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Unlike the better-known Netflix and Quickflix, which both began life as DVD rental companies and still have the rental component built into their interface, Stan is a pure streaming service, and is all the better for it. So anyway, back to Stan, the subject of this week's review which, for the sake of disclosure, is part-owned by Fairfax Media, the newspaper company that keeps the lights on here in the Digital Life Laboratories. If you do find a single streaming service that has everything, the way, say, Popcorn Time does, then the chances are it has cut through the complexity of licensing rights by ignoring licensing altogether: an option which has the advantage of simplicity, and the disadvantage of breaking the law.
#What is stan app movie
Unlike music streaming, which (with the notable exception of Taylor Swift) generally has a big enough selection in any one service that you only need the one service, TV and movie streaming services only have the full catalogue when viewed as a collective. With Stan, Netflix and Presto all coming online in Australia this year, on top of existing internet TV services such EzyFlix, Quickflix and Play, we've been trawling through their catalogues and it looks to us that subscribing to three or four of them at once might be in order.
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The other reason I ask is that, given the price of about $10 to $15 a month, you might as well subscribe to more than one internet service TV at a time, and the only real question is, how many more than one? Two? Five?