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ITunes Finally Has New Releases For Sale
It took two years to get a deal done, but the iTunes store has new releases for sale. All the major studios have licensed product to Apple day-and-date with DVD release. The price is what Apple has long insisted is an end-user friendly $14.99 for new releases and $9.99 for catalog. Can Apple jump-start the download-to-own market? |
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Netflix Introduces a Set-Top Box
The Netflix Player by Roku may have cracked the code on one model for making the delivery of movies over the Internet a viable business.
Internet Video: The TV Connection, the latest report from Adams Media Research, provides the first look at this new wrinkle in both Internet set-top box technology, and Internet consumer propositions. To find out more, click here.
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Worldwide Box Office Drives Film Entertainment Recovery
Film entertainment revenue to the U.S. major studios rebounded in '07 fueled by worldwide box office growth, but spiraling costs are taking a toll on studio profits. Film Entertainment Worldwide: The Private Equity Era,the latest report from AMR with international estimates from Screen Digest, is a study of film entertainment revenue by pipeline in the U.S. and international markets. The report provides an understanding of how private equity financing and new technology initiatives are changing the economics of the movie industry. To find out the implications for your business, click here.
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Video On The Internet 2008: Can Apple & Hulu Boost The Business?
The first quarter of 2008 was a watershed period for video on the Internet, with the launch of two major initiatives: Apple’s rental of major-studio movies on iTunes, Hulu’s offering of ad-supported streaming of hundreds of TV shows—and even major-studio feature films. AMR’s latest report analyzes both initiatives, projects the future revenue from both models and provides critical analysis of which model will pay-off best for content owners of all types—movies, TV shows, and news and sports. Click here for more information.
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