Okay, I touched on this in my Mac­world cov­er­age, but it deserves its own post.

We have a TiVo Series 3 that con­nects to the Inter­net. I can see us own­ing an Apple TV at some point in the future. We are mem­bers of Net­flix. All three of these allow for some form of dig­i­tal movie rentals. The TiVo uses Amazon’s Unbox ser­vice. Apple TV uses iTunes. And Net­flix uses… well, you can only watch their movies on a PC, so screw ‘em.

The other two have a pretty con­sis­tent pol­icy. Order a rental and you have thirty days to start watch­ing it before it is erased. Once you start to watch it, you have 24 hours to fin­ish it, watch it again, etc., before it is erased. And therein lies the problem.

My wife and I love the idea of dig­i­tal rentals. No movie store, lit­tle delay, prices are okay (if a lit­tle expen­sive). But we can only watch movies at night, after the boys are in bed. That means we start about 8:30 pm or so. And we have small boys. Small boys who wear us out. It is not impos­si­ble that we might be too tired to fin­ish watch­ing our movie. If we fail to fin­ish our movie, we must fin­ish it before 8:30 the next night, or we are out of luck. Our 24 hour win­dow will be closed.

That doesn’t work for us. I’m sur­prised that it would work for any­one with a reg­u­lar job, kids, or a life. Which doesn’t say much about the exec­u­tives at TiVo or Apple (you hearin’ me, Steve?). 24 hours does not work. It is a num­ber made up in a boardroom.

The solu­tion is sim­ple. Make the watch­ing win­dow 36 hours. No big deal. I’d even accept 30 hours. Hell, I would grate­fully take 26 hours. But please make it more then 24. Thank you.

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5 Responses to 24 hours is not enough to watch a digital movie rental

  1. mark says:

    Surely this restric­tion will even­tu­ally go the way of MP3 DRM…but when?

  2. Danny says:

    Gru­ber and Pogue agree with me. Or, I agree with them. But I thought of it, too! And that guy who sent Pogue the email. And like a bil­lion other people.

  3. mark says:

    Giz­modo: Movie rentals from iTunes 7.6? Awe­some. That pesky 24-hour view­ing win­dow once you’ve started the film? Not so much. What if you need just a lit­tle bit more time? Or maybe a whole lot more time? We’d heard you could extend the dooms­day clock by toy­ing around with your system’s date/time. We tested it and it’s true.

  4. Mom says:

    Hey, I am, as you are the first to know, not in your tech­ni­cal class, but I can play Net­flix movies on my bobble-head iMac. I can play them on my Chi­clet iBook too. iDVD han­dles them just fine. We do NOT want to have to rely on PCs.

    Oth­er­wise, your set up sounds great, if I knew any­thing about what you are talk­ing about.

    Greet­ings from the last cen­tury. Lots of love, Mom

  5. Danny says:

    The dif­fer­ence is with tra­di­tional Net­flix, you pay a sub­scrip­tion fee (not much, admit­tedly) and you have to wait for the Postal Ser­vice (not long, admittedly).

    With a dig­i­tal down­load, you can start watch­ing it within a few min­utes of pur­chas­ing the rental, and you only pay for the one movie you are watch­ing. This would be ideal for us, as we rarely watch more than a movie a month now, but when we do it is a spur of the moment thing. Hence all the dither­ing about which dig­i­tal plat­form (Ama­zon, Apple, Net­flix) we’d use, if we could.

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