The Phnom Penh Post

Netflix users can download some movies onto devices

- Daniel Victor

NETFLIX announced yesterday that users worldwide can download some videos to their mobile devices instead of streaming them over cellular data, a feature that could keep eyeballs on the app when internet signals are spotty or unavailabl­e.

Users boarding an airplane, leaving on a road trip or ducking into the subway, for example, could use Wifi to download their favourite movies and TV shows beforehand, then view them when the cellular signal dips out.

Netflix said that initially, only some of the content in its library will be available offline via the feature, available in the latest version of its app on phones and tablets using iOS or Android. The company did not specif y how many prog r a mmes wou ld be c ome available for download later, saying only that there would be “more on the way”.

Even in areas with strong cellular coverage, watching content offline would allow users to avoid depleting their monthly data limits, addressing a major frustratio­n of mobile video, which eats up data ravenously.

Customers who watch only a limited amount of video before incurring overage fees with their cellular carriers are more likely to stop watching videos – an unpalatabl­e option for media companies like Netflix that want to keep eyes glued to their products.

AT&T also appears to have come to a similar conclusion.

In announcing DirecTV Now, a television service that can be streamed on mobile devices, the company said on Monday that its cellular customers would be able to watch TV shows without that usage counting toward their monthly data limits.

“The last thing you want to do when you’re binging or enjoying entertainm­ent is trying to calculate how many gigs I’m using or where I am in my data plan,” Brad Bentley, AT&T’s chief marketing officer, said on Monday, referring to gigabytes of data.

Netflix is not the first video streaming company to introduce the offline option. Amazon Video, one of Netflix’s biggest competitor­s, has made some videos available offline since September 2015.

Hulu does not offer offline viewing, but Ben Smith, Hulu’s head of experience and a senior vice president, said on Tuesday that the company was working on it, according to CIO, an industry publicatio­n.

“We’ll get there, for sure, in our industry,” he said.

 ?? RYAN ANSON/AFP ?? The Netflix company logo is seen at the Netflix headquarte­rs in Los Gatos, California.
RYAN ANSON/AFP The Netflix company logo is seen at the Netflix headquarte­rs in Los Gatos, California.

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