Blu-ray Hits Key Milestone Faster than Standard-Def 280
An anonymous reader writes "Slashdot has already reported on the go-go sales for the 'Casino Royale' Blu-ray on Amazon, but now comes news that the same Blu-ray disc is the first high-def disc to ship 100,000 units within the United States. It took standard-def DVD eleven months to reach that retail milestone (in 1998 with 'Air Force One'), but with 'Royale,' the nine-month old Blu-ray format now has done it two months faster."
Great.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Right now I can do a lot with standard def DVDs fairly easily. I'll need that functionality before I buy into any HD format. To me that functionality is worth a lot more than the extra resolution.
Re:Great.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, it's a good thing you don't have to wait. [boingboing.net] Every disk released so far is cracked. They are going to take a stab at improving the protection, but companies have been doing that since DeCSS came out.
And yes, I went out and bought a bunch of blu-ray disks after the cracks happened, for much the same reason.
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Actually, they have not, as there was no way to fix CSS once it was broken. They just had to deal with it.
A lot of lessons learned from that went into designing AACS, and it has many methods to deal with various kinds of breaks, including all that have been done so far. The battle over AACS is just beginning, and currently the ball is in the content producers' court. Future discs will not be cr
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As I said elsewhere, I'm not even getting into this fray until the DRM BS is over. I don't need a babysitter telling me where I can and cannot watch the movies that I buy. I'm also not into buying revocable rights that are controlled at the whims of greedy technophobes who think that me paying $20 of my hard-earned cash for their product is somehow ripping them off.
Don't forget! Sony promised not to start us
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No, the movies you buy today will keep playing forever. However, the movies you buy tomorrow may not play on the player you bought today. However, the only reason this would happen is if you extracted the keys from your player and posted them on the internet.
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companies have been doing that since DeCSS came out.
DeCSS came out in 1999. Those seem to be from 2005/2006, so that's something like six years later. While they may technically be a result of the original release of DeCSS, it's hardly "doing that since DeCSS came out".
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I'll "upgrade" to an HD format:
- after the DRM efforts collapse
- when combo players are under $200
- when disc prices drop to the same as DVDs
- when
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If I'm travelling I'll rip a collection of my DVDs and copy them to my laptop's hard drive. Then I can watch them on the road without needing to carry the original media. Also, if I'm on battery power the battery lasts much longer spinning the hard drive than it does spinning the DVD drive.
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If I wanted to go nuts, I could watch them from anywhere with high speed internet.
As has been mentioned, I can also load them onto a laptop to take on a trip without adding bulk.
Shipped or sold? (Score:2, Interesting)
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This kind of reminds me how at one LPs were certified gold or platinum based on units shipped, not sales. This led to some interesting "gold" and "platinum" certifications where certain LPs were shipped by the boxcar and returned unsold by the boxcar. The Bee Gees and Peter Frampton (and others) soundtrack to the movie of _Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band_ is probably the
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This time around Bluray got some bonus hardware sales by bundling in the PS3. Now everyone with a PS3 is sit
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Faster? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Faster? (Score:5, Funny)
Wait, my keyboard is being taken ove----
Great! So now we can say that Blu-Ray hit the 100,000 unit milestone at almost twice the rate of population growth since 1998! Thanks, Intron!
-- The Sony Marketroids
Population growth stupidity (Score:4, Insightful)
My response was that Ralph Nader got more votes than Abraham Lincoln.
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Well, Gore got more votes than the guy who got awarded the office; that's the counterintuitive bit.
It still feels like we got a president based on the rounding error that is the electoral college.
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Presidental candidates like having to concentrate campaigns in selected states since they modify the final outcome more than predom. blue/red states or states with low populations. That way they also get to pander to said states with promises of subsidies and how they're so totally awesome and the union wouldn't be the same w
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Well, Gore got more votes than the guy who got awarded the office; that's the counterintuitive bit.
It still feels like we got a president based on the rounding error that is the electoral college.
OT of course, but if you don't count the dead that voted, the same can be said of Kennedy and Nixon in '60.
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Bush won two very close elections, in one of which he got over 50% of the vote, something his predecessor never did.
Get over it.
Just to push this further in the realm of offtopic political flamage:
I'll get over it just as soon as the negative ramifications of the 2000 are finished. Hell, I'll settle for the war to be over. Sure Bush made himself a war pr
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Because if you don't agree with them, they must clearly be deranged due to rabies?
Apparently this political debate *is* actually very closely related to the "OMG YOU FANBOI _________ OWNER! YOUR CONSOLE IS TEH SUX!" topic at hand.
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However, the US population has only gone up 10% since DVDs were introduced, and this is 20% faster. Add the fact that a lot fewer people have HD-capable sets today than had DVD-capable sets back then, and the Blu-Ray adoption rate looks unusu
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It was probably pretty high -- I know my parents still have an old VHF/UHF set sitting around in an extra bedroom, and almost 10 years ago there were probably a lot more.
However, the problem of TVs without composite inputs was basically solved during the 70s and 80s by VCRs. They built a RF modulator into them so that you can hook it up to your TV and just tune to Chan. 3 and see whatever the VCR is currently puttin
Re:Faster? (Score:5, Interesting)
Until people can get 1080 native sets for reasonable prices or they atart buying the 50+ inch size sets there really is not going to be the adoption rate they think they are getting. Almost none of the customers at the company I work for want HDDVD or Blu Ray after we go an demo it in their theater. We demo on their gear and a 1080 projector. when they see the higher end projector they are all over it until a price is quoted, then they say "we will wait a couple of years, our current setup is fine." They do not like having to throw away a $10K-$20K 720p projector and buying a similarly price 1080 projector plus all their content, plus player, etc....
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This is so untrue. My brother has a 27" 720p HDTV and you can EASILY tell the difference between an upconverted DVD and HD.
It is absolutely true with my 50" 720p.
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Are they made by God?
Can I get one for my VHS player, so my VHS tapes can look like 720p too?
Did you read the GREYCstoration article? (Score:2)
Oh, you must have one of those new line doublers than inserts resolution that wasn't there in the original source material.
Are they made by God?
No, they're made by GREYC Lab [slashdot.org]. That algorithm isn't real-time yet, but there do exist algorithms that can guess the high spatial frequencies that VHS and DVD-Video filter out. Specifically, upscalers with a cartoon mode may draw inspiration from hq3x [hiend3d.com].
Can I get one for my VHS player, so my VHS tapes can look like 720p too?
I haven't played with the GREYCstoration noise reduction algorithms myself, but it might be possible to tune them for the kind of noise output by consumer videotape equipment.
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Upconverted DVD vs 720p is night and day. The difference is staggering. The difference between a true 720p image and an upconverted 480i image is substantial.
Comparatively, the difference between 720p and 1080p on a display 50" or smaller is much, much less dramatic. It can even be hard to tell in many cases, especially once you get to
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I can easily see the difference between 720p and 480p on a 42" plasma.
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I'm not sure where people get this "You have to have a 1080p set with a 60" screen to spot the difference" nonsense. 720p looks stunningly better than 480p. You would have to be blind (or viewing it on a 14" TV) to miss the difference.
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I remember hearing this same argument about DVD, incidentally. "The resolution isn't that much better than VHS/LD, why should anyone give up their VHS or LD player for that?" And the resolution difference between HDTV and DVD is a lot greater than between VHS and DVD.
Little Shiny Objects (Score:2)
When the switch from VHS to DVD occurred (lets pretend Laserdisc never existed) people were going from a big plastic rectangle to a small shiny disc. I would expect some hesitancy there, even though people were accustomed to CDs at that time. But now the change is very small, a Blue Ray disc looks very much like the tried and true DVD disc.
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You can't just say that this 20% growth on population is just because of the births, it's also because many people just didn't die.
Your population can't grow because people don't die. It can only grow from births or immigration. Also where do you get 20%? 18 / 270 * 100 = 6.66% increase in population.
Yeah but how many 8 years old were there back when DVD was released?
This is a valid point, however, it still comes no where near the 20% you touted. I dont know exactly how to get the numbers we want
9 Years Later (Score:5, Insightful)
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The take-off point was Win 95 not XP.
"In the marketplace, Windows 95 was an unqualified success, and within a year or two of its release had become the most successful operating system ever produced." Windows 95 [wikipedia.org]
The mid-line consumer PC rated and sold for Vista Premium or Ultimate is a very sophisticated product.
In the same sense that the Bl
No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
Rottentomatoes.com has Air Force One at 77% fresh, vs. Casino Royale at 94% fresh.
Casino Royale is a 17% better movie, which directly explains the roughly 17% faster selling rate.
What it doesn't explain is why Slashdot has been running so many stories direct from the Sony marketing department lately...
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The problem is the fact that they used a hard solid number to compare the two rather than a percentage per capita for instance. You have the factor of nation/
Actually it was even faster (Score:2)
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Actually I'm dropping my standalone Toshiba DVD player, the PS3 has been that good as a replacement (managing to play through DVDs with scratches that locked up the Toshiba).
I'm enjoying it as a game system, and it makes a killer DVD/Blu-Ray player (especially if you spring for the bluetooth remote which makes it helps it pass the "wife test")
Better format or... (Score:2, Insightful)
Depends on your definition of "Key" (Score:5, Insightful)
Shipped? (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, I'll bet that all those shipped Blu-ray discs are sitting at hundreds of Best Buy stores, right next to the towers of Playstation 3 systems.
It's easy to ship when you're giving them away.. (Score:5, Insightful)
All this says is that a number of PS3 owners have registered online for their 'free' disk.
It's like Nintendo claiming to have won the console wars because of the 1-1 sales of Wii Sports..
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Vista me this (Score:3, Insightful)
Accidental? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I would have though the HD-DVD marketers would be pushing the format based on this, but they don't seem to be marketing it that much at all.
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Well..... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a marketing spin, and maybe, just maybe, Sony won't repeat the betamax/minidisk/whatever format stumbles they've done in the past. But, based on the companies history alone, you'd get good odds that blu-ray ends up a niche market product.
So what? I'm still not buying HD.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wake me up when that happens.
In other news, 100,000 blue lasers were sold (Score:2)
Shiped but not Sold? (Score:5, Insightful)
So how many people actually "bought" the movie?
Not surprising... (Score:2)
How long before they relieve us of the old format? (Score:2, Interesting)
I have no use for this new hi-def stuff. My old legacy dvd players and TV's work fine, thank you very much and I don't and won't shell out for new equipment, period. People throw away old CRT TV's all the time, I just pick them up from the curb, repair them and "watch on".. It will be many years before I run out of old style legacy CRT's. I get them for free and it costs me just about as m
Re:How long before they relieve us of the old form (Score:2, Funny)
sorry couldn't help myself...
Re:How long before they relieve us of the old form (Score:2)
If rental stores are any guide, it'll be a 5 to 7 years before you see DVD's disappear from stores completely. I remember I got my first DVD player around 97 or 98, just when DVD's were starting to show up in the movie rental places on a little shelf. Now, you'd be hard pressed to find a VHS in a rental store and it's been like that for quite a while.
Still, your resistance to change attitude doesn't hold any water. You seemed to have ditched your VHS players for DVD with no problems and I expect around
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hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Yawn... (Score:3, Informative)
And it suffers from the same oversight...
That is, it fails to take into account the increases in market volume and buying power which would make it a useful comparison and instead uses the same raw number to compare two very different markets in two different eras. That raw number of 100,000 doesn't mean the same thing at the dawn of the DVD player as it does now at the dawn of the "BluRay player."
A useful comparison would consist of a ratio or percentage adjusted to take those differences into account. But it's obvious that an honest comparison isn't going to impress anyone.
After 12 years (I'm making an educated guess here), all they can say is that they beat the same raw number of purchases by 2 months?!?!
There's an old saying... "you can't polish a turd."
What's the comparison to DVD sales though? (Score:2)
Could it just be that people finally have a compelling reason to actually purchase a hi-def format movie?
Standrd (Score:2)
That's because (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, well (Score:2)
There's not exactly a vast range of choice for Blu-ray owners, is there?
I think some form of Bayesian analysis is in order to adjust the stats so they're fair. I suspect just comparing straight numbers is highly skewed.
Broken audio on Casino Royale DVD (Score:2, Interesting)
Watching the movie on my Mac Pro with a moderately priced receiver and speakers, the audio level drops were so distracting it was hard to watch the movie. The first one I noticed was during Audioslave's intro song during the animation. It continued to happen throughout the movie. In action scenes, music would be loud, and just before a punch, the audio level would drop to 1/2 or less, and then slowly b
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Meaningless numbers (Score:3, Informative)
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Air Force One is another matter, but hey, could've been worse, could have been Air Force Two [imdb.com] instead of Casino.
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Maybe he's talking about the original version...
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Re:PS3 owners? (Score:5, Interesting)
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The question then becomes, does the PS3 follow the footsteps of the PS2 as a finicky, low-quality DVD player or does it rival stand alone
Re:IMO, don't rely on a Playstation to play movies (Score:5, Informative)
I do own one and the BR support is second to none. Furthermore since it's online, any time Sony finds a bug, they can sneak the fix in with the next firmware update. The PS3 will remain the best BR player despite what anyone else builds. Not only that but tons of magazines have already had showdowns with BR players and the PS3 wins every single time. Speed, ergonomics, correctness, etc. it wins in every category.
Now there are a very small handful of 'video purists' that criticize the lack of 1080p/24fps support which is true film and prevents 4:3 pulldown, but Sony can add support at any time via firmware. Not only that but I have yet to see *any* player support 1080p/24.
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Yeah I'd say it's FUD because you don't own a PS3 and therefore can't have a valid opinion on the Blu-Ray functionality.
My experiences are based on the PS2, another Sony product that doubled as an economy DVD player. I don't think you can totally dismiss that, but at the same time you are correct that I don't have a first-hand testimonial from using the PS3 to supply.
I do own one and the BR support is second to none.
We'll have to see whether that holds up when the QC on the Blu-Ray discs themselves starts to decline. The problem with the PS2 which I described was with DVD releases that presumably contained subtle, minor errors in their encoding, or encoding choices that
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Thank god for AVSForums and their quality guide. http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=75 3726 [avsforum.com]
Re:IMO, don't rely on a Playstation to play movies (Score:4, Insightful)
So what you are saying is that the moment someone finds out how to get around the anti-customer protections that prevent you from using the player to play backups Sony can slip in a 'fix' without your permission?
Thanks but no thanks. I have a rather extensive movie collection and I take care of them. Discs are just too fragile, especially children's movies. I have a backup of each of my hundreds of discs and I have needed those backups numerous times. I also have a number of movies that I digitized from VHS and encoded to DVD. I'll pass on any player that I can't safely hack on without having to worry about repercussions from an anti-consumer vendor. Especially one like Sony that doesn't merely cater to the vile music and movie industries but is actually a part of both.
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I've also tried using my PS3 for DVD playback, it rivals a standalone DVD player from Toshiba I got two years ago. It even managed to play-through a really bad scratch on the DVD that the Toshiba just flat out locked up on.
Its also been pretty good on Blu-Ray disks.
I've enjoyed using it enough I went out and got the Bluetooth Remote (which functions just fine), and I'm ditching my stand-alone player, which also trims back 5 cables from the clutter (compon
Re:PS3 owners? (Score:4, Insightful)
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The PS3 doesn't being HDMI or RCA stereo out only.
I couldn't determine if you were saying the P3 only had HDMI and RCA outs, or if you receiver doesn't have an optical in. If you were saying the former, and your receiver does have optical in, then you are just wrong because the P3 has a single optical out port. I'm not sure how else you would be hooking up 6/5.1 surround sound (not saying there are no other options), but the preferred method, if you want high quality sound, would be by HDMI or optical. There are a number of covert options available that
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Imagine when everyone out there who knows he needs to back stuff up backs stuff up to a single Blu-Ray disc (all 50gb) and then the disc stops functioning.
Even if disc and burner prices come down pretty dramatically, I think we're to the point with hard disks that they're cheaper and more usable/recoverable after long-term storage and/or damage.
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You're kidding, right?
Hard drives are *terrible* at returning to service after sitting un-powered for several years. And if you drop one...
Hard drives are *not* archival digital storage media, even if it makes you feel smart to backup to them.
Hard drive life cycle (Score:2)
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If you accidentally delete/corrupt/overwrite your data, you don't have any recovery.
RAID and backup are complementary. You can't replace one with the other.
Law of storage (Score:2)
When prices do come down, I then have five times the storage I did, requiring 10-12 disks. Once again making back ups on to removable storage time consuming, cumbersome, and fault prone.
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Yeah, they are down to about 480 bucks now for a burner. Looks like they've halved in price in the last 6 to 8 months. Probably another 6 or 8 months they will halve again, then again. In about a 18 months, they'll probably hit about 100 bucks, and I assume the media prices will keep dropping as well (unless the nameless, faceless media giants artificially keep the price of the media high as a deterrent to copying). Still.. I remember when DVD-R disks were 5 bucks each, so I assume they'll drop as well.
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Five combo DVD's, play in SD too (Score:3, Informative)