If you’re buying Beauty and the Beast, make sure to connect Disney Movies Anywhere

Most digital copies are a letdown. Disney’s are not.
We’ve all seen it: buy the movie before it’s out on Blu-ray, and you don’t get any special features, and your copy is stuck in one store forever. It sucks, right? WRONG! Disney has a digital system that makes buying the movie early an actually tempting thing to do, and it all has to do with connecting digital stores and awesome app implementation.
Before you go buy Beauty and the Beast, please download Disney Movies Anywhere. You will not be disappointed.



Disney Movies Anywhere is a venture that Disney has undertaken in cooperation with Google Play, iTunes, Amazon, Vudu, and other stores to offer their digital copies on all your favorite digital platforms. If you buy a Disney movie on Google Play, Disney Movies Anywhere can see the purchase once it’s connected to your account and then give you that same film on iTunes, so you can load it on the iPad before a family trip. Here’s what we do:
Download Disney Movies Anywhere.
Open Disney Movies Anywhere.
Log into (or create) your Disney account. This is the same Disney account you’d use on Disney.com, the Disney Store, or a Walt Disney World vacation.
Tap Connect Account
Choose the service you’d like to connect.
Log in to that service to connect the account.
If you want to connect your account to Apple iTunes, log into the Disney Movies Anywhere website on your desktop computer or Disney Movies Anywhere app on your Apple device.
Now, buy a movie. Any Disney movie you buy will show up on every digital store you’ve connected to your account, and with the copy of your digital film in Disney Movies Anywhere, you’ll also be able to access any shorts and special features associated with the film. For big blockbuster movies like Beauty and the Beast, there will be a lot of special features. For smaller movies, like The Parent Trap, you’ll only get the movie, but you’ll get that movie anywhere that Disney has an agreement.
What if I want to buy the Blu-ray?
Great news! Remember those digital codes that come in a lot of Blu-ray combo packs? For Disney movies, those codes go right into Disney Movies Anywhere. This means that you can spend $20 buying Beauty and the Beast on digital and get all the special features on Disney Movies Anywhere, or buy a shiny Blu-ray combo pack for that same $20, pop that digital code into DMA, and get that magical digital copy with all the special features PLUS a physical copy for when you want to use that Blu-ray player gathering dust in your entertainment center. The physical copies are essentially free, so why bother buying a digital-only copy online?
I am a huge Disney fan. I wait for the Blu-ray because it is the only Blu-ray I can buy that comes with a decent digital copy. Even better? This time, I don’t have to wait an extra three weeks for that Blu-Ray combo pack!
Apple’s 2TB iCloud plan will only cost you $10 a month
A slew of announcements came out of Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference yesterday including a price drop for the company’s 2TB iCloud storage plan. It may not be as sexy as the HomePod, but it’s still pretty good news.
The plan’s price was cut in half to just $10 per month, which used to be the cost for the now non-existent 1TB plan. Apple’s other upgraded storage options are still priced at $1 for 50GB and $3 for 200GB of space. This now puts Apple’s value way ahead of Google Drive and Dropbox at that storage level, both of which charge $10 per month (or slightly cheaper if paid for annually) for 1TB of storage. It’ll be interesting to see how Apple’s competitors, who have a history of battling it out over pricing, respond to their freshly-reduced cost.
For those requiring a ton of storage space, however, you’ll still have to turn elsewhere. Whereas iCloud caps out at 2TB, Google Drive offers up to 30TB and Amazon’s Cloud Drive gives you unlimited file space for $60 per year. And for free storage, Google Drive is still one of your best bets, offering 15GB compared to iCloud’s and Amazon Prime’s 5GB and Dropbox’s measly 2GB.
Apple’s 2TB plan at the new price level is available now and anyone previously subscribed to the 1TB plan has been automatically upgraded.
Via: The Verge
Source: Apple



