Yup, the Danish Working Environment Authority is pretty clear about it.
There has to be a source of natural daylight and there must be clear windows that you can see through. Of course there are always exceptions, but they are just that.
Are UHD disks going to be anymore than the modern version of laserdisk?
It seems to me that even bluray is basically dead at this point. The younger generation isn't buying huge stacks of movies to fill out the 200 disk shelves they got for christmas, and the older generation frequently doesn't even have a bluray players.
Random (couple year old) link about bluray vs dvd sales numbers.
Optical disks are becoming more relevant for me as Netflix's catalog shrinks because content owners want to launch their own streaming. If I want to watch something today and in 6 months, I better buy it on disc, because who knows if it'll still be available later. Also, the minivan can play blu-rays, but streaming netflix on I-5 in central california doesn't seem likely to work.
Well, i'm in the same boat with respect to netfix and disks. But my usecase tends to be more along the lines of watching the movies on my tablet in the gym (which requires time shifting them if you will).
That isn't possible with UHD blurays at the moment, and I've sworn off buying DRM encumbered products. Just one of my reasons is that exactly 100% of the HDDVD's I purchased that were warner brothers products have bitrotted (its apparently true of nearly all of them if you believe other peoples posting) despite the fact that the disks from other studios continue to play. Some people have gotten the disks replaced with blurays, but WB didn't even respond to requests I made.
So, I won't buy DRM encumbered video products. I might rent them, but they can kiss off if the price is more than redbox or similar.
Really, what I want is to just buy an unencumbered digital version that isn't screwed up.
Give me something like the steam experience but without even the "DRM" of that.
Also set a reasonable price point. 5 USD for a SEASON of a great show sounds like a good high price starting point. Make it inexpensive for me to GIFT seasons to others as well. Maybe 2.50 for the first season to someone else, and then lower in cost after that.
How to increase profits? Stop the lobbying, consumer-fighting-disservice, and DRM insanity and just focus on making a good product and delivering it in an EASY way for consumers to get.
$5 USD is probably too low, depending on the length of the season; $2 USD / disc probably covers manufacturing and distribution (for Blu-Ray; DVD manufacturing maybe $1 USD), but you need something to pay for the talent too.
The editor is necessary to the Chrome Developer Tools, since you can edit existing pages and debug the changes. The Code Snippet functionality is however not necessary (in my opinion), but it's such a small part of Chrome Developer Tools that I'm not sure it qualifies as bloat.
See https://support.plex.tv/articles/200250377-transcoding-media...