However, the disc can be copied within 48 hours, since it works like any other DVD during that window.
But they make a good deal of their money from late fees.The rental industry is based on a low price for limited use
Originally posted by: ApacheXMD
i bet if you took it out of the package and coated the disc with some sort of varnish or laquer or whatever, it'd stop the oxidation process and keep the disc fresh.
-patchy
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Notice they only list so far non-childern movies, none that kids watch 5 or 6 hundred times.
Maybe it wouldn't be so bad, "sorry little suzie I don't know why 'the little mermaid' doesn't play anymore."
Originally posted by: Bootprint
Notice they only list so far non-childern movies, none that kids watch 5 or 6 hundred times.
Maybe it wouldn't be so bad, "sorry little suzie I don't know why 'the little mermaid' doesn't play anymore."
Originally posted by: hdeck
too bad it only takes a few hours to rip dvds =/
Originally posted by: pulse8
But they make a good deal of their money from late fees.The rental industry is based on a low price for limited use
Originally posted by: JeffreyLebowski
well the movies the listed are movies most people could only stomach to watch once anyways.
I just think it's a ghey idea, so what happens when the "material" on the disk that oxadizes, seeps off or leaves a chemical vapor from the process in your DVD player and gets on your favorite out of print DVD? sure, it prob can't coat the whole disk, but if it got on the boot sector of the deisk that has the start up info or anywhere else on the disk which can cause it to skip or just freeze up.
What then?
Originally posted by: hdeck
too bad it only takes a few hours to rip dvds =/
Originally posted by: ApacheXMD
i bet if you took it out of the package and coated the disc with some sort of varnish or laquer or whatever, it'd stop the oxidation process and keep the disc fresh.
-patchy
Originally posted by: maladroit
Circuit City tried this before.
It was called Divx.
It failed miserably.
Originally posted by: maladroit
Circuit City tried this before.
It was called Divx.
It failed miserably.
