Monday, April 27, 2009

Netflix Streaming: Improving the Quality of the Stream

I recently installed a Netflix Streaming Blu-ray player in a friend's house. The idea seemed pretty seemless until you start digging into it. My first observation was the installation is not something a "non-geek" can do with ease. The player did not have the right firmware out of the box and we had to do a complicated USB download and installation (the USB stick had to be totally clear of any other files).

Once we got the correct software loaded on the player, it worked quickly. You queue up some movies in your Netflix account and select them on your on-screen menu and it starts to stream the video to your blu-ray player within 30 seconds.

My problem was with the quality. There was a "quality bar" indicator that showed us that we only had 2 bars out of 10. Apparently the quality of the video codec streamed to your tv depends on your connection. The streaming of the movies were terrible at 2 bars. Barely watchable.

Here are some tips from Netflix on how to improve the quality: http://blog.netflix.com/2009/03/netflix-trying-for-consistent.html

If you do actually get your player to work, at a watchable quality, you will come to know quickly that a very limited library is available for streaming. That was the most disappointing aspect.

As a videophile, I recommend not hassling with the above. It will likely lead to disappointement.

1 comment:

An Schumacher said...

But really this is a great additional "free" feature if you already have Netflix. I like being able to watch TV shows and 80s movies through Netflix online and not having to wait for the disc to come in the mail. I don't feel as guilty now when it turns out I don't like a movie and I turn it off.

My son watches several movies on Netflix streaming and it's great because I don't have to buy/rent them. He watches them over and over again on Netflix's dime.

I also think this satisfies my need to have access to things immediately. So much so that I am willing to sacrifice some quality for the ability to expand my video library by 12,000 titles.

I give it a B+.