least for video movies on demand. The article states that the 8 to 9 gigs of data on a DVD would take two weeks to download at 56kb, making Netflix' three-day distribution by mail seem speedy. (Since they can send three or more movies at once, Netflix compares favorably with DSL download speeds, too.) The author estimates Netflix alone distributes 1,500 terabytes a day, which is impressive considering the Internet carries 2,000TB a day (by estimates cited in the article). The 'immediate gratification' aspect of Internet consumerism has given a huge boost to companies like FedEx and UPS, but it's surprising to think of the post office as being the leading infrastructure provider for digital entertainment, in terms of market share and efficiency, for the forseeable future. (Disclaimer: I don't work for Netflix or the post office.)' ” [Slashdot]

I'd have to agree with this assessment. I just received two NetFlix discs in the mail today, and I'm thrilled with their service. I would never in a million years get this selection, ease-of-use, and consistency from a movie company online, telco middleman, or P2P video sharing. Why can't Hollywood focus on how successful the DVD format has been and look at the digital cup as half full?  [The Shifted Librarian]

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