Zitat des Tages von Reed Hastings:
We are seeing the beginning of things. Web 2.0 is broadband. Web 3.0 is 10 gigabits a second.
In the U.S., HBO is a very aggressive service.
It turns out that all Netflix streaming peak on Saturday night can fit inside a single fiber optic, which is the size of one human hair.
I founded Netflix. I've built it steadily over 12 years now, first with DVD becoming profitable in 2002, a head-to-head ferocious battle with Blockbuster and evolving the company toward streaming.
It is clear that for many of our members two websites would make things more difficult, so we are going to keep Netflix as one place to go for streaming and DVDs.
I'm on the Facebook board now. Little did they know that I thought Facebook was really stupid when I first heard about it back in 2005.
In 20 years from now we will all be able to click and watch TV.
Well, we're about 24 million subscribers today, and that's up from about 15 million a year ago, so it's a very high rate of growth, and that's what's exciting about the business - more and more people are getting smart TVs, they're watching Netflix on their iPads.
Great leaders, like Steve Jobs or Jeff Bezos, also focused on the long term.
If the Starbucks secret is a smile when you get your latte... ours is that the Web site adapts to the individual's taste.
Most companies that are great at something - like AOL dialup or Borders bookstores - do not become great at new things people want (streaming for us) because they are afraid to hurt their initial business.
When we think about online learning, it's such 'early days.' Bill Gates is a wildly smart insightful guy. Yet, even a guy as smart and insightful as that, 30 years ago can say things like, 'Who's every going to need more than 640K of memory?'
There's a finite market for DVD-by-mail, and the growth over the next 10 years will be in streaming.
So much of the downstream revenue is linked to that initial excitement, to how much revenue is produced in the domestic box office. For example, what we pay for a film three years later is highly correlated to how well it did in the box office.
There is a revolution happening, and within two years I think that Wi-Fi and Netflix will be built into all the televisions.
I don't know of any Internet service that opens on a regional basis.
Broadcast TV is like the landline of 20 years ago.
In fact, technology has been the story of human progress from as long back as we know. In 100 years people will look back on now and say, 'That was the Internet Age.' And computers will be seen as a mere ingredient to the Internet Age.
In the States, there's ESPN3, and each country has different options, and other than premiere league football, there tends to be very little global content. And movie and TV rights are pretty broad content.
I've worked very hard, but my life's always been fun.
My first company, Pure Software, was exciting and innovative in the first few years and bureaucratic and painful in the last few before it got acquired. The problem was we tried to systemize everything and set up perfect procedures.
The Costa Rican government is prioritizing laying fiber optic over paving roads. Costa Rica is trying to become one of the Internet societies. This is happening throughout the world.
I watch mostly independent films.
About half my work in education is U.S. political reform around school districts and charter schools, and creating more room for entrepreneurial organizations to develop. And about half on technology, which I look at as a global platform.
I hate the photo shoots. I hate all that stuff.
But as an entrepreneur you have to feel like you can jump out of an aeroplane because you're confident that you'll catch a bird flying by. It's an act of stupidity, and most entrepreneurs go splat because the bird doesn't come by, but a few times it does.
How much has it been your experience that Americans follow what happens in the world?
Stone Age. Bronze Age. Iron Age. We define entire epics of humanity by the technology they use.
I think there will be 20 years of evolution from linear broadcast to internet television.
In hindsight, I slid into arrogance based upon past success.
Comparing Apple to Netflix is like comparing apples to oranges, especially if the oranges made so many mistakes that people stopped eating oranges and just went back to Blockbuster.
I hate the photo shoots.
Our brand at Netflix is really focused on movies and TV shows.
Fibre optic is becoming like electricity. If you look at how electricity spread around the globe 100 years ago, that's what's happening now.
School districts in the US don't adopt technology very quickly.
At Netflix, we think you have to build a sense of responsibility where people care about the enterprise. Hard work, like long hours at the office, doesn't matter as much to us. We care about great work.