Close X
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

It's On ... Amazon's Stand-alone Streaming Targets Netflix

Darpan News Desk, 18 Apr, 2016 10:38 AM
    NEW YORK — Amazon is taking on Netflix and Hulu with a stand-alone video streaming service, just weeks before Netflix raises prices for longtime subscribers.
     
    New customers can now pay $8.99 a month to watch Amazon's Prime video streaming service. Previously, the only way to watch Amazon's videos was to pay $99 a year for Prime membership, which includes free two-day shipping on items sold by the site and other perks.
     
    At $8.99 a month, Amazon's stand-alone streaming service is $1 less than Netflix's standard membership and $1 more than Hulu. Netflix said earlier this year that a "substantial number" of its longtime members who paid $7.99 monthly -- and have been protected from price hikes -- will now pay an additional $2, starting in May.
     
    Amazon's decision to break off its video streaming service could cause some defections at Netflix, wrote Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter in a note to clients.
     
    Both companies have invested heavily in original and exclusive programing. 
     
     
     
    Netflix has "Orange is the New Black," ''House of Cards" and a couple of series based on Marvel comic characters. Amazon's offerings include "Transparent," ''Mozart in the Jungle" and previously-aired HBO shows. With Hulu, users can watch many current TV episodes a day after they air on a network. Hulu is also growing its exclusive offerings, with "The Mindy Project" and "Difficult People."
     
    Netflix declined to comment Monday. Representatives for Amazon and Hulu did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
     
    Besides its stand-alone video service, Amazon is also offering a new pay-as-you-go option for its full Prime membership that costs $10.99 a month and comes with free-two day shipping, streaming and other perks. Amazon said users who opt to pay $10.99 monthly, instead of the $99 annual fee, can cancel at any time.
     
    Shares of Amazon.com Inc. rose $8.23, or 1.3 per cent, to $634.12 in morning trading Monday. Netflix Inc. shares fell $2.37, or 2.1 per cent, to $109.14.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body
    Dusseldorf-based DOOB 3D can produce a detailed, four-inch figurine of your body, or in other words, a 3D selfie, reported Wired.com.

    Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body

    App That Can Turn You Into A Supermodel

    App That Can Turn You Into A Supermodel
    If you have always wished to possess looks that would make the opposite sex go weak in their knees, here is an app for you. The app claims to transform you into a supermodel at the touch of a button.

    App That Can Turn You Into A Supermodel

    Facebook To Let Users Nominate Online Heirs

    Facebook To Let Users Nominate Online Heirs
    Facebook has announced that it will allow users to designate a family member as their online "heir" to manage their account and make comments in their name after their death.

    Facebook To Let Users Nominate Online Heirs

    TECH Talk: GOLiFE Care Smart Band

    TECH Talk: GOLiFE Care Smart Band
    Move over FuelBands and FitBits of the world — there’s a new player in town, and its name is the GoLife Care Smart Band by lifestyle electronics company PAPAGO!

    TECH Talk: GOLiFE Care Smart Band

    Apple Planning Own Search Engine To Trump Google?

    Apple Planning Own Search Engine To Trump Google?
    There perhaps isn't anything that a Google search cannot find, but all of us who have only been 'googling' for information and knowledge may soon be "appleing" for them.

    Apple Planning Own Search Engine To Trump Google?

    5 Things About How Young And Old(er) Canadians Are Using Technology

    5 Things About How Young And Old(er) Canadians Are Using Technology
    TORONTO — It's not surprising that young Canadians are seen to be more plugged into digital trends than older consumers. But a new report from the Media Technology Monitor suggests the gaps between how the young and old(er) are using technology are, in some cases, vast.

    5 Things About How Young And Old(er) Canadians Are Using Technology