passatdoc
Well-known member
Two weeks ago the DVD player connected to my living room HDTV gave up the ghost. I gave the player to a neighbor who likes to do Halloween displays, because the audio output still worked (i.e. could still play audio files on CDs or DVDs).
Went to Costco to buy either a replacement DVD player or a Blu Ray player, figuring I'd spend like $150 and get some sort of simple stand-alone unit.
Boy was I surprised. They had only one standard DVD player model left in their product line, which to me was a signal that soon they will only make BluRay movies, more or less forcing everyone to buy a BluRay unit. That was no problem, since most of the units weren't super expensive (most in the $125-150 price point range). However, I was unaware that NONE of these units are stand-alone anymore, welcome to the world of internet apps on DVD players.
The dept manager was about my age which was good, easier to get tech advice from a middle aged employee than a college kid!! After interviewing me and learning that I did not have ethernet cable at my tv location (living room), but that I did have a wireless network at home, he recommended either a WiFi-equipped unit, or one that could be upgraded to WiFi with an adapter (which adds $75-80 to the cost). I figured, hell just get a unit with WiFi and start using it, so I went with a Vizio unit with built-in WiFi. Also learned that some tv's now come with WiFi as well, though my two year old HDTV works fine (so far).
Hooked up the HDMI cable and had the wireless up and running in like ten minutes. I was not a Netflix subscriber beforehand, but I set up an account through the Vizio website, which gives Vizio customers a discount (I think $8 for full unlimited service, including mail disks, vs $10 normally). Movies started streaming instantly and flawlessly. Plus, you can use it on up to six devices, so I added my home computer, laptop, and office computer (I am the boss, and sometimes I am stuck at my office on weekends or nights on call or doing paperwork, so it's a nice form of entertainment).
I am amazed at the value this product (streaming Netflix, plus a reasonably priced Vizio BluRay player) delivers for $8 a month. I wonder if NetFlix subsidizes the manufacturers to include WiFi at a low price? Anyway, I downgraded my cable service to just the basic 72 channels plus 30 "basic" HD channels, keeping the box, but this drops the bill from $85/month to $60/month. If I ditch the box and the full HD channels and just hook the cable in to the tv, I can drop the rate to $42/month.
I'd much rather have a lower cable rate and pay the Netflix subscription, it's amazing. I never had time to scan the program guides to see what was on the 400+ channels I had. Now I can watch what I want when I want, not have to worry about setting things up to record, and if I don't finish a title, I have the option to resume where I left off at a later time.
Went to Costco to buy either a replacement DVD player or a Blu Ray player, figuring I'd spend like $150 and get some sort of simple stand-alone unit.
Boy was I surprised. They had only one standard DVD player model left in their product line, which to me was a signal that soon they will only make BluRay movies, more or less forcing everyone to buy a BluRay unit. That was no problem, since most of the units weren't super expensive (most in the $125-150 price point range). However, I was unaware that NONE of these units are stand-alone anymore, welcome to the world of internet apps on DVD players.
The dept manager was about my age which was good, easier to get tech advice from a middle aged employee than a college kid!! After interviewing me and learning that I did not have ethernet cable at my tv location (living room), but that I did have a wireless network at home, he recommended either a WiFi-equipped unit, or one that could be upgraded to WiFi with an adapter (which adds $75-80 to the cost). I figured, hell just get a unit with WiFi and start using it, so I went with a Vizio unit with built-in WiFi. Also learned that some tv's now come with WiFi as well, though my two year old HDTV works fine (so far).
Hooked up the HDMI cable and had the wireless up and running in like ten minutes. I was not a Netflix subscriber beforehand, but I set up an account through the Vizio website, which gives Vizio customers a discount (I think $8 for full unlimited service, including mail disks, vs $10 normally). Movies started streaming instantly and flawlessly. Plus, you can use it on up to six devices, so I added my home computer, laptop, and office computer (I am the boss, and sometimes I am stuck at my office on weekends or nights on call or doing paperwork, so it's a nice form of entertainment).
I am amazed at the value this product (streaming Netflix, plus a reasonably priced Vizio BluRay player) delivers for $8 a month. I wonder if NetFlix subsidizes the manufacturers to include WiFi at a low price? Anyway, I downgraded my cable service to just the basic 72 channels plus 30 "basic" HD channels, keeping the box, but this drops the bill from $85/month to $60/month. If I ditch the box and the full HD channels and just hook the cable in to the tv, I can drop the rate to $42/month.
I'd much rather have a lower cable rate and pay the Netflix subscription, it's amazing. I never had time to scan the program guides to see what was on the 400+ channels I had. Now I can watch what I want when I want, not have to worry about setting things up to record, and if I don't finish a title, I have the option to resume where I left off at a later time.