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Last night I found (via Digg) a way to open up the "Watch It Now" tab in Netflix. This feature gives you the ability to watch around 1000 movies via your computer (they have been slowly rolling out this service to customers over the past month or so). It's all included in your plan -- every $1 you pay per month gives you an hours worth of viewing time, without affecting your physical DVD queue at all. There's no waiting, virtually no software to download, just click "Play" and you're instantly watching.
Seeing how I'm bed-ridden (I've got a nasty case of the flu), I've watched about four movies/TV specials via this service in the past 15 hours. It is unbelievably awesome. This is what I've always dreamed of: a massive archive of content available instantly that's billed via a monthly subscription plan. No waiting for the DVD to show up, no loading it into the player, no returning it, just click then watch.
The chief factor holding this service back right now, however, is the selection. Netflix has only been able to convince a small number of content owners (studios, networks, etc.) to take part in this service. Thus, there are only about 1000 movies. A lot of it is big name stuff, but a lot is also really crappy "what the hell is this" kind of stuff.
When (if?) more content owners sign-on, this could change everything. Assuming, that is, that Netflix is also working on a device similar to Apple TV. While I don't mind watching movies on my laptop, most people do and won't. Maybe Netflix and Apple should join forces? That would be a very good day indeed.
I've been meaning to put together my top fifty films list for quite some time now. I finally did it.
The following list is based on the films I like the most, not the films I think are necessarily the best executed. Everything is listed in alphabetical order (you probably would have figured that out on your own).
I hope to update this list, as my tastes change and I see new films, throughout the year.
2001: A Space Odyssey
24 Hour Party People
A Clockwork Orange
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul
Almost Famous
American Beauty
Barry Lyndon
Being John Malkovich
Blue Velvet
Bully
Capturing the Friedmans
Casino
Crumb
DiG!
Dont Look Back
Duck Season
Fight Club
Francois Truffaut's Antoine Doinel films (The 400 Blows, Bed and Board, Love on the Run, Stolen Kisses)
Full Frontal
Ghost World
Goodfellas
Hedwig & the Angry Inch
I Heart Huckabees
Jackie Brown
Kids
Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill films (Kill Bill: Volume I, Kill Bill: Volume II)
Lolita
Lost in Translation
Lovely & Amazing
Magnolia
Manhattan
Midnight Cowboy
Moulin Rouge!
Once Upon a Time in America
Punch-Drunk Love
Sabrina (1995)
Sex, Lies and Videotape
Sexy Beast
Silence of the Lambs
Singin' in the Rain
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
Spirited Away
The Cell
The Dreamers
The Insider
The Shinning
Traffic
Welcome to the Dollhouse
Wonderboys
Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession
See more of my music consumption at Last.FM.
Maintaining a custom built Blogger template got old. I've always wanted to give Vox a try and, since I had some time this weekend, I made it happen and pulled the switch. I've imported only a few of my old Blogger posts (see below), mainly because Vox does not allow YouTube embedding (and many of my posts had a lot of the YouTube magic).
Bottomline: don't expect much to change. Same old shit. Same address. Just a different looking page.
Apple TV is missing a vital feature: the ability to play back non-iTunes supported video files. Right now, Apple is officially stating that Apple TV will only play back M4V, MP4, and MOV files.
Well, I guess that means that all of us who have libraries of AVI, WMV, FLV, etc. video are just screwed then, right? Apple officially says yes. I, officially, say no.
Here's the deal... Quite obviously, Apple doesn't want you using these file formats. They want you using Apple TV to play back television shows and movies that you've bought via iTunes. That said, they haven't gone as far as to completely stop you all together.
Thus, below I will go through the reasonably simple process of getting Apple TV to play back virtually any video format (I'm not going to deal with audio in this post, though chances are the process will be identical).
The important thing I want to stress here is that, since no consumer in the world actually owns Apple TV yet (they are set to ship sometime in February) I am speculating that all of this works.
That said, I feel very confident that my methodology is sound and that what I am showing you will work with Apple TV.
Why?
I've spoken with multiple official Apple employees and the key point every one of them has stressed to me with regard to format playback in Apple TV is this: if you can get iTunes to play back the video, it will work with Apple TV. Thus, iTunes play back is the key. And, since I am indeed able to get iTunes to play back non-iTunes supported video files, Apple TV should work with these files as well. Also, I have directly asked Apple about the process explained below, and they have said it should indeed allow you to playback non-iTunes supported files in Apple TV.
The second thing I want to stress: nothing I will show you below has anything to do with re-encoding. Obviously, your AVI or WMV or whatever files will play back in Apple TV if you take the time and effort to convert them to a format that iTunes likes. For many people, however, the amount of work (and storage space!) this entails is simply out of the question.
Third: this demo comes from the point-of-view of a Mac user, since that is what I am. Thus, officially this is only a guide for other Mac users. That said, I feel confident that what I'm doing will also work on a PC, though I have not tested it (Apple TV does officially support Window XP, but, as of right now, does not support Vista).
Fourth and finally: you're going to need Quicktime Pro. Not just Quicktime. If you don't have it, get it. I don't know of any way to do any of this without Quicktime Pro.
Ok. Whew! Now let's get started. There are only three simple steps.
Step 1: Install some codecs.
If you've already done this on your computer (as I'm sure many of you have) skip this step.
For Mac users go here.
(If you're on a PC, which this guide does not officially support, try here.)
Step 2: Create a Reference Movie
Open any non-iTunes supported video in Quicktime Pro (in other words, if you've got an AVI or WMV or whatever file, open it in Quicktime Pro). If Quicktime Pro won't open AND play back your file, this probably means that you did not properly install the codecs.
In Quicktime Pro, with your movie open, go to "File" then "Save As." Select "Save as a reference movie." Name it whatever you wish. Save it wherever you want. Click "Save." The saving process should take less than three seconds.
Step 3: Add the reference file to iTunes
Now, simply drag-and-drop the new reference file (which should be pretty small) into iTunes. To see if you've added it correctly, check in the movies section.
Finally, try playing back the newly added video in iTunes. Note that there are four different ways to play back a video in iTunes: in the main window, in a separate window, full screen, full screen (with visuals). To choose the one you like, go into your iTunes preferences.
If the video played back correctly in iTunes, you're all done. That's it! It should now playback just fine via Apple TV.
One very important thing: while you can move the reference video file around all you want, you have to keep the original video file in the exact same spot on your computer. If you move it, you have to create a new reference movie for the new location.
You will have to do this with every video file you want to be able to use with Apple TV. Thus, there is a little bit of work. That said, an entire season of a show would take about a minute or two. When you compare this to how long it would take for you to re-encode an entire season of video files into an iTunes-friendly format (many, many hours), you'll see why this is quite a great little hack indeed.
So, that's it for now. If our little blogosphere digs this article, I'll next write a post on creating a script or macro that will allow you to automate this whole process, making it even easier.
Note: you should most certainly NOT base your purchasing decision on this guide. I could very well be overlooking something. And just because an Apple rep has told me that he thinks this will work, he could also be wrong, or even just an idiot. Also, in an attempt to be as honest and forthright as possible, here is a list of places that disagree with this guide: here, here and here (more will be added as I find them).
Update #1: Here is a screenshot of a conversation I had with an "Apple expert" over at the Apple store (top right hand corner of that page -- it is actually 3 separate screenshots that I had to put together via Photoshop).

Update #2: This story made it all the way to the Digg homepage. My first time ever. Yay!
5. Angel Lust
4. The Liberal Quakers
3. Abe's Big Black Hat
2. I Fear Sunrise
1. Animal Parade
Now I need a band.

