Netflix price changes are lesbian eroticism in art nuvoe paintingalways controversial. But luckily, it looks like the streaming company's latest strategy for getting more money out of users won't affect most of us (for now).
The streaming giant confirmed to CNET that it has been testing out a new tier for its pricing models for select users in Europe: a €16.99 per month "Ultra" subscription plan, which would provide exclusive access to HDR (high dynamic range) content.
SEE ALSO: Moms really, really love Netflix"We continuously test new things at Netflix and these tests typically vary in length of time," Netflix spokeswoman Smita Saran told CNET. "In this case, we are testing slightly different price points and features to better understand how consumers value Netflix."
The pricing tiers previously offered by Netflix focused on allowing users to stream on multiple screens at once. The $7.99 Basic plan allows streaming on only one screen, the $10.99 Standard allows two, and the $13.99 Premium offers four.
Right now, there are reports of a few different versions of the new pricing model. One would offer the Ultra without affecting the already established plans. But Phonearena.com and Cordcutting.comare seeing some promotional materials that reduce the number of screens for Premium from four to two, and Standard to only one screen.
Netflix's statement was clear in stating that these Ultra pricing tests are just that -- a test, instead of a permanent model for all users. "Not all Netflix subscribers will see the test and the company may not ever offer the specific price points or features being tested," Saran said.
The variations in the test pricing models suggests that Netflix is right now trying gauge how valuable the HDR feature is to current users.
But you might still be wondering what the HDR feature offered in Ultra even means.
While still a relatively new and pricey improvement to TV image quality, HDR can be seen as to the difference between standard and high definition. And like the evolution of HD, many are predicting HDR will one day inevitably become as ubiquitous as HD.
Right now, though, HDR is mostly seen as a costly and inessential new feature reserved for those who can afford to become early adopters. As Endgadet proposes, this marks a shift in Netflix's strategy for getting more money out of its existing 125 million existing users. Rather than just charge everyone a little more, it appears to instead be targeting affluent users for this extra feature.
But then again, this could set a precedent for a future where HDR is considered the standard image quality for all TVs.
Topics Netflix
Google Meet is testing AIFounders of poopWhat We’re Loving: Great Teachers, Great Books, Giant Wigs by The Paris ReviewWilliam Weaver, 1923–2013 by Sadie SteinDoris Lessing, 1919–2013 by Sadie SteinThere's a massive ship stuck in the Suez Canal, but at least it's delivering memesDecember by Sadie SteinThe Pink Stuff cleaner review: the TikTok product lives up to the hypePrince Harry joins the U.S. work force to...fight misinformation?There's a massive ship stuck in the Suez Canal, but at least it's delivering memesTikTok tests music streaming service in Australia, Singapore, and MexicoOn Sylvia Plath’s “Nick and the Candlestick”Top 10 streaming services offering free trials in 2023Spotify updates Tesla app with audiobooks and moreOn Not Thinking Like a Writer, and Other News by Sadie SteinIt Was Too Strong: An Interview with Todd HidoA Downright Incantation by Sadie SteinF?!@#g Ohio by Sadie SteinMaude Drop vibrator review: Affordable sex toy with serious powerWell, This Is Depressing, and Other News by Sadie Stein Recapping Dante: Canto 16, or the Pilgrim’s Progress by Alexander Aciman In 2014, Subscribe to the Paris Review and McSweeney's Open Ye Gates! Swing Wide Ye Portals! Part 2 by Edward McPherson Nastia Denisova’s Window on the World Save New York’s Rizzoli Bookstore Writers Remember Ronald Reagan Sleeping Beauty by Sadie Stein Coming of Age by Sadie Stein What We’re Reading on Valentine’s Day Tomato Pie and Culinary Failures An Excerpt from McSweeney’s Next Issue The Morning News Roundup for February 13, 2014 Céline and This Walking Cup of Ramen Both Know True Hardship Sadie Stein Reflects on Robert Burns’s Poem “Address to a Haggis” James Joyce’s modern heirs, the Hardy Boys’ strangest mysteries yet, and other news See Our Poetry Editor, Robyn Creswell, at Housing Works Curious Punishments by Sadie Stein An Excerpt from Samuel Foote’s The Nabob Visible Man: An Interview with Mitchell S. Jackson by Tim Small On Russell Hoban’s “Turtle Diary”
2.5543s , 10194.7734375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【lesbian eroticism in art nuvoe painting】,Steady Information Network