Netflix’s recent price hike caused rampant backlash, cost the movie rental service one million subscribers, and sent the company’s stock tumbling. Last night, CEO Reed Hastings admitted in a blog post, “I messed up.” But he’s not offering a reversal on the price hike, simply an explanation that, he admits, should have come earlier: Netflix is spinning off its classic DVD-by-mail service; it'll now be a distinct entity known as Qwikster, while Netflix itself will become streaming-only. The Wall Street Journal notes that while Qwikster will be a wholly-owned subsidiary of Netflix, the two websites (including movie queues and ratings and account information) will not be integrated.
                                    
                                    
                                
                                
                             
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                                
                                
                                    
                                        Needless to say, already-dissatisfied customers don’t appear to feel too much better about the whole prospect. (Take a quick look at the comments under the blog post if you don’t believe us.) Some reactions: 
 -  “It's yet another example of failing at the speed of light,” writes Austin Carr in Fast Company. “The faster Netflix moves to innovate, the more bumps it hits on the way.”
-  “Netflix is a company in crisis,” writes Seth Abramovitch at Gawker, but this “fix … will likely please no one. … They say they're doing it to grow, but is offering consumers two companies to boycott instead of just one really going to make things any better?”
-  In New York, Caroline Bankoff asks, “Is everyone happy now? Anyone?”
 (One big, hilarious oops: Netflix 
doesn't control @Qwikster.)