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LG BD670 3D Wireless Network Blu-ray Disc Player with Smart TV |
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Blu Ray Movies On Netflix
A big button "Netflix" of the new TV remote controls connected? A tantalizing prospect that the site advertising video streaming U. S. would successfully negotiated with manufacturers of televisions, says Business Insider. Now, instead of get blu ray movies on netflix on the Internet, simply the viewer to press the button, synonymous with "little publicity" for the site "every time someone uses the remote control of his new television" , correctly notes Business Insider. According to a statement, Sharp, Sony and Toshiba are the party; manufacturers Panasonic and Samsung would also monitor the movement in the Blu-Ray. A great step for Netflix, thumbing his nose at many companies eyeing on the cake to broadcast content on the TV connected. And among them rival Comcast, ISP and cable operator United States, which was recently demonstrated by overtaxing the passage of Netflix movies in their pipe. In early 2010, Google launched its movie rental service online, YouTube Rentals in beta. That theater speaker system demand for payment is limited to the United States. Since then YouTube has been negotiating with Hollywood studios to negotiate agreements and expand the catalog of available titles currently in the thousands. The idea is to compete with similar offerings from Amazon, blu ray movies on netflix and Apple iTunes already operating at full capacity in the U. S. market. For now, YouTube has managed to close deals with many independent producers, and Lionsgate, but also with major movie studios including Warner Brothers, Universal and Sony Pictures. But others are reluctant to license their films. YouTube has failed to convince either the Disney or the Fox or the Paramount. Even the 130 million users that visit YouTube each month from potential customers seem attractive enough. It seems that weighs against the bad reputation is a subsidiary of Google being soft on piracy. Anyway, reports Sharon Waxman in The Wrap, the presentation of the YouTube Rentals is imminent. The idea is that movies can be rented by the Internet site YouTube the same day they are available in video stores and other on-demand services like iTunes, several weeks before it will be in play services such as streaming subscription Netflix. . . .