Speaking of which, we may be able to find these kinds of numbers in decent quality published commercially. Having, say, 26 (or at least 13) episodes of something on a disc may become commonplace - and without a reduction in quality. How?
Single-layer DVD discs (like recordable DVDs or software DVDs) hold 4.7GB of data, while movies are often distributed on dual-layer DVDs, which can hold 8.5GB of data.
Blu-Ray (blu-ray.com) is a technology currently in development to surpass DVD capacities. A single-layer Blu-Ray disc might hold 25GB, while a dual-layer disc can hold 50GB. Even more impressive (especially given that even dual-layer discs are quite a technical feat) is that the engineers are studying ways of potentially making quad-layer discs capable of holding 100GB (almost the equivalent of 12 DVDs)!
Of course, the DVD Forum is developing their own higher-capacity disc, called HD-DVD. Indications are that single-layer HD-DVD discs will hold 20GB, while dual-layer HD-DVDs will be able to hold 32GB. (note that these are SI-prefix, or "mathematical" capacities, while Windows will show powers-of-2, or "computer" capacities, meaning that a 4.7GB disc will appear to only hold 4.3GB)
I'm expecting them to premier in the US probably in 2006-07, but some companies are saying they'll release products supporting these standards next year. In five years, maybe instead of buying 7 discs, we'll be able to spend our $150 (or whatever it'll cost by then) on one disc, and still get a whole series. (both technologies will come out in Japan first, because HDTV sets are a lot more common - meaning that the extra capacity will be used for higher resolution video.)
Personally, of course, I'm rooting for Blu-Ray, because of its superior capacity.