<rant mode on>
Many of us folks in the UK that care about the region coding feel it is 
a cynical attempt to make us pay extortionate prices and control the 
market instead of allowing a competitive market to develop.  For 
example, the movie Eragon has recently been release here, the MRP is 23 
pounds, that is more than 45 bucks! Without region coding, I believe our 
high street prices would be comparable to US prices.

Fortunately region free players are readily available here, especially 
on the cheap units http://preview.tinyurl.com/3yayef hence a large 
number of on-line stores sell region 1 DVD's at a huge discount from 
high street stores. The region 1 version of Eragon imported from the US 
costs 13 pounds, just a bit more reasonable!
Sadly, it seems the average punter just pays the rip-off price in the 
high street and perpetuates the situation.

IMHO region coding is an immoral attempt to rig the market, and control 
the control it with an iron fist.
<rant mode off>

Cheers, Andy.





ann sanfedele wrote:
> Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
> 
>> Ann,
>>
>> I have time to watch about one-three hour's worth of television a  
>> week, aside from 15 minutes of news and weather while I'm cooking  
>> breakfast. TMC, TCM, Discovery, etc might be nice but paying for more  
>> than basic extended cable service (already $50/month, $600 a year)  
>> seems insane ... most of the cable channels worth watching require a  
>> digital cable interface box and can only be had with a 10-channel  
>> service pack additional, which would double the yearly cost.
>>
> Mine costs $90 including high speed internet, digital stuff, etc -- it 
> would cost more but
> I have a package that doesnt include espn or bravo.
> 
>> At $9 to $15 per DVD, $300-600 a year is a LOT of good movies that I  
>> can buy and reuse whenever I feel like it rather than wait for when  
>> the various cable channels choose to show them and hope that I have  
>> the time at that moment to watch. And ... no commercials, no editing  
>> for television format, extra material on the higher end DVDs about  
>> the series, better quality, etc.
>>
>> "200 channels and nothing to watch" is a perfect description of most  
>> of what I see on television.
>>
>> I do go to the movie theater, primarily for good indies but also for  
>> a lot of the better big bux films. There is a huge difference in the  
>> presentation of a movie on a big screen in the theater compared to  
>> watching that same show on a television screen, though more for some  
>> than for others. I go to the theater when other people generally  
>> don't in order to avoid children and obnoxious crowds. It's expensive  
>> but worth it to me.
>>
> Expensive is key word -- even senior  it is $7.00  or $7.50 in NY... 
> then you watch 20 minutes of
> promos that are so loud that I have to stand outside the door to the 
> theatre until they are over...
> and...well, there is this other problem I have that makes it at the very 
> least distracting to sit through
> an entire movie  -- at home I can get up every 30 minutes without 
> missing anything.
> 
>> Felipe does watch the occasional broadcast barfola from time to time,  
>> like "America's Next Top Model". Gag me. He keeps me updated on  
>> modern culture, whatever that might be. ;-)
>>
>> I would rather process and scan film. It's tedious but much more  
>> enjoyable.
>>
>> Godfrey
>>
>>  
>>
> I can't do much of any one thing for very long - even working on 
> photos.... I really do think
> I may have ADHD.
> 
> ann
> 
>>  
>>
> 
> 
> 


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