cellio: (sleepy-cat)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2011-02-06 02:51 pm
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pleasant surprise from Netflix

After returning a DVD, on Friday I was a little surprised to see that Netflix was sending me the second item on my queue even though the first was marked as being available. But shrug; Netflix never promised a strict queue and that's fine. So long as they send the discs in multi-disc sets in order I have nothing to complain about (and this failure is unlikely given how I structure my queue).

Saturday I got email from them saying "you may have noticed that we did that" -- it was because while the disc is available, it wasn't available at my nearest distribution center. So while sending me #2 they were also going to send me #1 from farther away and I should expect it in a few days. This means I will have more DVDs out at a time than is supported by my subscription. It's a very small cost to them to provide this, but many companies wouldn't so it makes a good impression that they did.

In a similar vein, when I downgraded my subscription after getting the Roku streaming device (don't need as many DVDs at a time when there's plenty to watch via streaming), I didn't expect them to replace the DVD that arrived at their distribution point a day before the downgrade was to take effect. They sent it anyway, so I had an extra DVD for some days past when I had paid for that privilege.

Tangent: Roku sent email Thursday saying I could now watch Social Network through them (for a rental fee from, IIRC, Amazon). I observe that the DVD will be available through Netflix on Tuesday. Is there really a market of people who (1) can't wait five more days but (2) didn't see it in the theatre, or (3) have Roku devices but (4) don't use Netflix so they can't get it that way? I'm puzzled by the business model.

[identity profile] anastasiav.livejournal.com 2011-02-06 08:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Roku sent email Thursday saying I could now watch Social Network through them (for a rental fee from, IIRC, Amazon). I observe that the DVD will be available through Netflix on Tuesday. Is there really a market of people who (1) can't wait five more days but (2) didn't see it in the theatre, or (3) have Roku devices but (4) don't use Netflix so they can't get it that way?

I don't think Roku knows what kind of Netflix subscription you have.

We have the "streaming only" Netflix option so we don't get any DVDs. (We used to, but we would keep DVDs for - literally - months before they'd get watched and sent back.)

We have recently watched some streaming movies via Amazon (we got some streaming credit when we bought some movies as holiday gifts), and its actually been cool to want to watch something and be able to see it right now, while, say, E is unexpectedly taking a nap. Kind of like living in the future.

[identity profile] jeannegrrl.livejournal.com 2011-02-06 09:08 pm (UTC)(link)
(googles Roku) That looks really neat. How long have you had it? Are you happy with it? Do you also have cable? We have our internet, phone, cable all rolled into one bill, and view our Netflix on our Wii, but I might contemplate a Roku for another room in the house.

hmm....

[identity profile] nancylebov.livejournal.com 2011-02-06 09:47 pm (UTC)(link)
The founder of Netflix was inspired by not liking to pay late fees for videotapes-- he decided to found a company that didn't have an adversarial relationship with its customers.

Can he be convinced to go into insurance?

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/merle_/ 2011-02-06 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Is there really a market of people who (1) can't wait five more days

Yes. People are silly that way. We can only pity them and thank them for paying outrageous amounts of money so we can see things later for a pittance.

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/merle_/ 2011-02-07 05:41 pm (UTC)(link)
There are people who hate the theatre experience (I should know). However, that tends to cause one to be patient as well, so as you say, it is strange.