Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a pair of quality headphones that aren't seemingly made of glass. I'm an avid BMXer which causes me to frequently bash on any type of technology that joins me for my daily riding. I've been through the higher quality headsets in the Skullcandy line as these are supposed to be built for "abuse," which is laughable. I cant wear earbuds or canal buds, as my large ears seem to have a repelling property upon anything that sits in them. Wired or Bluetooth doesn't really matter, but I need something that can hold up to taking a few hits every now and again. I'm trying to keep 'em under $150. Thanks!"
Vudu...
Following in the footsteps of MovieBeam, MovieLink, etc.
The quality may be better than the above parties, but who cares? Hardly anybody is buying these Vudu boxes, and Vudu's future is far from certain. Maybe you want to take a chance on them, but I don't. And it's not because I am cheap. I spent $500 on a Pioneer Blu-Ray player. But you know what, I have a lot more faith in Pioneer being around in a year or two than Vudu, and besides even if Pioneer were to go out of business, their assets would likely be bought up by another manufacturer (i.e. Panasonic or Sharp). And my Pioneer Blu-Ray player will keep on working as all the major studios are releasing on the format (Sony-owned United Artists, Paramount, etc.).
Disney sold MovieBeam to Movie Gallery (which owns Hollywood Video). Movie Gallery is in Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection and shed its MovieBeam assets, I believe.
MovieLink lost tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars before the movie studios sold it to Blockbuster for about $2 million. Blockbuster is perpetually losing money.