Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Why Apple iTunes Isn't Selling Movies. Yet.

The technology for downloading movie-length videos is ready, but their multi-gigabyte files would overwhelm current broadband connections.

By Daniel Turner

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Since Apple unveiled its iTunes Music Store in spring 2003, bloggers have batted around the idea that the company chose the name cleverly -- because "Music" could be changed easily to "Media" when it started selling online movies. Three years later, although movies have not yet appeared on the iTunes site, it has sold more than 15 million digitized TV shows and videos (for $1.99 a pop), with the blessing of ABC, Disney, Showtime, NBC, MTV, and other providers.

So far only one full-length movie has been offered at the iTunes Music Store, "High School Musical." And it's formatted only for the iPod. (Courtesy of Apple.)

Not surprisingly, then, the success of these online TV shows and videos has accelerated speculation about movies. Last week, Variety, Forbes, and MSNBC all ran stories about rights and pricing negotiations between Apple and the major movie studios. The consensus: It's just a matter of time before iTunes starts selling feature-length movies, if not this year, then in 2007.

For Internet video distributors, though, the Motion Picture Association of America has been a tougher nut to crack than television studios, because the film industry is more concerned about piracy.

Aside from the wrangling over copyright and digital-rights management, though, technical problems also stand in the way of an iTunes Movie Store. Actually, it's one key technical issue. While Apple already has a high-profile storefront, marketing mechanism, and suitable file format for delivering movies, figuring out how to deliver these massive, multi-gigabyte files remains a challenge.

Whether a consumer has a dialup or a broadband connection, it takes only a few minutes to download a song from iTunes. The Lord of the Rings trilogy would be several thousand times larger -- yet have to be downloaded at the same rate.

Choosing a file format carefully can mitigate the problem, but only somewhat. Apple owns the QuickTime format, whose latest QuickTime 7 Pro version, includes the H.264 compression/decompression standard, which is also used in the new generation of Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats. It compresses data into a much smaller space than the MPEG-2 codec used on DVDs. As a result, a DVD-quality movie rendered in H.264 will take up half as much room on a disk drive and be twice as quick to download. (The H.264 standard is also designed to allow viewing at many different scales, from low resolution for 3G cell phones and video iPods to high-definition versions with 1,080 lines of vertical resolution.)

But the HD movie trailers that Apple currently offers on its website still weigh in at more than 100 megabytes. And even with H.264 compression, an entire movie would amount to well over one gigabyte and take an entire evening to download at the 1.5-megabits-per-second maximum cable or DSL modem speed available to most Internet users in the United States -- which lags far behind many other developed nations in the capacity of its "broadband" links to residences. (The average South Korean household, for example, has 10-megabit-per-second access to the Internet.)

"This is one of the reasons why there's no activity taking place" in movie downloads, says Frank Casanova, director of QuickTime Product Marketing at Apple. With a 1.5-gigabyte movie file, "you could request a movie from Netflix [which delivers DVDs by mail] before this download gets to you." (Casanova said this even as rumors were breaking that Netflix was investing money in a movie download service.)

Specialized Internet service providers, such as Speakeasy, can double the speed of a home broadband connection, to 3.0 megabits per second. But these services cost roughly $80 per month, twice as much as standard DSL or cable modem Internet service, and gigabyte-sized movie files would still take hours to download. Consider that for an extra $40 a viewer could rent more than a dozen DVDs from a video store.

Comments

  • Another Good Reason For Fiber To The Home
    I've visited some communities here in CA that offer fiber to the home (FTTH) in new subdivisions  recently and they would not have a problem with movies, as data rates are offered at 30-100 Mb/s and 1 Gb/s is in the planning stage.
    In New England Verizon FIOS is being offered to established neighborhoods too.
    Thre is no doubt that FTTH is the secret for delivering movie downloads.
    Jim Hayes
    President
    The Fiber Optic Association, Inc.
    The professional society of fiber optics
    www.thefoa.org
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Jim Hayes)
    06/28/2006
    Posts:1
  • You probably mean speakeasy dot NET
    Because speakeasy dot com ("Speakeasy is the solution to your numerical problems") doesn't appear to be an ISP.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Charles Albrecht)
    06/28/2006
    Posts:1
  • 1.5Mbps???
    *hugs his $47.95 Canadian per month 8Mbps cablemodem connection -- Shaw Extreme-i service*

    I can normally download 700kByte/s from Microsoft, Apple, etc.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Donald)
    06/28/2006
    Posts:1
  • test - new thread vs reply
    test
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (test)
    06/28/2006
    Posts:1
  • 50 Megabit
    In Japan 50 Megabit DSL cost roughly 40 dollars. It's offered by Yahoo Japan.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Ray)
    06/29/2006
    Posts:1
  • Blockbuster-based iPid Distribution
    Robert X. Cringley wrote about a potential delivery method 4 months ago: Blockbuster.

    http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20060216.html
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Chris Horn)
    07/24/2006
    Posts:1

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Malleable Maps, Artistic Robots and Bubble Interfaces
Technology Review January/February 2010

Current Issue

Security in the Ether
Information technology's next grand challenge will be to secure the cloud--and prove we can trust it.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES
Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2010 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.