Last month there were rumor reports that Netflix had a 3D category up for a brief time with a couple movies. Then it disappeared as quickly as it appeared. An AVS member caught a screen pic of it. I'm sure with how popular 3D has become this past year, Netflix will soon have it.
Re bandwidth of 4K-- if you have Comcast broadband, you may wish to check into their Business broadband service which offers unlimited cap and the speed is provisioned with consistent rates that you buy in a tier. I have the lowest level which is now 40 down and 20 up. It keeps going up as the competition raises the bar. But the cap is unlimited, for now. The monthly rate is $139 and includes a 100MB web space and 100 email accounts. I'm sure cox and Time Warner also offer these business class services.
A rep from Sony said they will be offering their own 4K streaming content later this spring. The number he gave was true 4k will eat up 120 GB per typical movie which he said may be a problem for some ISP's. it is not certain if Sony will be publishing their content on multiple 50 GB disks or offer the new 150GB format. Eventually the special high capacity optical will be the standard, just not sure when that will be.
What I gathered is with 4K the early adopter beta group will be about 2 years in the making. I'm being realistic with current development trends now. 4K looks serious as did 3D. 3D is mainstay now and most TV makers consider it as a required feature in all TVs. 4k and how it will be delivered will be a changing game. The TVs whether 4K LED or OLED will be the decision. Of course there is also the area of compression schemes to consider. Like I said this will be about a 2 years ride to ubiquity. During this time we will have to suffer with all the Negative Nancy's who post ad nauseum their fears of anything new.