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Guest post by George Howard , this first appeared on ForbesMany moons ago — just around the time I first applied the term "Canary In A Coal Mine" to the music industry — I wrote a piece entitled, “The Stream That Snuck Up on You.” The thesis was that, as “cloud-based” media became readily accessible at any time, there was a distinct sense of a rapidly accelerating movement away from the need to ever own or possess media.A decade or so later, it appears that the transition from any type of locally stored media to an all-streamed/cloud-based access model is nearly complete. Applications like Google Photos render Apple’s iPhoto happily unnecessary. Even books and magazines no longer need to be perpetually stored on a Kindle; instead, one downloads the files as needed from the Amazon cloud and then deletes them from their devices, knowing that should they ever want to re-read that Graham Greene novel, it is quickly accessed from the cloud. (I intentionally chose Graham Greene because his work is still frustratingly unavailable from the Kindle store. … Why?!) Netflix, Hulu, et al. have completely obliterated the need to waste storage space on devices (let alone shelf space with DVDs) for movies or TV.