


- Flixster disc to digital portable#
- Flixster disc to digital software#
- Flixster disc to digital code#
- Flixster disc to digital series#
They are complicit in the big media companies’ assault on Fair Use and First Sale doctrine in so doing, as if the DMCA hadn’t eroded the rights of individuals to use or dispose of content-containers they own in a manner which suits them in the first place. While I would be in dire straits indeed before setting foot in a Walmart for any purpose, the fact that they put a stamp on any disc that’s done the D2D course is highly disturbing to me. For my part, I think and wish that the US licensees would start including Digital Copy with all their titles, preferably not through Ultraviolet unless it has improved dramatically since its introduction (when it was a steaming pile of digital shit) until they do, there are … other methods.
Flixster disc to digital series#
True, but I think I remember that the challenge is the Japanese licensors, partly because they tend to be more conservative with regard to anything that might damage their profits (such as piracy or reverse-importation) and partly because they require a signed contract for everything from video transfers to package design to that one 3-minute ONA that only shipped with the ninth volume of the second manga series that’s only peripherally related to the rest of the show but adds development for this one character whom you only see for half a minute in episode 19 (the uncensored AT-X version).
Flixster disc to digital code#
I wouldn't be surprised to see them explore this option in the distant future.ĭon't expect this list to get much bigger currently, but it'd be nice if it included all anime titles that have a UV/digital copy code packed with them (if there even are any) and not just D2D titles. They could charge a premium of $5-10 more and include the digital copies with the home video release and it most likely wouldn't hurt their sales assuming most of the customers who buy digital copies of their shows (ie: iTunes) don't overlap much with the ones who purchase home video releases. I can see this having good profit potential for them. Of the titles mentioned so far, I don't see any of the 'big' anime licencors (Funimation, Sentai, NISA, etc).
Flixster disc to digital portable#
Most new TV shows/movies include them nowadays and having digital copies in the cloud available for streaming/download would be a welcome move for people so they could watch the shows on the go without lugging around the physical media and maybe even a portable blu-ray drive for laptops without a blu-ray/optical drive (in my case). On this topic of, I do wish NA licencors would start including them with the home video release. From what I've read on here so far, it's seems to be basically the same as a digital copy/UV code I'm guessing (using the physical disc instead of a code). I've gotten and used a few Ultraviolet and Digital Copy codes, but D2D is new to me. Never even heard of Disc-to-Digital before this thread. Re: Anime available for Disc-to-Digital (VUDU/Flixster/CinemaNow/UltraViolet/etc) I may take them all in to Walmart to do in-store Disc-to-Digital. It's one of about four titles (out of hundreds) that this has happened to me.
Flixster disc to digital software#
** - I tried, but VUDU's D2D program couldn't "verify" the disc, and Flixster's and CinemaNow's D2D software said it wasn't eligible for D2D. * - I have successfully added this title to my UV library via D2D. generally Sony Pictures and Manga Entertainment titles. This is simply the titles I have found through Vudu's Disc to Digital info page. Ghost in the Shell: 2nd Gig - Individual Eleven Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex - The Laughing Man Interested if there are others I haven't even thought of? there's not many eligible D2D anime titles available on UltraViolet and the various portals with which to stream titles, but I thought I'd list the ones I know of. (I'm lucky that my laptop has a BD-drive, so I can convert tons of Blurays to get HD streams added to my library for super cheap) mainly through UV codes provided with movies, and also Disc-to-Digital services. So, I've recently become addicted to building an online library of movies.
