Friday Jul 4 2008
All times are London time

Search Quotes in the FT.com site
FT Logo

December 28, 2007

Wal-Mart gives up on movie downloads

Walmart Wal-Mart has the shelfspace to make or break a new DVD release, but its attempt to take that power to the Web has just bombed. The mega-retailer quietly closed its video download store in the run-up to Christmas. So underwhelming was the service that its failure is only just getting noticed.

Leaving aside Wal-Mart’s own particular failings, this is another sign that the movie download business has been going nowhere fast. Earlier this week we reported that Apple’s iTunes store will soon be trying out a new approach, offering movies from News Corp’s 20th Century Fox studio for rental.

A second feature of the Apple/ Fox deal looks even more intriguing: besides slotting it into a DVD player, people who buy a traditional movie disk will also be able to rip a (DRM-protected) copy of the movie to their iTunes collection, then watch it on an iPod. For Apple, this is a great way to suck more content into the iTunes ecosystem from what remains the dominant channel for movie distribution. For Fox, it’s a great way to add more value to a DVD ("Watch this film on your TV and your iPod!")

This all highlights once again the lack of appeal for mainstream consumers in movie downloads. Even those who feel comfortable plugging into an online service and paying full DVD prices are left with a digital file that they’ll have difficulty transfering to the TV screen. Without significantly lower prices, it’s an idea that seems to be struggling.

Post a comment

Comment Policy




As a final step before posting the comment, please type the two words you see in the image beloweight numbers in the audio clip; this test is to prevent automated robots from posting comments.


More FT Blogs and Forums

  • Clive Crook's blog The FT's chief Washington commentator blogs about intersection of politics and economics

  • Economists' Forum Leading economists and the FT's chief economics commentator, Martin Wolf, debate the big issues

  • Gideon Rachman's blog The FT's chief foreign affairs commentator on world issues and his travels

  • The Undercover Economist Tim Harford's blog on economics in everyday life

  • Willem Buiter's Maverecon The LSE professor blogs on 'economics, politics, ethics, religion, culture, free and open source software (FOSS), and whatever'

  • John Gapper's blog FT chief business commentator talks about business, finance, media and technology

  • Management Blog A forum for the latest thinking about the issues that preoccupy managers around the world'

  • FT Alphaville Instant market news and commentary for finance professionals

  • Brussels Blog By our Brussels writers

  • Westminster Blog By our UK Parliament writers

  • Dear Lucy Columnist Lucy Kellaway and readers solve your workplace woes