DIVX DVD - The Format that Bankrupted Circuit City

Divx DVD - The Format that Bankrupted Circuit City - Today I stumbled upon a very nice Panasonic DVD Player, the Panasonic X410U DIVX DVD CD Player. But when I went to play a DIVX DVD, I couldn't even get past a registration screen? Why not? I own the Hardware, why cannot I not play these movies?
#DIVX #DVD #Review
Please Note, all the pictures, video segments, or music that I use do not belong to me. I own no rights to the images, video, or music found on Google, or recorded from said Video Games. All content is property of its content creator. Please support the companies that produce these Video games, Pictures, and Musical Segments.
All footage taken falls under ''fair use'' of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (1998). Therefore, no breach of privacy or copyright
has been committed. Freedom of speech is the ability to speak without censorship or limitation.
#Panasonic #DVD #PanasonicX410U #X410U #PanasonicDVD #DVD #CD #Player #CircuitCity #Circuit #City #PanasonicDIVX #DIVXDVD #Review #Reviews #Reviewing #CRTTV #CRT #CRTTVKZread
God Bless you and Jesus Loves you! =)

Пікірлер: 818

  • @crttv1651
    @crttv16512 жыл бұрын

    Due to the stupidest Anti-Piracy measures, DIVX failed. No one wants to hook up their DVD player to a phone line, no one wants wires going 50 ft from their kitchen to their living room. No one wants to buy a DVD and not own it. This went bust after one year, just one year...

  • @UnluckyLucky2004

    @UnluckyLucky2004

    Жыл бұрын

    You know what they say... Piracy Is No Party

  • @anonyfamous42

    @anonyfamous42

    Жыл бұрын

    How did they come up with that idea

  • @wesleyorrin7957

    @wesleyorrin7957

    Жыл бұрын

    Its almost like the Wold Economic Forum designed this… sort of a precursor to “you will own nothing and be happy”.

  • @mikeg2491

    @mikeg2491

    5 ай бұрын

    It failed because it was in search of a solution for a problem that didn’t exist. Consumers generally prefer to rent movies versus owning, but why would I run up to circuit city and put up with mall traffic to get a movie when I could just rent an actual dvd from blockbuster 5 minutes up the road? If I have to call someone on the phone or connect to an outside server to rent something then I’d just rent a movie with PPV thru the cable box at the time.

  • @TechieZeddie

    @TechieZeddie

    5 ай бұрын

    How were you able to play it? You kinda glossed over it.

  • @__Philip__311
    @__Philip__3115 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I remember DIVX. It was in the title of every movie I downloaded from Morpheus, Limewire and Kazaa. It’s a good thing the anti-piracy measures protected the movies from being illegally obtained.

  • @GamesFromSpace

    @GamesFromSpace

    5 ай бұрын

    It confused the hell out of me that somebody made a hardware divx player.

  • @Dee_Just_Dee

    @Dee_Just_Dee

    5 ай бұрын

    @@GamesFromSpace You guys are confusing two different things. The videos that you could download in the early-to-mid 2000s were made with an MPEG4 codec called "DivX", whose creators jokingly named it after this failed DIVX format.

  • @Burningwithecstasy

    @Burningwithecstasy

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Dee_Just_Dee thanks for clearing up my confusion about DivX surviving past this Circuit City failed format.

  • @bluebirdsigma

    @bluebirdsigma

    5 ай бұрын

    And then fanmade dvd covers would have "DIVX" in the style of the DVD logo because they were for burning a bunch of video files like an anime season. And then they came up with another codec named XviD.

  • @GamesFromSpace

    @GamesFromSpace

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Dee_Just_Dee You're confused about our confusion.

  • @audiooddities9982
    @audiooddities99822 жыл бұрын

    I remember walking into a Circuit City and seeing a whole aisle of these things, after ten minutes of reading the info on it, I thought to myself "Man, that's a really dumb idea.."

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    I'm glad that you and many others saw it for what it is. If this format was successful main stream, then no one would own their own copy of the movies they purchased from that point onward. This strategy that they had only makes sense with online services, not with physical products. Thank you for making sure that they failed by not buying or supporting this crap 👍

  • @asherdie

    @asherdie

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@ThexthSurvivorso like now with streaming services and no hard copies available.

  • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    5 ай бұрын

    This was pretty much the general reaction of most people who took the time to read the sales info. Some people ran rather than walked away form the DIVX displays. I was in a BestBuy store where one of the sales people was talking to their manager about the DIVX gimmick and the manager, right on the sales floor, said (and I quote) "That's the dumbest f**king thing I ever heard!" Best Buy knew it was garbage too.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    5 ай бұрын

    @@asherdie Yes, as for hard copies now, DVDs and VHS tapes are super cheap for the most part. Bluray if you're looking in the right places you can find cheap also. For new movies and TV shows with no physical copy, I just make my own.

  • @Pidalin

    @Pidalin

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivor 100% agree. I also stopped buying physical boxes of games when they started with that game is not there as whole and you have to install it thru "some" steam. So it's pointless to buy boxed version when you can't install it anyway without some online service.

  • @Vince_Tasciotti
    @Vince_Tasciotti Жыл бұрын

    I used to work at Circuit City, I made sure I never sold a DIVX player. Circuit City wanted to push DIVX as the next big home entertainment format. A retail store does not have the resources to push an inhouse format as the greatest idea ever. I thought DIVX was a seriously flawed idea. Circuit City management wanted employees to purchase one to be able to better promote it. I went to the mall on a day off and bought a standard issue DVD player instead. One the day that DIVX was cancelled all promotions for it were taken down, the discs were removed from the shelves and now there was more space for DVDs. What's more is the management never offered a clear explanation as to why DIVX failed, they actually avoided they issue when it would come up a store meetings.

  • @natewheatshelf

    @natewheatshelf

    Жыл бұрын

    Did they make you watch that industrial sales video on how to sell them? T (Technology) Q (Quality) C (Convenience). I would have been at those meetings after they flopped mocking the crap out of them, like TQC TQC baby! Check out my new DIVX tattoo! Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, normal DVDs have got to go! Seriously, they must have been so blinded the dollar signs in their eyes that they never stopped to think if it was a good idea or not. Big props to you for not selling out.

  • @Vince_Tasciotti

    @Vince_Tasciotti

    Жыл бұрын

    @@natewheatshelf Yes I did see all of those inhouse DIVX promotions. They helped me in not selling a DIVX player. My father was a TV repair man, so I grew up with a basis for good and bad technologies. A friend of his was moonlighting as a DJ at a local radio station. We would visit the station from time to time and intead of being in the broadcast booth, I would chat with the engineer about how the signal was modulated against an FM broadcast, things like that. So when I first learned about DIVX, I was not impressed at all. My first thought was this is not a good idea. It's destined to fail, and I want to distance myself from this whole concept.

  • @zt1053

    @zt1053

    Жыл бұрын

    At least they could play regular dvds

  • @machiavelli4428

    @machiavelli4428

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here I worked at the one in Merced California and ohhh man if I even saw customers go close to to the divx area (which was pretty rare LOL) I would just walk the other way towards the TV section

  • @Gannooch

    @Gannooch

    6 ай бұрын

    Management wanted employees to buy a Divx player? I could only imagine what the other family members who lived in said employees house thought when they learned that said employee had to buy a Divx player and had to hook it up to phone lines in addition to the TV.

  • @ZacabebOTG
    @ZacabebOTG5 ай бұрын

    It's worth pointing out that the DivX video codecs have nothing to do with the DIVX movie format shown here. The developers of the DivX video codecs just adopted the name as a joke to poke fun at the DIVX format. Their reason for using the name was likely that all the aggressive anti-piracy measures at the time backfired and encouraged piracy, and DivX was very much targeting the pirates with their more efficient codec. The same pirates who would strip out the unskippable "YoU wOuLdN't StEaL a CaR" PSA when pirating movies to save on space, by the way. You know, that obnoxious PSA you'd only see when you rented or bought a legit DVD. The one that made piracy look cool and then scolded you for it. The PSA that had thousands of people stop buying DVDs and start pirating instead to avoid the obnoxious, unskippable anti-piracy PSA... 🤪

  • @GamesFromSpace

    @GamesFromSpace

    5 ай бұрын

    It also made me question who wouldn't steal a car, if the stealing was actually copying and now everyone had a free new car.

  • @cyphaborg6598

    @cyphaborg6598

    5 ай бұрын

    Aha I see, I never knew of this physical format but of course I'm aware of the codec.

  • @kojimayoshiyuki2728

    @kojimayoshiyuki2728

    5 ай бұрын

    Though its interesting, philips eventually started putting out dvd players that supported the codec divx, so as a kid I would download my movies, burn them to a data dvd and have my downloaded stuff on my tv that way, I think this was around 2007. but it was a cool player and I used the heck out of it until I moved to a modded original xbox with XBMC.

  • @KimoKimochii

    @KimoKimochii

    5 ай бұрын

    u prefers XviD

  • @simillarian

    @simillarian

    5 ай бұрын

    @@kojimayoshiyuki2728 Oh cool, I’ve literally never come across anyone else, online or irl, who also did this. I specifically hunted down one of these DVD players for the sole purpose of watching .avi files on my TV.

  • @WeirdWonderful
    @WeirdWonderful2 жыл бұрын

    I also love their definition of "owning" something, where you own the otherwise useless plastic circle, but not the content that is on it, which is the entire reason for buying it to begin with. Do I really own something I have to pay someone else for every single time I actually use it for it's intended purpose ?

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    Precisely. Their plan was to have consumers pay recurring rentals and making more profit long term. So you never really own it, you're just renting it.

  • @deanovolplo7469

    @deanovolplo7469

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivor So you "owned" the disc & every time you played it you had to pay?? Sounds nuts to me.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    7 ай бұрын

    @@deanovolplo7469 Consumers would have to be nuts to support that kind of business model. I'm glad it failed. Older media is super cheap now for anyone that wants to buy.

  • @mikeg2491

    @mikeg2491

    5 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@deanovolplo7469 As crazy as it sounds though is I bet if you did a survey of people who bought DVDs over the last 20 years a lot probably only watched the movie once or twice at most, so three divx replays at $4.50 each would have still been more cost effective than buying the movie for $20-$30 new.

  • @rsb__

    @rsb__

    5 ай бұрын

    If you really think about it streaming is a version of this…

  • @WeirdWonderful
    @WeirdWonderful8 ай бұрын

    "We think people will want to build a library of discs" Yes, of discs they can access at any time, without having to pay you for every single time they want to use it. I know this is just a softball "make us look as good as possible" promo "interview"....but them ignoring the fact people can already do literally this without paying them a perpetual fee to access the content that is on the disc that they bought is just laughable.

  • @kcgunesq

    @kcgunesq

    5 ай бұрын

    You have to remember that a DIVX probably cost about $1 more than a rental in many cases, but was likely $10 or more less than buying. $10 in the early 2000's was probably enough to get three people a meal at Wendy's, so the equivalent of $25-$30 today. It wasn't a horrible idea, but it just wasn't going to appeal to enough people at a time when even DVD was new tech and Netflix would send you up to 4 discs at a time by mail for $12 a month or so.

  • @WeirdWonderful

    @WeirdWonderful

    5 ай бұрын

    @@kcgunesq It was a horrible idea, it's basically selling people an otherwise useless plastic disc and then demanding they rent out the contents each time they want to watch it.

  • @davidm4566

    @davidm4566

    5 ай бұрын

    @@WeirdWonderful it had potential for its time. I have many movies that I've only watched once or twice. I liked these movies and will probably watch it again one day so I keep them. If it was cheaper at the time (maybe $1-$2 to rent rather than more expensive than Blockbuster) when DVDs cost $22-$25 to own, and you couldn't find them used, it could have worked. Yes, you have to pay for it every time you want to watch, but big picture you're paying less overall. For the movies you watch all the time you could just get DVD. The problem was that the prices of DVDs came down and $5 wasn't a deal to rent a movie. The only real benefit was that if you didn't get time to watch it you could just get to it later.

  • @darkprinc979

    @darkprinc979

    5 ай бұрын

    @@WeirdWonderful Let's not forget that people these days don't count ownership to mean much.

  • @gamble777888

    @gamble777888

    5 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@WeirdWonderfulit wasn't a great idea, but essentially that's how most people purchase movies today, minus the useless disc It was the early years of the internet, heck it was the early days of disks themselves, I could see why they were interested in doing this, sort of a way to compete with the movie rental joints, but yea it was too confusing and not convenient enough to ever work.

  • @willkomnath2560
    @willkomnath2560 Жыл бұрын

    I used to work at Circuit City when this came out and we knew it was junk from the start. But the reason they went bankrupt was gross mismanagement at the highest level.

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    So basically the same difference 😅

  • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    5 ай бұрын

    @@RKingis LOL

  • @danielboone8435

    @danielboone8435

    5 ай бұрын

    They probably did it on purpose. Brought in a ringer to run it into collapse, then hired him as a consultant at the parent company. Google Dave Brandon.

  • @cardinaloflannagancr8929

    @cardinaloflannagancr8929

    5 ай бұрын

    Not at all it was just on of the bad decisions. Divx was not the reason for bankruptcy and ended 8 years before bankruptcy ​@@RKingis

  • @jefft8597

    @jefft8597

    5 ай бұрын

    I remember when they fired 3400 of its highest paid store employees because they were making too much money, and then let them apply for lower paid positions in order to keep their jobs. Who is going to support a store like that!?

  • @DeliciousAutumn
    @DeliciousAutumn Жыл бұрын

    I remember DivX. My dad bought a DVD player in 1997 or 98 when they were still a new concept, and going for like $1,000. And I remember all the wires coming out of the back of the glass doored media cabinet that sat next to the entertainment center. He had his 5 disc CD player, vcr, VHS rewinder all in the same cabinet and sitting on top was that round-style antenna for the radio. He had all this snazzy media equipment but refused to get cable television, so the antenna may have been for the TV come to think of it. But his DVD player came with DivX and it was a sin to unwrap a DivX DVD without permission, because as long as they where wrapped, you knew they hadn't been watched. I think he only ever paid to re-watch a few of them. He didn't leave the phone cord plugged into it. So we had to get behind the DVD player and hook it up when we wanted to watch a DivX that we'd already viewed. Touching any of his electronics without him around and under his supervision and explicit consent though was blasphemy.

  • @jessihawkins9116

    @jessihawkins9116

    5 ай бұрын

    no one touches my electronics either 😤 well….I just saw your profile, I might let you touch them 😕

  • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    @Plasmastorm73_n5evv

    5 ай бұрын

    Sounds like your dad is/was a technophile.

  • @ImWithTeamTrinity

    @ImWithTeamTrinity

    5 ай бұрын

    I bought a playstation 2 in 2000, it played dvds out of the box, which was pretty awesome. I stopped using VHS at that point, until recently, when I bought a VCR for the nostalgia.

  • @FadeToBlack1989

    @FadeToBlack1989

    5 ай бұрын

    I run my house much like your father. My bluray collection is holy and may never be touched by inpure hands. Only mine

  • @-_-Wells-_-0

    @-_-Wells-_-0

    5 ай бұрын

    Material things 🙄

  • @tgs1766
    @tgs17665 ай бұрын

    The most infuriating part, as someone who got on board with DVD early, was the movie studios who went the DIVX route instead of standard DVD. At the time, 20th Century Fox and Paramount studios (those are the big ones I remember but I think there were others) decided to support DIVX only. They would not put their movies on standard DVD. So you’d walk into a CC and there in the DIVX section were movies like Alien and Star Trek and none were available on standard DVD. Once DIVX went belly up, those studios relented and started releasing their movies on DVD. It was a celebratory moment for early adopters.

  • @LaurenGlenn

    @LaurenGlenn

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, but also with that, I remember owning a double sided laserdisc player (Pioneer CLD-3070... loved that thing)... and all those movies were sold on laserdisc. I had to buy Face/Off on laserdisc (which I would've done anyway then) and I also bought Star Trek 1-6 on it too). Pioneer and Fox still made laserdiscs during this period.

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    @@LaurenGlenn Yes, they did but but for much longer. And LaserDiscs were always niche. They never gained mainstream acceptance in the US. They were too costly and too cumbersome.

  • @awesomeferret

    @awesomeferret

    5 ай бұрын

    And having a new format that you bought only to see it fail, and to see movie studios give up on your format of choice that you adopted early is "a celebratory moment" because... 🤷‍♂️ My only theory is that you somehow thought "celebratory" had negative connotations. If not, then why the heck would it be a "celebratory moment" for early adopters of DIVX?

  • @uhoh7541

    @uhoh7541

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@awesomeferret looks like reading comprehension is not a strength of yours?

  • @awesomeferret

    @awesomeferret

    5 ай бұрын

    @@uhoh7541 oh the irony... It's about the order of the statements. I'm guessing the OP was saying that the early adopters of DVD were having a celebratory moment due to contextual cues, but due to the placement of the sentence, grammatically, one would assume that he was talking about early adopters of Divx were having a celebratory moment. And obviously the early adopters of Divx wouldn't be celebrating about major movie studios dropping the format they adopted early. It's pretty funny that you made a jab about reading comprehension when you so conspicuously ignored my major points in my comment. 😂

  • @Monty22001
    @Monty220015 ай бұрын

    I remember this. There was a real sense of fear this would destroy physical media altogether at the time, and if it had won it might've. The only thing that was worse were the discs that had a dye that would darken when exposed to Oxygen and be perm dead. The containers weren't totally airtight so they'd last only a few months even if sealed. Crazy times.

  • @gogereaver349

    @gogereaver349

    5 ай бұрын

    thats not what divx was. you are thinking flexplay.

  • @Monty22001

    @Monty22001

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gogereaver349 I guess I wasn't clear. I said the dye one was worse than divx. Just forgot what its name was.

  • @bmir89

    @bmir89

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@Monty22001 They were both equally terrible ideas. Also both brought out around 2000 when Home Satellite TV was become much more mainstream and affordable, and along with that you could just order the movie network - or pay-per-view films. This was also when they started bringing out recording receivers as well so you could just record whatever you were watching. The only thing I'd give DIVX over Flexplay, was they tried it in '98/'99 - back when then conventional video store was a still a very real thing. So although DIVX was terrible in practice - on paper I could see it making sense. Flexplay ran from '03, until whenever it died it's miserable death.. around 2010 I think. The complete nonsensical thinking behind Flexplay was when the launched it - Blockbuster was already starting to trend down, and Netflix was gaining steam. Every year throughout the 2000's old Blocky was tumbling and Netflix was getting bigger and bigger. So the writing was on the wall regarding physical media and how things were going to go... but even then Flexplay kept pushing. Must've been funded by a bunch of Dinosaurs that refused to accept change.

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    No one at the time thought DIVX would destroy physical media. 🙄🙄 DIVX was physical media. At that time, physical media is all there was. What would it have been destroyed in favor of? High quality video streaming was decades away.

  • @Monty22001

    @Monty22001

    5 ай бұрын

    @@tgs1766Ok, is saying it would just destroy optical media and people would go back to tape be a better explanation?

  • @TechieZeddie
    @TechieZeddie5 ай бұрын

    How did you play the DIVX disc? I thought it was encrypted and since the service is gone, you can't activate the disc to play. You kinda glossed over it - something about registering the player then burning it? Can you elaborate on that? It's not enough info for us to reproduce.

  • @mikeg2491

    @mikeg2491

    5 ай бұрын

    I have the same question

  • @bryede

    @bryede

    5 ай бұрын

    My understanding is that the phone verification service was shut off in 2001, so I'm curious as well.

  • @kelseystickney8663

    @kelseystickney8663

    5 ай бұрын

    Agreed. I really want to know, not because I want to recreate it but just pure curiosity. I’m thinking the “registration disc” either has a copy of every known decryption key for every released film or some master key. Either way, that seems like a massive oversight that the memory location of the decryption key can be accessed via disc instead of solely the phone line.

  • @echo700

    @echo700

    5 ай бұрын

    I had one of these in 1999. I was aware of people that had slowed the internal clock on the player so the initial two day period would last much longer. I never looked into actually doing it. I did try to rip some of the discs I had a few years later with no luck.

  • @soonerborn9073
    @soonerborn9073 Жыл бұрын

    It was horrific marketing telling people they own something they couldn't play after the 2 day period without another fee. Just idiotic.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    You're right, but they were counting on people not being savy enough to know that they wanted to trap and milk the consumers continuously. Effectively creating a low effort, passive income model with massive profits into the foreseeable future. Corporate greed knows no bounds. I am very happy that most people were smart enough not to support this BS, because if they did, every physical copy of any movie, TV show, and music to this day would have the same or worse endless rental trap. We would never own it for personal use!

  • @gogereaver349

    @gogereaver349

    5 ай бұрын

    you could buy more time for like 3$. why the need for a phone line.

  • @nixon2tube

    @nixon2tube

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gogereaver349 To pay the server $3 for that extra play.

  • @davidm4566

    @davidm4566

    5 ай бұрын

    It was basically a rental. The modern version is streaming rentals that give you 24 hrs to watch. That they thought people would buy them used at yard sales seems ridiculous lol.

  • @darkprinc979

    @darkprinc979

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivor You mean like with streaming and digital rentals today?

  • @tk-uo9mh
    @tk-uo9mh Жыл бұрын

    Imagine divx board of directors seeing hbo max like “well shit”

  • @justin8894
    @justin88945 ай бұрын

    this is the 1990s version of you will own nothing and be happy. You basically by the desk and they charge you every time you play it. The public doesn’t want that. Yet here we are 25 years later and that’s exactly what we’re doing with modern DRM and streaming.

  • @davidm4566

    @davidm4566

    5 ай бұрын

    Exactly! Even though we pay for a movie to "own" on streaming, the studio can edit it or remove it at any time without even compensating us. Often they lose the licensing rights or something to keep streaming it. I don't know all the details why but have heard this is an issue. Edit: when we purchase a movie on a streaming platform, it's basically a long-term/indefinite rental. Also, if the streaming site shuts down, the movie is gone, too.

  • @darkprinc979

    @darkprinc979

    5 ай бұрын

    That's because the public wants it now. If people really didn't want this they wouldn't support it and these companies would be forced to abandon the idea. The problem is that people aren't willing to sacrifice their entertainment to take a stand against this sort of thing. It has now gone past entertainment and is beginning to infect other things, with automobile manufacturers offering subscription based features in their vehicles.

  • @md_vandenberg
    @md_vandenberg5 ай бұрын

    I remember reading a Popular Mechanics article back in the day on this format. My takeaway was: "why?" Renting a DVD was $5 or so and buying one was about $20. So at worst, it was $25 to own a movie forever or until the disc rot settled in. DIVX was truly destined to fail.

  • @suarezguy

    @suarezguy

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah just not having to return something was at least not a big increase in convenience.

  • @philiphatfield5666

    @philiphatfield5666

    5 ай бұрын

    Disc rot is right. At one time I owned about 400 DVD's. If I had known over one third of them would end up being unplayable, I would have never bothered with them in the first place. I have only about 150 now, and I tried to play my "From Russia With Love" DVD the other day and it skipped chapters at will, froze up, and I threw it away. I regret all of these formats. A friend gave me a Blu-Ray player a few years ago and some of the discs don't even allow you to resume play at will.

  • @hackerx7329

    @hackerx7329

    5 ай бұрын

    It was even worse where I lived. New releases tended to be 3 dollars to rent and you could go on special nights at some video stores and do bundles where you rented X amount of movies and it was just 1 or 2 dollars each so "buying" a movie on Divx was actually a LOT more expensive than renting in our market. Making the deal even worse was the fact that DVDs often had extra content on the disc other than just the movie and most Divx discs didn't so you paid more money to get less content AND the player had to be hooked up to a phone line AND the players cost more money. There was absolutely no benefit to the consumer in our market and many others.

  • @uhoh7541

    @uhoh7541

    5 ай бұрын

    What causes disc rot? I've personally never seen it and some of the CDs i have from the early/mid 90's weren't even stored properly over the years (loose with imperfect climate control). Never seen it on a DVD either, BUT i only go back to that format for a few titles only available on it. I hear it discussed often, is it possible a certain climate is more prone to it or maybe there was a manufacturer selling bad discs to only certain parts of the states?

  • @WeSRT4
    @WeSRT47 ай бұрын

    Circuit City would have failed anyway. Management couldn't manage their way out of a wet paper bag. DIVX only hastened the end....

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg47235 ай бұрын

    I'm just amazed you can still register a DIVX player. Holy shit.

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy655 ай бұрын

    It was a stupid idea from the very start. Today, our local Circuit City building is now an antiques mall. When CC rolled out Divx, it was the day when I decided that 100 percent of my electronics related purchases would be at Best Buy and Circuit City would never again see my footprints on their floor.

  • @johnpierce2095
    @johnpierce2095 Жыл бұрын

    Im gonna go to circut city tomorrow and check it out LOL

  • @thetooginator153
    @thetooginator1539 ай бұрын

    I would love to know what the meetings at Circuit City headquarters were like. I have worked at places where no one is willing to contradict the boss. There could be a live elephant in the room and if the boss said there wasn’t, everyone would shut up (slight exaggeration, but only slight). This DIVX idea would have made a great test of employees willingness to tell their boss that an idea was bad. It’s obvious that the commercials left out the downside of DIVX, which SHOULD have been a red flag. DIVX was created right when the internet took off in earnest, so, the timing for keeping a BIG secret from consumers was a thing of the past, so it was a disaster CC wasn’t ready for.

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    It wasn’t just CC. Studios were in on this too. Not that the bosses there would have been any different.

  • @jasonkloos6348

    @jasonkloos6348

    5 ай бұрын

    I've never had a boss with any ideas 🤔

  • @cubdukat
    @cubdukat Жыл бұрын

    I had the non-DIVX version of the RCA player they showed here. It was surprisingly good. I eventually sold it because there was no way to make it region-free or play burnt DVDs. It was my first DVD player.

  • @heroicnonsense

    @heroicnonsense

    5 ай бұрын

    I had the non-DIVX Panasonic player (I believe the model no. was DVD A-310 or A350). It was a cool little player with a built-in Dolby Digital decoder - so 5.1 analogue outputs on the player and no eternal decoder needed. Plugged straight into my receiver (which had an analogue 5.1 input).

  • @DavidPlantz

    @DavidPlantz

    5 ай бұрын

    I had that same RCA player that I got at RadioShack. It was simple, but worked well. I only ditched it when I upgraded to a Blue Ray player.

  • @juliann1824
    @juliann1824 Жыл бұрын

    How did you manage to unlock the DivX part? Been looking everywhere online

  • @lap456
    @lap456 Жыл бұрын

    I remember in that time over 90% of the 1st time DVD-Video Player buyers were Blockbuster members "i was one of them" they wouldn't buy DIXV players since Blockbuster didn't have DIXV disks. So they got their 1st DVD-Video players at the Best Buy across the road.

  • @goody649
    @goody6492 жыл бұрын

    Lol. The anti piracy and limited viewing clearly killed this. On paper it sounded great, but in reality it was doomed to fail

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    Nope, it was greed that killed it.

  • @LaurenGlenn

    @LaurenGlenn

    5 ай бұрын

    I don't know of anyone who thought this sounded great on paper. Imagine buying something and then not owning it outright? Yeah, really exciting stuff. :)

  • @amac203

    @amac203

    5 ай бұрын

    Almost as exciting as paying for a dvd from a store which you needed to drive back to the next day and return it ;) @@LaurenGlenn

  • @mrdgenerate

    @mrdgenerate

    5 ай бұрын

    Sounds great on paper if you can't read maybe....

  • @suarezguy

    @suarezguy

    5 ай бұрын

    I think people didn't really mind just renting a movie to watch it quickly or having to return it until around 2005 and then increasingly with each year. Blockbuster touting "end of late fees" probably just made them more unpopular.

  • @elrondhubbard7059
    @elrondhubbard70596 ай бұрын

    Twice a month... in the middle of the night... your DIVX player will sneak in to your bedroom and take a small blood sample.

  • @ebonimom6964

    @ebonimom6964

    5 ай бұрын

    This is funny😂😂😂

  • @Debbiebabe69
    @Debbiebabe695 ай бұрын

    Always was confused as to why the DIVX remote detonating dvd shared a name with the DivX codec used by pirates to fit a dvd movie onto a CD.

  • @gregorybentley5707
    @gregorybentley57078 ай бұрын

    I know this was a year ago but do you remember where you found information on the disc you needed to burn to register it? I can't find any info anywhere

  • @ShrimplyPibblesJr
    @ShrimplyPibblesJr Жыл бұрын

    I don’t understand how people they could possibly claim a better viewing experience. We aren’t THAT dumb.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    You're right, but some people are unfortunately.

  • @ShrimplyPibblesJr

    @ShrimplyPibblesJr

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivor oh. I’m dumb. But still

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    They basically were assuming everyone was retarded.

  • @jeffsims7386
    @jeffsims73865 ай бұрын

    The only DivX I remember was the codec used for pirated movies. I do recall wondering why some dvd players had support for a codec so well known for being used in movie piracy, but I was in middle school/high school borrowing movies from friends to rip and didn’t really care.

  • @NickeyMouse

    @NickeyMouse

    5 ай бұрын

    Most of the DVD players you see with DivX on them have the codec logo because they can decode data files in that format. So instead of burning a "traditional" DVD you could burn a DL-DVD with a bunch of AVI files instead. Much like when CD players started being able to read/play data CDs with a bunch of MP3 files on them instead of being burned like a traditional 74min CD with 9-14 tracks.

  • @AZREDFERN
    @AZREDFERN5 ай бұрын

    This could have been like early streaming. $1 per disc to build your collection, a monthly subscription paid over the internet or Circuit City, and the phone line simply verifies your subscription with 2 small data packets.

  • @gregkrueger331
    @gregkrueger3315 ай бұрын

    I used to travel a lot for work and they used to have the same thing in the airports. You could “rent” a movie and you had two or three days to watch it before the clock went out and you couldn’t watch it anymore. I probably “rented” about 30 movies that way.

  • @davidm4566

    @davidm4566

    5 ай бұрын

    I remember that!

  • @icanbelieveitisnotdonebyap941
    @icanbelieveitisnotdonebyap9415 ай бұрын

    Even the sales guy trying to sell this knows how much this was going to fail

  • @midwaygamer-ou3my
    @midwaygamer-ou3my11 ай бұрын

    My neighbor jailbroke our dvix dvd player and pirated the movies online back in the day so clearly it was a waste of time.

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    Every word of this is false. Either that or you just didn’t understand what was going on at the time.

  • @The_NJG
    @The_NJG2 жыл бұрын

    That’s neat. I didn’t know that part of digital history.

  • @knyght27
    @knyght275 ай бұрын

    Thanks for making this video, I never actually found out what 'DivX' was back in the day

  • @Wallyworld30
    @Wallyworld305 ай бұрын

    I recall a Promotion that Playstation 2's came with 10 DVD Movies. PS2 basically made DVD the new VHS. DVD Players were stupid expensive when PS2 came out basically the same price as the games console. But just a couple years later you could get a DVD Player on Black Friday for $25. I remember that Black Friday DVD player also had DivX playback built in so you could play ripped Divx Movies on the cheap DVD player.

  • @KlingonCaptain
    @KlingonCaptain5 ай бұрын

    Welcome to Circuit City, where service is state of the art! Circuit City was one of my favorite stores when I was a kid. I was sad when they all disappeared.

  • @davestvwatching2408
    @davestvwatching24085 ай бұрын

    Don't confuse DIVX (Circuit City's Anti Piracy version of rental DVDs 1998) with DivX (a video codec from the early 2000s )

  • @Alexs23743
    @Alexs23743 Жыл бұрын

    "Remember that selling DivX puts you at the forefront of cutting-edge technology..." -A guy who probably cut himself on that cutting edge, circa 1999. The sad part is that Circuit City's rise was thanks to the company successfully predicting that TV's, microwaves, and VHS would all take off. But Circuit City failed a prediction here...and never bounced back. :(

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    They failed because of corporate greed. They wanted you and everyone who purchased movies or TV shows to only be able to rent them continuously and never actually owning them for personal use. If people were stupid enough to buy into that nonsense, they would have made tons of passive income into the foreseeable future with very little effort. Thankfully, people were smarter than that. There have been various types of technology in the past that I wished didn't fail because they were good ideas, but this DivX endless rental trap is one form of technology that I am glad failed.

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    It was a horribly retarded idea, that anyone with a half a brain could see it was doomed.

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivorIt wasn’t just CC. Major studios were in on this too. For the year that DIVX was in existence, 20th Century Fox and Paramount movies were only on DIVX. They refused to support standard DVD. Once DIVX died, they relented.

  • @LaurenGlenn
    @LaurenGlenn5 ай бұрын

    I remember this but it seems like it lasted more than a year. But it did give laserdisc players a few extra years when Paramount movies (and others) would not come out on DVD because they had exclusivity with Divx. Not to mention the confusion of some with MP4 DivX formats used on the computer. This format seemed odd where I could just go to Blockbuster instead and return it without creating waste. My brother in law was all in on it. Also "gold disc DivX" seemed stupid considering that's basically just a DVD. I can only guess they liked it because of what Redbox eventually did with DVD rentals that they added license fees to Bluray discs when those went out for rental.

  • @ChrisCooling

    @ChrisCooling

    5 ай бұрын

    I don't remember any studios that went exclusively with Divx. Divx operated from June 1998 to June 1999. Paramount began releasing DVDs Oct 1998.

  • @Ultrajamz
    @Ultrajamz5 ай бұрын

    As a 90s kid I always knew divx as that weird format sometimes spotted on morpheus

  • @tarlough77
    @tarlough775 ай бұрын

    I bought the DIVX dvd player from circuit city in the 90s and paid my dad each month to put a phone line in my room. I bought a few divx dvds and soon they canceled the whole thing so they never worked again (even though I bought some of them for beyond the 2 day period). Totally forgot about divx until this video showed up on my KZread suggestions.

  • @creeke_alley
    @creeke_alley5 ай бұрын

    Hitting the sub button and seeing it go to 1k was great and look forward to more content from this channel 🎉

  • @kcgunesq
    @kcgunesq5 ай бұрын

    Aside from DIVX, there was also the format war. I purchased an HDDVD player from Circuit City about a month or so right before that format was removed from the market. On the plus side, Circuit City gave me full credit towards a Blu Ray player, so I didn't really lose out, but that had to hurt their financials.

  • @lokionthecomeup

    @lokionthecomeup

    5 ай бұрын

    Anyone could have told you Blu ray was winning that race back in the day. Hddvd never stood a chance

  • @camcruise9600

    @camcruise9600

    5 ай бұрын

    @@lokionthecomeup he probably bought a Zune also😂

  • @ILoveTheAllCreator

    @ILoveTheAllCreator

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@cam2168 Zune sound better than iPod and gave you more space for less money

  • @DreamStarGalaxy

    @DreamStarGalaxy

    5 ай бұрын

    @@camcruise9600 I bought one too. It was great.

  • @jugganutz

    @jugganutz

    5 ай бұрын

    HD-DVD was a superior format. Blu-ray (Sony) only won the war by paying Fox to be dedicated. It doesn't really matter though since it was all a short term step. Even Toshiba was looking at doing flash cards when the war was raging since the costs got so low.

  • @JillyMaysHere
    @JillyMaysHere Жыл бұрын

    Does the divx disc have the same features common on DVDs, or is it literally just the movie, no frills?

  • @Banryu95
    @Banryu955 ай бұрын

    Good thing DivX lived on as a staple format for pirated movies... I specifically remember having a cheap DVD player with a "DIVX" logo on it that was amazing because I could "allegedly" burn a movie to a 700mb CD-R and watch it on a TV instead of my computer. That was hot sh*t back then.

  • @IAmNeomic

    @IAmNeomic

    5 ай бұрын

    The video format is actually different than the discs. Initially, DivX videos online were branded as "DivX ;-)" as the people who created the codec yoinked the name from the DIVX company, as their trademark was not applicable in France. When DIVX went under, the company registered the trademark for themselves and dropped the wink emoticon.

  • @chrisbuckley1785
    @chrisbuckley17856 ай бұрын

    Damn this is some cutting edge shit. Whats next DVD's in the mail? Coupd you imagine such a thing?😮

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    At least Netflix wasn't retarded with greed.

  • @infraredplayer
    @infraredplayer7 ай бұрын

    Not gonna lie, I reallyyyy like the square case designs I wish that was slightly more common.

  • @kennethlee494
    @kennethlee4945 ай бұрын

    Best Buy is the main thing that bankrupted Circuit City. Equipment and media, whether it was audio, video, cameras, CDs, DVDs, VHS or computers were less expensive than the identical items at Circuit City. After the local Best Buy opened I never set foot in CC again.

  • @Felamine

    @Felamine

    4 ай бұрын

    To add to that, poor customer service and bad treatment of employees. Divx was a terrible idea and resulted in a huge loss for CC, but it hardly contributed to its downfall. CC was making a ton of bad decisions towards the end of its life. Divx happened to be just one.

  • @oliverrando6463
    @oliverrando6463 Жыл бұрын

    I never even heard of these kind of dvds

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    That's probably a good thing back then.😊

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    If you didn’t have a Circuit City in your area you wouldn’t have. And even if you did, you still likely wouldn’t have. It only lasted one year.

  • @ymgve
    @ymgve5 ай бұрын

    What did you do to get the DIVX discs to play? You talk about burning a disc to register the player - what did you burn to the disc?

  • @kevinkelley3906
    @kevinkelley39065 ай бұрын

    Ahh Circuit City. The store that 95% of their movies didn't have prices on them.

  • @whaduzitmatr
    @whaduzitmatr5 ай бұрын

    So Im probably never going to encounter a divx player or movies, but I am curious what program you needed to burn to a disc to make the movies watchable?

  • @funkoidi
    @funkoidi5 ай бұрын

    Hey @CRTTV there's mucic playing in the background toward the end of the video? Who/what is that?

  • @chuckyluvsu13
    @chuckyluvsu135 ай бұрын

    That was so interesting, thank you for this great video

  • @WeirdWonderful
    @WeirdWonderful2 жыл бұрын

    Soooo the "gold discs" are basically DVDs I had to pay extra for and could possibly not even buy if I wanted to, cause the studio might object. ...did they not realise this was basically an anti-pitch at this point ?

  • @Tornado1994

    @Tornado1994

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nope. CC wasn't just stupid and misguided, but Investors actually said "YES" to this.

  • @lovelydolltime8006

    @lovelydolltime8006

    10 ай бұрын

    The DIVX gold discs never became a reality due to how short lived the DIVX format was.

  • @RKingis

    @RKingis

    5 ай бұрын

    Well, they did think they could sell people a DVD you pay to watch. So........

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Tornado1994Studios, not surprisingly, also said yes to this. 🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @nykraftlemagnifique
    @nykraftlemagnifique5 ай бұрын

    Wouaaa ! This is a real surprise for me to discover this ! I'm french and for me, divx was the format to get illegal copy of dvd download on internet on e-donkey ! I never know this format was launch like that to be an alternative to location ! Amazing !

  • @ronaldvazquez4373
    @ronaldvazquez43735 ай бұрын

    If you think about it they were way ahead of their time. You own nothing now on a streaming platform. I also worked there and hated it it, working on commissions selling something and having it returned because the delivery service had no idea how PIP worked and selling them the over priced splitter with the monster cables. lol memories!

  • @TheHavnmonkey

    @TheHavnmonkey

    5 ай бұрын

    yea but it's not exactly the same... with DIVX you own a physical copy that physically takes up space on your shelf but can't play it without paying more money. I think that is even worse than the digital only system we have now!

  • @menoats
    @menoats5 ай бұрын

    I never even knew about this technology. Poor circuit City. They had the right idea just the wrong media format.

  • @x7xSINIST3Rx7x
    @x7xSINIST3Rx7x2 жыл бұрын

    Those things are so hot garbage i remember they tried to sell me this while i was trying to get a tv lol but no one wanna do this mess they just want to buy a dvd play it sleep watch it the next day without having to buy it again and again and again but good video notice you used the hotline Miami soundtracks in the into of the video but yeah divix sucks

  • @anonamatron
    @anonamatron5 ай бұрын

    Everyone will want to buy a DVD that doesn't let them watch it! And we only have to buy a whole new player to do it?? Count me in! Circuit City, here I come! I hope they're still open.

  • @suitandtieguy
    @suitandtieguy5 ай бұрын

    How the hell did you play these discs when the authentication server went dark 22 years ago?

  • @Xbox-3b0
    @Xbox-3b05 ай бұрын

    Flashback back to the late 90's

  • @og_tokyo
    @og_tokyo5 ай бұрын

    is that royalty free tune @ 1:26 the same as in miami hotline game?

  • @abdizur8765
    @abdizur87655 ай бұрын

    Never even heard of DIVX until now. 😂

  • @erin19030
    @erin190305 ай бұрын

    I miss going to the video store on Saturday night for a good movie and some hot pop corn.

  • @JacknVictor
    @JacknVictor5 ай бұрын

    I had a dvd player that played divx format and these things just played on it no problem as I ended up with a box of the discs. Didn't have to register or put in codes etc. the other way around it was just to rip the divx file from the disc and convert to whichever codec format you wanted it in, using a pc and the appropriate software.

  • @Supernivek80
    @Supernivek805 ай бұрын

    This video brought back my vivid memory of a CC employee explaining this to me, noticing my puzzled expression, and immediately shifted gears with “Personally, you’re better off buying the DVD.” I think I was more flummoxed and entertained by the notion of the Mission: Impossible-style self-destruction of the disc after being viewed. The concept was far too ahead of its time. Ultimately streaming would utilize the limited rental, like Amazon. Rent it, you have it for 30 days unwatched. Once you watch it, you “have” it for 24 hours and it’s gone.

  • @recoveryguru

    @recoveryguru

    5 ай бұрын

    Your talking about Flexplay. I bought a bunch for $1 on clearance and then ripped them. Was that pirating or not? 🤣

  • @darkprinc979

    @darkprinc979

    5 ай бұрын

    And for some reason people consider this concept to be acceptable.

  • @Supernivek80

    @Supernivek80

    5 ай бұрын

    @@darkprinc979 Yeah I’ve been buying physical media because these corporate streamers can go suck a bag of d****s for taking our money to “own” a digital copy, only to take it away without so much as an explanation or an apology. Hard no.

  • @danmartin6225
    @danmartin6225 Жыл бұрын

    question so after you use your 2 days of play, you can activate the same disk again for another 2 days in the future?

  • @googaagoogaa12345678

    @googaagoogaa12345678

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes you could you would buy another 48 hrs for however much it was

  • @tgs1766

    @tgs1766

    5 ай бұрын

    And if you chose not to all you had were worthless, useless, plastic discs.

  • @Tommi-C
    @Tommi-C5 ай бұрын

    DIVX was originally a PC format and in the UK our DVD players could play the files from a disc or hard drive. We did not need to connect it to the phone line. As a disc format it was a stupid idea.

  • @gogereaver349

    @gogereaver349

    5 ай бұрын

    because divx was a good codec but it did have drm ability. it lived on as xvid. basically open sourced without the drm. how did you think they got 4.99 disk it was just essently a mpeg4 vcd.

  • @Tommi-C

    @Tommi-C

    5 ай бұрын

    Hi, I do realise that it had DRM in it but in the UK we did not have to bother with stuff like that. We could put a lot of DIVX videos on a DVD-R and just watch them.@@gogereaver349

  • @Dee_Just_Dee

    @Dee_Just_Dee

    5 ай бұрын

    Nope, you have that backwards. The DIVX disc format he's talking about in this video is the original DIVX. The PC format DivX was developed by somebody else entirely, who chose the name to poke fun.

  • @Dee_Just_Dee

    @Dee_Just_Dee

    5 ай бұрын

    @@gogereaver349 Not the same format. The *DIVX* format CRTTV is talking about uses MPEG2 just like ordinary DVDs, except that instead of using a decryption key stored on the disc itself, it needs to "phone home" so that the user can be charged per view. The *DivX* codec came along after DIVX's failure, and its devs chose the name "DivX" to poke fun at DIVX.

  • @firewalker1372
    @firewalker13724 ай бұрын

    “Look at the big brain on Brad”!!! Love that movie…

  • @Michael-sb8jf
    @Michael-sb8jf7 күн бұрын

    I also seem to recall it was about this time when Circuit city went from the "upper tier" electronic store. You know the place you went to buy you high end electronics to walmartesque shopping experience. They went from knowledgeable "professionals" to hiring college students looking for beer money.

  • @RPGreg2600
    @RPGreg26005 ай бұрын

    Somehow, I've never heard of this, and i used to love shopping at Circuit City!

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla19875 ай бұрын

    @1:47 - I have the exact same hand-held football game from MANY years ago. Still works great!

  • @kelseystickney8663
    @kelseystickney86635 ай бұрын

    I’m confused. Did the burning of the hardware registration allow permanent decryption of all the discs? I mean there’s no way any server is still online, right? I would think each disc would have a unique key?

  • @kowalskivideos6476
    @kowalskivideos64765 ай бұрын

    I worked at circuit city back during these days. When they cancelled them we used to have divx disc throwing competitions 😂. We used to laugh about how much they sucked! Circuit city was such a cool company to work for though

  • @christiangonzales7429

    @christiangonzales7429

    5 ай бұрын

    It must have also been fun tearing down the DIVX displays!

  • @kowalskivideos6476

    @kowalskivideos6476

    5 ай бұрын

    @@christiangonzales7429pretty sure warehouse team took them down overnight so it was an uneventful teardown. The training videos for this were pretty hilarious though, they really thought this was going to be the next big thing (as employees we knew better)

  • @mikewest6569
    @mikewest65695 ай бұрын

    Reminds me of that RCA record format that played movies, that lasted about a year also.

  • @Robosan4000
    @Robosan40005 ай бұрын

    The guy @0:45 @3:41 @8:26 is Juan Conde. He was a news anchor in Richmond, VA. Circuit City was headquartered in Richmond.

  • @punknerd9747
    @punknerd97474 ай бұрын

    How do you burn a disc to do that? How does it work to watch the movies without the phone line?

  • @TwilightMelody
    @TwilightMelody5 ай бұрын

    This is just incredible. It’s like nobody at any point in the process thought, what’s the upside supposed to be for customers? I get the upside for piracy and rental concerned Hollywood, but those are not normal people concerns. Furthermore, the battling ideas that you somehow own a disc, but can only watch it for two days, if I’ve got that insanity right is just… The one attractive thing is the price, but when you realize you’re just buying rentals… There are a lot of promising mediums that just went down for one reason or another, or had their own perks and advantages. This doesn’t seem to be one.

  • @OnnieKoski
    @OnnieKoski5 ай бұрын

    Wow… good thing I’ve got all my favorite Discovery Channel shows saved on my PlayStation.

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin67375 ай бұрын

    I knew Circuit City was going to close in 2009. They did not want to service a Panasonic VCR I had, and told me to send it back to the manufacturer. I said to the staff you are going to go out of business. The store still sits there empty. Otherwise I did like that there was another choice to Best Buy. 😮

  • @Amenhir1
    @Amenhir14 ай бұрын

    A very long time ago when my mother was shopping for her first dvd player we stopped at circuit city. She saw all the divx discs which were only 5 bucks, I believe. I didn't know anything about those but fortunately, the clerk that was talking to us told us how much of a waste they were and she didn't buy a divx player. If your own employees are telling customers to avoid a product, it's no wonder it went down the toilet.

  • @ronarter5162
    @ronarter51625 ай бұрын

    My pioneer head unit in my truck has a DVD and divx logo. I wonder how it would work? It's only maybe 5 or 6 years old too. I will have to find a disc.

  • @brandoncyoung
    @brandoncyoung5 ай бұрын

    They were ahead of their time actually. Now we all do the same shit with streaming now.

  • @chrisgermann6658
    @chrisgermann6658 Жыл бұрын

    DVD had superior rendering in my opinion.

  • @cubdukat

    @cubdukat

    Жыл бұрын

    The only difference between a regular DVD and a DIVX DVD was the DRM. Otherwise they were both the same electronically. There was no difference between the DIVX version of a film and the regular DVD format outside of the DRM.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    @@cubdukat Maybe in general. The version comparison of Pulp Fiction shown on this video the aspect ratios are different and the DivX version is cropped while the DVD version is widescreen, not cropped and has the correct aspect ratio. Thus making the DVD version better.

  • @gogereaver349

    @gogereaver349

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ThexthSurvivor however encoded the divx version was lazy.

  • @MarkMarkMark
    @MarkMarkMark5 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed this immensely. Can you do SACD player? Nobody covers them

  • @jblps
    @jblps5 ай бұрын

    2:36 This part was my favorite 🤣🤣 Give them away and yard sales lmao great business model

  • @xlixity
    @xlixity5 ай бұрын

    Why would anyone think that anybody would want to build a collection of movies that you can't watch?

  • @hexkwondo
    @hexkwondo5 ай бұрын

    Never even knew this format existed. Guess it wasnt out for long

  • @christiangonzales7429

    @christiangonzales7429

    5 ай бұрын

    Only lasted a year.

  • @dustin6225
    @dustin62255 ай бұрын

    Ah yes, the high-stakes period in the late 90s when floundering tech retail stores were pushing proprietary BS in the hope it would become a standard. DIVX was an especially hilarious one. It's "protection" was the tech equivalent of a pre-broken condom.

  • @psychosneighbor1509
    @psychosneighbor15095 ай бұрын

    My first credit card was from CC towards the end of this nonsense. I walked in looking for a new computer to play Flight Simulator and was something like $150 short on cash for what I needed. They approved me for $1500 which left me with $600(or thereabouts) remaining credit and then they proceeded to try to push this garbage on me hard. I told them I already had a DVD player and they went on and on with nonsense about why I needed it. They did a good job of making me feel bad for not buying it lol... Anyway, I ended up maxing that card out and making minimum payments until they folded up shop and just stopped sending me a bill. It was a pretty sweet deal. Thanks CC! Haha...

  • @Senor_Esteban
    @Senor_Esteban5 ай бұрын

    I got the DVD player in the commercial for high school graduation. Lived 30mins from nearest Circuit City but it was cool to get a half dozen movies to watch after dial-up authentication. ;)

  • @danmartin6225
    @danmartin6225 Жыл бұрын

    I remember divx as just being a video format for computers it was actually good because you can download small files and they would play HD videos pretty quick, this was 2006, and I remember the stage 6 website where you can dowmload free videos

  • @phoenixman8569

    @phoenixman8569

    Жыл бұрын

    I remember that web cite too, I got a few movies from there, I still have the free version of divx on my PC but i hardly ever use it as vlc will play almost anything, i guess i keep divx as nostalgia...

  • @danmartin6225

    @danmartin6225

    Жыл бұрын

    @@phoenixman8569 nosralgia or not it was a bright idea of the technology ,small files that play HD videos, I hope if they use it in the future, and these guys get credit and recognition 👍

  • @EdgeRatedR007

    @EdgeRatedR007

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. Online movie sites with Divx players almost always had the best quality you could find.

  • @ThexthSurvivor

    @ThexthSurvivor

    11 ай бұрын

    You're referring to the DivX codec that was use for compressing video files for use on PCs. Much better than the crap Circuit city wanted the masses to support.

  • @TheHavnmonkey
    @TheHavnmonkey5 ай бұрын

    I remember seeing these, but never looked into them. It cost more than a regular DVD player and I was poor so never gave them a second thought. I see the parallels between modern "ownership" of digital movies/games.... but this is the exact opposite if I understand correctly.... You own the physical copy but cannot play the digital file locked inside the physical disc without paying for a code? lmao. Imagine having a bookshelf full of DIVX discs that you'd have to pay to watch again at your own home. So if you guy the disc and watch it the same night, then want to watch it again 2 months later, you have to purchase another unlock code???

  • @christiangonzales7429

    @christiangonzales7429

    5 ай бұрын

    Exactly. Who in the world would want to pay every time they wanted to watch one of their DVDs. Made ZERO sense!

  • @darkprinc979
    @darkprinc9795 ай бұрын

    Looks like Circuit City was ahead of its time. We have this today with digital rentals. I'm glad this failed back then, and maybe it shows that people were a bit wiser back then, or maybe not if it really was only about the convenience and not the 2 day viewing window limitation. The problem today is that people have been conditioned to accept not owning anything, and have freely embraced the concept because of its convenience. That convenience comes with a heavy cost, however. Ownership comes with a lot of inconveniences but it also comes with some things that are much more important than convenience, those things being freedom and power. Nowadays your ability to make use of much of the digital content you pay for is entirely dependent on the company providing it and you can lose access at any time for any multitude of reasons ranging from being banned from expressing the wrong opinions on the internet to the company in question having some kind of server failure.

  • @samhill4454
    @samhill44544 ай бұрын

    I had a college friend in Virgina, 1997-ish, who worked on this project. He had the cool job, and a new Honda Civic. I was very envious! Out of all of us, he was killing it, I thought. Then DIVX flopped and he was out of a job for a very long time. I think he became a pastor or something.

  • @matteframe
    @matteframe5 ай бұрын

    Wait, the phone registration number still works?

  • @GeosFace
    @GeosFace Жыл бұрын

    Great Video thank you!