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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 6:06 am)
Content Advisory! This message contains profanity
Renting a movie is like renting a woman, check the yellow pages and the classides, and compare prices.
STOP PALESTINIAN CHILD ABUSE!!!! ISLAMIC HATRED OF JEWS
Quote - Any tips on how to rent DVDs?
Use Google to find the location of a convenient Blockbuster or some other firm that rents DVDs. 2) Use a telephone to call them and find out what you need to open an account (if anything).
Open account (if required), browse DVDs available and make a selection.
Take home and watch.
Bonus tip) Keep an eye out for women, you may be able to persuade them to watch with you.
there may be a dvd-kiosk (redbox or similar, approx. $1 per rental) in one's local supermarket. not certain, but ISTR one of the members here did some kind of software or engineering for them. just try to remember: these OT posts draw trolls like flies. you'll get quicker answers with no harassment using google.
Quote - No, just trying to help you, but I do find it alarming that you don't know how to do something like that and have to wonder why!
Agoraphobia?
STOP PALESTINIAN CHILD ABUSE!!!! ISLAMIC HATRED OF JEWS
Netflix? :blink:
http://www.netflix.com/ <----- CLICK the link
BUT ........... you may need to go outside* :woot:
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
There's also your public library. They have DVD's and you can check 'em out for free. A real advantage than Blockbuster.
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The technology now is moving away from physical DVD's to video streaming through gaming consoles such as PS3 and XBox 360. Newer flat panel LCD's and LED's have builtin internet access; create an account on Netflix online and browse through their catalog. Otherwise, in the United States, many 7 Eleven's and major supermarkets have cheap DVD rentals through a vendor machine. I have seen rentals for as little as $1.99 per night, a bargain if you are looking for just once-in-a-while entertainment.
If you watch tv, and have cable or satellite, there are movies 'on demand', movie channels, netflix (as mentioned), or many sites that stream movies online, some free, some with "premium" packages. At you local grocery or box store, there's Red Box, and you can buy DVD's just about everywhere. Jartz mentioned libraries, which have more hard-to-find films.
With as much advertising these businesses do, it's really hard to not know where to find DVD's.
There are stores you can still rent movies from? I thought they all went away. Plus if you do the red box or blue box, the dvds can be pretty badly scratched up and you're out a dollar or two.
WARK!
Thus Spoketh Winterclaw: a blog about a Winterclaw who speaks from time to time.
(using Poser Pro 2014 SR3, on 64 bit Win 7, poser units are inches.)
I haven't gone to a video store and rented a movie in many years! I usually wait for them to come on a movie channel on television. My cable company now offers me hundreds of free video on demand movie rentals every month. However, despite having all of those movies available to me, I tend to not be able to find anything that I feel is worthy of watching. Lots of them are movies that are on the regular television or other movie channels within that same month, or are movies that have unrecognizable actors and/or very bad acting.
I tend to use my PVR to tape shows (lately lots from History, Documentary and National Geographic) and then watch them instead.
"It is good to see ourselves as
others see us. Try as we may, we are never
able to know ourselves fully as we
are, especially the evil side of us.
This we can do only if we are not
angry with our critics but will take in good
heart whatever they might have to
say." - Ghandi
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BTW(OT within OT), Tebop here is a Smallscreen grab of an unbiased render in progress.
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Quote - are you guys making fun of me?
it's true, i don't go out much
Hell yes. We love an easy target.
Seriously though, it's a strange question to ask here when all you have to do is Google it.
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
Quote - are you guys making fun of me?
it's true, i don't go out much
They haven't rented movies recently either. Blockbusters is in Chapter 11, and most of their stores have closed. Their stock is 50% video games, and 30% new releases. Most of the rest is misfiled, or bad movies, and, out of list of ten classic movies we were looking for, they had two.
You can rent a lot of current releases at the grocery store, or there is some sort of movie renting kiosk in many cities. (We don't watch many current releases.)
Your best bet, if you don't need instant gratification, and you watch a fair number of movies, is either Netflix or Greencine. (Assuming you are in the US.) Both have a monthly fee which lets you have some number of movies checked out at the same time. Greencine charges $33.95 for five movies out at a time. Once you have the five movies out, they send you the next available movie on your list when you send one back. (There is a way to notify them once it is in the mail to cut down on time.) Fewer movies out at one time cost less.
I think that Netflix is usually faster (they have many warehouses, and Greencine is only one place in California), and for popular movies are more likely to have it available. Greencine has a better selection of niche movies (Anime, TV shows, Foreign).
Go to a Walmart or other large department/grocery store and look of a large red vending machine. You can rent DVD's there for about a 1 or 2 dollars I think. I don;t really use them myself, but I pass one every time I go to buy a movie, but they should have a fairly clear set of instructions pasted on the side.
o.k., I thought you-know-who did the engineering for those redboxes, but maybe not, as I'd be bragging about it if I did the software for those things. have looked at the redbox selection, and blockbuster is still better IMVHO. netflix sux due to metering their clients, for which they may have been sued and/or prosecuted, hence good luck with them. the target group is ipad/iphone/android users, not exactly the smarter party, peering myopically at their 3X4 inch downloads of "thor" and the latest vampire remake.
Vampire remake........... HILARIOUS...
Most cable companies also have an "ondemand" feature, which is a selection of movies that you can access from your cable company/cable box much like netflix... Crap-ass selection, but once in a while theyll have something good...
I use it to catch up on CSI =P
(um, this is prolly as ot as any thread could be, lol =P)
There are 3 kinds of people in the
world. Those that can count, and those that can't..
After I got my second automated message from Blockbutter to return a DVD I had already returned to avoid a late fee, I gave up renting.
Now I just buy used DVD's online. Most of the time the prices are pretty good, since BluRay and online are moving to take over the DVD market.
Sure you are taking a bit of a chance buying used online, like the guy that sent me the empty DVD box with a note that said "Sorry this is how I got it when I ordered it online." !
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I haven't rented in years..like 10 years or more.
I want to rent. but how much are rentals nowadays and what's the best store to get them from?
I don't really like watching in the computer. I prefer the TV with computer off.
Moreover, some people may like watching stuff on the web like youtube and stuff. But i really don't. You just have to keep clicking and searching and that's tedious. And you used to be that you didn't have commercials in youtube or whatever, but now you're forced to watch commercials even in internet videos. that sucks.
Anyways, i dont want to watch movies in the web. Any tips on how to rent DVDs?