MovieBeam

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MovieBeam System MB2160
CNET editor's review
Reviewed by ; David Rudden , Assistant Editor, CNET
Reviewed February 13, 2006

Tired of waiting for snail-mail deliveries of your DVD movies from Netflix and Blockbuster? The new MovieBeam System might be what you're looking for. The product is a DVR-like device that ships with 100 movies pre-installed on its 160GB hard disk. As many as 10 new movies are downloaded each week via a proprietary over-the-air distribution network. Once you buy the hardware ($200 after a $50 mail-in rebate, plus a one-time $30 activation fee), you pay only for the movies you watch, as you watch them: $3.99 for new titles, $1.99 for "library titles" (older movies). But what distinguishes MovieBeam from most of the existing cable and satellite pay-per-view and video-on-demand services is that some titles will be offered in high-definition. (HD movies will cost an extra $1 when viewed.)

Upside: In terms of hardware and content, MovieBeam looks to be on the right track. The box--officially known as the MovieBeam System MB2160--should be no harder to set up than a DVD player and includes its own small, flat indoor antenna that's about the size of a mousepad. It features all manner of outputs--composite, S-Video, component, and HDMI--and its pass-through composite input means you'll be able to run a VCR, a game system, or other device without taking up an extra input on your TV or A/V receiver. But the big draw--the movies--is where the service has the most potential. According to MovieBeam, high-def movies will be available in 720p resolution via the HDMI output, while all others will be 480p-DVD quality. In addition to Disney, which is an investor in the service along with Intel and Cisco, MovieBeam also has an unprecedented range of support from almost every major Hollywood studio--20th Century Fox, Lions Gate Entertainment, NBC/Universal, New Line Cinema, Paramount Pictures, and Warner--which will enable select titles to be available the same day they're released on DVD. It's also worth noting that MovieBeam's system has the benefit of experience: an earlier version of the service ran through the spring of 2005.

Downside: While 100 movies may seem like a lot, when you consider how many studios are backing the product, there probably won't be much of a range of choice from each company. And while 10 new movies are promised per week, they're added at the expense of ones removed from the service without your input. And while the antenna-based setup on the MovieBeam System should make it free of networking setup headaches and broadband download speed limitations, it also limits the availability of the product to areas where MovieBeam-compatible transmitters are in place, which, at launch, is said to be about "half of all U.S. households." Finally, while the lack of a subscription fee is always a plus, paying as much as $4 for a movie--or up to $5 if it's in high-def--seems steep when you're limited to a 24-hour window in which to watch the movie. Compare that to the seemingly endless parade of DVD sales ("two for $15!") that let you buy movies you can watch as often as you like. And unlike videos purchased from Apple's iTunes Music Store, you can't keep them forever or transfer them to be viewed on a portable device.

Outlook: For HDTV owners who are dreading the dead-end choice between HD DVD and Blu-ray, buying a MovieBeam box could be a great way to get access to several high-def movies a week. And the fact that the system uses its own over-the-air distribution service means customers won't be locked into their existing cable, satellite, or broadband Internet service for content--assuming, of course, that they're in the coverage area. We'll have a full review of the MovieBeam System just as soon as we receive the hardware. But our gut reaction is that the limited selection of movies may keep interest limited to those who frequent the New Releases shelf at Blockbuster. MovieBeam sounds like a great concept, but we'd like to see lower pricing--for the hardware and the movies--not to mention a wider selection.

...

Read the entire reiew here.
 
MovieBeam will replace my VOOM HD!

I cannot get all the VOOM channels, as promised last May.
What I am getting, I don't watch--reruns, poor HD resolution and PQ.
The VOOM original will not stay that way--the new VOOM has left out some channels I watched a lot--like Lab (to put babies to sleep and relax) and other of the Movie Genre (Gunslingers, Ha, Ha, etc)
Gameplay--never wanted that, never will.
VOOM HD NEWS channel is useless.
So, I will not pay $99 or $299 to upgrade to equipment just for these measley channels and the UHD, ESPN2HD, which I won't be watching anyway. Not this year!
What I WILL do, when available, is buy a $200 MovieBeam box and rent HD movies for $3 or $5/month. I don't need any special receiver or a HD DVD player--this box will hold 100 HD movies sent directly over a datacasting Public Broadcast System venue.
 
Wow! Looks like it is available in my area! Interesting...
 
Looking at how many aborted starts this service had had the VOOM reference may be prophetic.


NightRyder
 
Last edited:
bookwalk said:
I cannot get all the VOOM channels, as promised last May.
What I am getting, I don't watch--reruns, poor HD resolution and PQ.
The VOOM original will not stay that way--the new VOOM has left out some channels I watched a lot--like Lab (to put babies to sleep and relax) and other of the Movie Genre (Gunslingers, Ha, Ha, etc)
Gameplay--never wanted that, never will.
VOOM HD NEWS channel is useless.
So, I will not pay $99 or $299 to upgrade to equipment just for these measley channels and the UHD, ESPN2HD, which I won't be watching anyway. Not this year!
What I WILL do, when available, is buy a $200 MovieBeam box and rent HD movies for $3 or $5/month. I don't need any special receiver or a HD DVD player--this box will hold 100 HD movies sent directly over a datacasting Public Broadcast System venue.

Where can I get more info on MovieBeam?
 
I will check it out as well but it really depends on the selection of movies. If these are all disney movies, I will pass. I need variation in my movies not just one Hollywood production.
 
RobertsD said:
They did that when they first started, I think it was like $10 a month to lease, not sure though.
They only have it as purchase on their web site right now. It says HD you need an HDMI connection. Will HD work with component cables?
 
but you need a phoneline

Why do all these systems need a phoneline? More and more people are getting rid of their landlines...
 
patrickpiteo said:
They only have it as purchase on their web site right now. It says HD you need an HDMI connection. Will HD work with component cables?
According to the specs, it has these video outs:

S-Video
Composite Video
Component Video
HDMI

The picture of the rear of the unit shows all of those outputs also.


However, you might only get 480P from the component outputs. If you are interested it getting it, I would contact them and ask whether you get 720p and 1080i from them too.
 
jerryez said:
So, why is this different than Dish's new on demand service. PLus ypu can still get Dish's regular programming.

Well Dish HD movies are standard $6, nothing cheaper and they're only going to look decent if you use the HD PPV channel for 148.
 

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