Skip to main content

Digiboo expands its movie-in-a-USB model and talks platform plans

digiboo
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Movie-on-a-USB rental service Digiboo today announces its expansion to Portland via the city’s international airport. There are now seven kiosks throughout the airport where flyers can quickly select and download content directly to their own USBs and watch Internet-free during their travels. This adds to Digiboo’s current presence in the Seattle and Minneapolis airports.

The vending machine movie model is a familiar one. Redbox first introduced us to the concept of this type of on-the-go, DIY (do it yourself) consumption, and became a serious pain point for rental retailers like Blockbuster (which, if you haven’t noticed, are quickly becoming a thing of the past). But Digiboo wants to streamline and slim down the approach even more with its Internet-free playback and use of USB.

I had the chance to go hands-on with Digiboo and get a demo from founder Blake Thomas and head of marketing David Rondan. You can check out the process in the video below, but there isn’t much explanation necessary: After browsing and selecting your movie, you plug in your USB to the machine, swipe your credit card, and you’ll be notified when the content has been downloaded (which is fast — we’re talking maybe a couple minutes. Maybe.) Then, you connect to the Internet once to authenticate the Digiboo player, and from then on you can watch your rentals (or purchases, as that’s also an option) with or without a network connection. Rental prices range from $3 to $4, and purchases cost $15. Since initial installations, there have been over 3,000 transactions using Digiboo.

digiboo Thomas tells me that Digiboo chose to use the USB for a handhold of reasons; it’s small, consumers are familiar with it, and the startup sees hardware adoption of USB ports working in its favor. “There’s an overall trend in tech of embracing the USB. It’s becoming ubiquitous in desktops, laptops, TVs,” he says. And tablets? Well they have an answer for that as well, as Digiboo also will release a Wi-Fi download option within the coming weeks, and Rondan tells me that platform development is in the queue for the service. An Android app will be up first and while he says he has a date in mind, there’s no hard launch set quite yet. After that, Digiboo will start working on becoming iOS capable.

Naturally, whenever you talk about a new content distribution model, you have to talk about… well, content. It’s no secret that rights holders and platforms have had their fair share of disagreemnet, and that consumers’ choices have suffered as a result. But Digiboo comes from an enterprise background, as its founders all previously worked at MGM. Right now, the service has over 800 movie titles from Sony, Lions Gate, Miramax, Paramount, Warner Bros, and Kingston Digital.

Rondan emphasizes that given Digiboo’s desire to fill a hole for movie buffs that want to watch movies wherever and whenever, content is king. “If you’re going to have a viable movie service, you had to provide the content and our target audience are movie buffs so we need the selection,” he tells me. He also says that TV shows will be added later this year, and from there it’s onward and upward. “As people get used to our service and become more familiar with it, digital media is digital media,” says Rondan. “We can provide things like games and books. We’re focusing on movies right now, but we’ll do more as we learn about what our customers want.”

Given the consumer comfort with pay-as-you go content as well as our watch-from-anywhere attitudes, Digiboo seems like it’s in a position to reap the rewards of our times. “This idea is not new. Since digital files have existed, people have been thinking, ‘wouldn’t it be great if I could just get a movie?!’” he says. “But the technology just wasn’t there, in terms of transfer speeds, in terms of storage, in terms of size and compactness of the underlying hardware. So all of that came together at the right time for us.”

For the moment, Digiboo is focused on expansion and testing the location waters. Right now the kiosks are concentrated in airports, but places like coffee shops and malls could easily be seeing Digiboo service centers in the future.

Editors' Recommendations

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
This underrated sci-fi movie turns 10 this year. Here’s why it’s still worth watching
An alien looks down at a human face in Under the Skin.

Jonathan Glazer was recently in the news for several reasons. His latest effort, the discomfortingly immersive The Zone of Interest, earned him rave reviews and a nomination for Best Director at this year's Academy Awards. When he took the stage to accept the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, his powerful speech attracted both praise and criticism, cementing his reputation as a true outlier living in an industry so notoriously averse to risk and progressive thought.

With The Zone of Interest, Glazer's art finally entered a more global stage. However, the film that should've given him this level of exposure is his 2013 sci-fi masterpiece, Under the Skin. A visceral, puzzling, and striking cinematic experience unlike any other, Under the Skin is possibly the most daring and unforgettable sci-fi movie of the 2010s, which is no small feat considering triumphs like Arrival and Interstellar also came out during this decade. This month marks the film's 10th anniversary, making it the perfect time to reminisce about this polarizing and underappreciated sci-fi gem that, much like its director, dares to say what very few others will.
Under the brain

Read more
The best feel-good movies on Netflix right now
Marcel in Marcel the Shell With Shoes On.

There are thrillers and rom-coms galore on Netflix, but feel-good movies are a little harder to pin down to a single genre. That's because almost anything, from a drama or a comedy to a documentary, can be a feel-good movie. It has more to do with the response that the film gets from viewers than it does with the subject matter. And it often means more than just promising a happy ending because, in life, we have too few of those.

Our latest roundup of the best feel-good movies on Netflix includes the independently produced animation/live-action flick Marcel the Shell With Shoes On, the rom-coms Love At First Sight and Mamma Mia!, as well as a documentary that lives up to its title: The Greatest Night In Pop. And we have even more options for you below.

Read more
10 best movies set in NYC, ranked
Two people walk in Central Park in When Harry Met Sally.

New York is a city that moves at 24 frames per second. Some of the greatest directors -- Coppola, Kubrick, Scorsese, Cassavetes, Spike Lee -- were born there, and they came to understand the world through its ever-changing, light-saturated, fragmented landscape.

It stands to reason that films set in New York, or made to celebrate that city, are among the greatest ever made. Herein is a highly subjective list of 10 of the best, with directors limited to one entry each on this list.
10. Taxi Driver (1976)

Read more