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Netflix Ending DVD-By-Mail Service on Sept. 29


I discovered a lot of great movies via those little red envelopes. Sad to see them go.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Netflix is poised to shut down the DVD-by-mail rental service that set the stage for its trailblazing video streaming service, ending an era that began a quarter century ago when delivering discs through the mail was considered a revolutionary concept.

The DVD service, which still delivers films and TV shows in the red-and-white envelopes that once served as Netflix’s emblem, plans to mail its final discs on Sept. 29.

Netflix ended March with 232.5 million worldwide subscribers to its video streaming service, but it stopped disclosing how many people still pay for DVD-by-mail delivery years ago as that part of its business steadily shrank. The DVD service generated $145.7 million in revenue last year, which translated into somewhere between 1.1 million and 1.3 million subscribers, based on the average prices paid by customers.

The growth of Netflix’s video streaming service has been slowing down over the past year, prompting management to put more emphasis on boosting profits. That focus may have also contributed to the decision to close an operation that was becoming a financial drain.

But the DVD service was once Netflix’s biggest money maker.

Shortly before Netflix broke it off from video streaming in 2011, the DVD-by-mail service boasted more than 16 million subscribers. That number has steadily dwindled and the service’s eventual demise became apparent as the idea of waiting for the U.S. Postal Service to deliver entertainment became woefully outdated.

The service’s history dates back to 1997 when Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph went to a post office in Santa Cruz, California, to mail a Patsy Cline compact disc to his friend and fellow co-founder Reed Hasting. Randolph, Netflix’s original CEO, wanted to test whether a disc could be delivered through the U.S. Postal Service without being damaged, hoping eventually to do the same thing with the still-new format that became the DVD.

The Patsy Cline CD arrived at Hastings’ home unblemished, prompting the duo in 1998 to launch a DVD-by-mail rental website that they always knew would be supplanted by even more convenient technology.

“It was planned obsolescence, but our bet was that it would take longer for it to happen than most people thought at the time,” Randolph said in an interview with The Associated Press last year across the street from the Santa Cruz post office where he mailed the Patsy Cline CD. Hastings replaced Randolph as Netflix’s CEO a few years after its inception, a job he didn’t relinquish until stepping down in January.

With just a little over five months of life remaining, the DVD service has shipped more than 5 billion discs across the U.S. — the only country in which it ever operated. Its ending echoes the downfall of the thousands of Blockbuster video rental stores that closed because they couldn’t counter the threat posed by Netflix’s DVD-by-mail alternative.

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I honestly didn't know they were still doing the dvd by mail thing. I thought they'd stopped that years ago.

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I thought for sure that when I’d look the date of this thread I’d see 5 years ago, not 2 hours.

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"Netflix is poised to shut down the DVD-by-mail rental service that set the stage for its trailblazing video streaming service, ending an era that began a quarter century ago when delivering discs through the mail was considered a revolutionary concept."

Quarter century ago? That's technically true, but in 1997 they weren't doing much business, because hardly anyone even had a DVD player to begin with (1997 is the same year that DVD was introduced in the US, and they were very expensive at first). In 1997 you'd have probably had to ask a million or more random people on the street if they'd ever heard of Netflix before finding someone who had.

Netflix didn't become mainstream until DVD did (during the early to mid '00s). I first heard of Netflix in about 2003, which is the same year that DVD rentals first surpassed VHS rentals.

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💯

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I thought they stopped this years ago.

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I thought they quit the mail deal years ago, it was pretty cool but sometimes the DVD would arrive all scratched up and unplayable.

Streaming is way better.

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True. Getting a scratched or cracked DVD was a bummer. But I'll always hang on to my personal DVD collection.

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A few cool cats here, MrMojo, Allaby and KOWALSKI are physical media enthusiasts, but I just prefer streaming. The big downside of streaming is I can’t find Platoon streaming free on any of my services and I really want to see that again. Mojo, Allaby and K could pop it in right now.

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I think I'll reactivate mine then.

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