
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings announced tonight that the company will be splitting its business in two with its DVDbymail service getting a name change to Qwikster while Netflix will focus on streaming video.
Amongst all the hollering going on over the merits of Netflix spinning their DVD shipping service into a separate company and whether or not the new service's name Qwikster was pulled at random out of a hat labeled Bad.
Movie delivery service Netflix has just announced that it is rebranding its DVDbymail service as Qwikster and that it will keep calling its streaming service Netflix.
On the official Netflix blog today the company posted an apology concerning its recent decisions over the past few months. Shocking news yes but already the Internet has found one.
When the folks at Netflix decided to split up the DVDbymail and video streaming aspects of their business they seem to have forgotten to do one tiny little thing Check whether the Twitter account corresponding to their newly.
Oops Netflix has done it again.
In a post on The Netflix Blog that went up Sunday night the company's CEO Reed Hastings announced that Netflix would split its DVDbymail service and its streamingvideo service into two companies. But doing so raises.
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings issued an apology to members Sunday night while also providing some insight into how and why the company badly mishandled communications in light of a pricing change announced earlier this. If Netflix intended not to confuse people with their latest move to separate their DVD service and rename it Qwikster then it's made another epic fail.
Qwikster which will officially launch "in a few weeks" will be a completely independent entity from Netflix; the two services will not integrate in any way meaning two different websites two different accounts and two different.
Netflix announced that its DVDbymail operations would soon be rebranded "Qwikster" and that the service would be separated from the streaming service that it's been pushing for the last several years.