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Netflix will add 1080p, 5.1-channel surround sound streaming to its online video service later in 2010

By | February 8, 2010, 3:53pm PST

Summary: [UPDATE: As one of our readers points out below, Netflix will not be adding 1080p this year. Apparently, the feature was mistakenly placed on the 2010 development road map. That's a fairly big boo-boo. In any event, 5.1 surround sound is still on the list for adoption this year. ] According to our sister site CNET, [...]

[UPDATE: As one of our readers points out below, Netflix will not be adding 1080p this year. Apparently, the feature was mistakenly placed on the 2010 development road map. That's a fairly big boo-boo. In any event, 5.1 surround sound is still on the list for adoption this year. ]

According to our sister site CNET, Netflix’s on-demand video streaming service, a.k.a. Netflix Watch Instantly, is jumping on the 1080p HD bandwagon later this year, with a corresponding bump in audio to 5.1-channel surround sound.

The move comes after the company recently announced buoyant fourth-quarter results and predicted that two thirds of its monthly subscribers will watch videos through its online service by the middle of 2011. In addition to viewing them on PCs and laptops, subscribers can access Netflix Watch Instantly on game consoles, Blu-ray players, and other “connected” home theater devices.

While those watching videos on compatible monitors and HDTVs will be pleased with this development, what remains to be seen is how well Netflix (and your broadband connection) will be able to handle streaming the bandwidth-thirsty 1080p feed to your device. Already throughput speeds of around 5Mbps are required to handle 720p content from Netflix’s service—how much of a bump will you need to view 1080p material without a major case of the stutters? Obviously how quickly Netflix’s engineers (using Microsoft’s Silverlight technology) can solve any technical hurdles surrounding this issue may play a part in when exactly subscribers will get their 1080p.

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Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist.

Disclosure

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy is a freelance technology journalist; currently, all work that Sean does is on a contractural basis. Sean has also written corporate communications documents for CA.

Sean does not accept gifts from companies he covers. All hardware products he writes about are purchased with his own funds or are review units covered under formal loan agreements and are returned after the review is complete.

Biography

Sean Portnoy

Sean Portnoy started his tech writing career at ZDNet nearly a decade ago. He then spent several years as an editor at Computer Shopper magazine, most recently serving as online executive editor. He received a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. from the University of Southern California.

Talkback Most Recent of 27 Talkback(s)

  • must be fake
    M$ silverlight can't handle 1080p streaming.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Linux Geek
    8th Feb 2010
  • ZDNet Gravatar
    cmcfarling
    8th Feb 2010
  • Even if they are just working on it
    for future release, that would be encouraging enough for me.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Michael Kelly
    9th Feb 2010
  • Woot!
    I have FIOS - 20 megs each way.

    But the 5.1 is a bigger attraction to me than the 1080p. On my 50 inch TV, 720p does just fine, but stereo (Netflix's current audio) upped to simulated surround sound isn't cutting it.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Takalok
    9th Feb 2010
  • RE: Netflix will add 1080p, 5.1-channel surround sound streaming to its online video service later in 2010
    @Takalok I completely agree, the video is fine the way it is. I want 5.1 and while I can get 5.1 through the PS3 the Roku video is far better.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    maze400
    18th May
  • RE: Netflix will add 1080p, 5.1-channel surround sound streaming to its online video service later in 2010
    All well an good but Netflix doesn't offer many 1st run movies by Watch Instantly. Whats the point of having all of this hardware capability to stream video if you can't watch new movies?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jbender
    9th Feb 2010
  • New Movies???
    There are many old movies I would much rather see again than many of the new ones. For a free service I think the selection that NetFlix watch instantly provides is excellent, as well as being very diverse. I never have any trouble finding something to watch and I always have more than 100 cued.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Jeshimon
    9th Feb 2010
  • High-quality movies don't need the highest-quality streaming
    My family gets along just fine streaming Netflix
    films at 480p on our 65-inch Mitsubishi and
    listening to the soundtracks over a pair of $100
    Creative speakers. The films we choose to watch
    are so well-written that we're too busy thinking
    to notice that our eyes and ears are being
    shortchanged.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    paul613
    9th Feb 2010
  • Pixels the size of your head...
    Ummm... nonsense, of course, 480P on a 65inch TV is close to unwatcheable-- Sounds like this poster would really be into the radio dramas of the last century...
    ZDNet Gravatar
    noverge
    9th Feb 2010
  • Maybe just on your TV?
    480P output via component to a 720P 50" DLP rear-projection TV can
    look darn good to me. Maybe there's a crappy scaler somewhere
    between your 480P source (DVD player?) and the TV? I have an older
    50" HP md5020n DLP rear-projection set that has a great video
    scaler. That said, 480P is not the kind of great quality you see from
    1080i on PBS or Discovery, but I wouldn't call it "unwatchable", even
    though on a 65", it would obviously look a little worse. My older
    collection of VHS tapes, especially ones I recorded myself, do tend to
    be more in that unwatchable category. The streaming video from
    Netflix is better than VHS, but not even as good as 480P, but I expect
    it to improve every now and then, especially as ISPs upgrade their
    infrastructure. Verizon's FIOS already sends their on-demand video
    over the data portion of their system, so as not to occupy video
    "channels", as is generally the case with Comcast and others. This is
    one reason they've needed to use those high bandwidth wireless
    routers.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    garmon@...
    9th Feb 2010
  • Sound quality first, video quality later?
    Since 5.1 surround sound has been part of DVDs for years, and has
    recently arrived for TV (and soon for Netflix (and others?) streaming),
    you're really being short changed with simple stereo speakers. The
    problem with audio is that either it needs to be built into the TV
    (which means that surround and back is probably compromised) or it
    needs to be discrete components (maybe wireless surround/rear
    speakers will soon be a modestly priced TV add on?). I have now set
    up two 5.1/7.1 "home theatre" sound systems (one for a 50" read-
    projection TV and one for a 14" broadcast monitor -- yes, a nice old
    Sony Trinitron). I find that the sound makes all the difference
    between a flat movie and an immersive one (at least where they had
    competent sound editing). Dialog mostly comes from the center
    channel, where you'd expect it, but the surround, when it's kept
    subtle, is incredibly good. Too bad audio set up is such a bear ;-(
    ZDNet Gravatar
    garmon@...
    9th Feb 2010
  • RE: Netflix will add 1080p, 5.1-channel surround sound streaming to its onl
    The current Roku boxes don't seem to support 1080p.
    And BTW, it's not silverlight. The embedded devices (Roku,
    BD players, PS3, etc) don't seem to run on Silverlight.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    emiliosic
    9th Feb 2010
  • Wrong direction!
    Yep --- probably a bunch of folks out there with fat pipes and hungry eyes.
    Probably many-many more, especially in rural areas, on isp-imposed diets or stuck in airports with nothing on cell ...
    You'd think small and light is better.

    Dang .. unAmerican ..
    Go ahead and supersize me, even though I'll never be able to access it 8-)
    ZDNet Gravatar
    ChuckKristensen
    9th Feb 2010
  • how about more shows?
    instant play doesn't have a big selection of shows.

    when are film and especially tv going to get on the internet bandwagon?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    hansonjb
    9th Feb 2010
  • 720p 5.1 please
    Providing HD movie content with a stereo downmix is absurd IMO. 5.1 audio takes a small amount of bandwidth compared to the video and makes a far bigger impact than 720->1080 (for me anyway), I'd prefer they get that working first.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    frylock
    9th Feb 2010

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