Why the hell should I pay more for 4K?

4K
Don't push 4K down the road of irrelevance

It recently emerged that Netflix, the streaming company so famous that even old people are aware of it and planning on asking a grandchild how to get it on their 1989 Sony BRAVIAs, wants new subscribers to pay more for access to 4K streams.

We also recently saw the launch of Tidal Music, a Spotify-battling service that offers 'HiFi' quality music, delivering 1411kbps, 44.1 kHz/16-bit FLAC and ALAC streams. The cost of this? £20/$20 per month.

Adoption tactics

Making people pay more for the best quality of something digital stinks of the sort of greedy tactics that caused the music industry to explode amid a storm of negativity and recrimination.

Yes, Netflix and Tidal have to make money somehow and we assume it's quite expensive to host 4K videos/CD-quality tunes and bung them out to thousands of people at the same time, but that's not our problem to solve. Moore's Law should mean it's half the price to buy new servers that it was 18 months ago, so that must help.

4K is still a new technology. It needs to get inside people's houses, build up user numbers and prove its worth before it becomes a thing that's worth extra money.

Why punish the early adopters again? The poor suckers who spent a stupid amount on additional pairs of 3D glasses for their living room TVs need reassuring that their next TV isn't going to be another expensive black elephant, like the 3D sets of a few of years ago.

4K content is niche, 'HiFi' quality music is perceived by many as unnecessary. They have a chance to flourish, but tell people they're more expensive and you only risk killing them off more quickly.

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