Suzi, I have huluplus and amazon prime and there is a lot of overlap. I mostly have huluplus because Charlie gets a lot of use out of it (I got him a Roku for his new apartment in Alameda, and he watches Netflix, huluplus and amazon all on my acccounts). It allows both of us to have minimal cable. I'd drop cable in a minute if I wasn't a sports nut.
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javachik,
I am not sure. I wish I were an industry analyst because I probably could answer your question more cogently.
It seems to me that netflix is in a bit of a bind:
a) disc shipping is somewhat beholden to the postal service system which is in trouble
b) streaming is beholden to the content providers who can act like ass clowns half the time. streaming is also beholden to cable companies and other telcos who control the pipes.
I think netflix is getting squeezed and I wouldn't be surprised if another major change to functionality/value is not in store.
I saw "huluplus" and thought, for a moment, "it IS lupus!".
HA!
Looks like the cost for HuluPlus and Amazon Prime are less than what I had been paying for Netflix, monthly. I know, I'd have to pay Amazon Prime for the full annual amount together. But the other benefits of Prime sound pretty good too.
note: not all videos available on Amazon Unbox are available free via Prime.
Is there an easy way to have last.fm remove an artist from my library? It keeps giving me Weird Al because I like Jonathan Coulton.
Yeah, hope I didn't mislead. Prime is worth it for me for other reasons; I don't rely on unboxed free very much. But I do order movies occasionally (and pay).
But the price of DVDs has come down SO much from when I joined Netflix in 2000, that these days I'll just buy the DVD if I really want to see something. My neighbors and I have huge collections between us, so lending them out is nice, too.
It turns out that wen we move to Cincinnati we'll be able to get over the air TV again. I had sort of forgotten about that, since we get none here! We're talking about replacing our 20+ year old big square TV with one of these newfangled ones. I'll look up Consumer Reports, but any suggestions? We don't need gigantic or HD, but not randomly breaking for no reason would be good.