Most Consumers Sitting Out The High-Def War 681
The New York Times notes that, despite the increasing variety of programs on the Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats, most US consumers are staying out of the DVD format war. This is a wise decision, the article states, because the two formats are essentially at a stalemate. "The two camps are victims of their own earlier success with DVD. The standard DVDs offered a quantum leap in quality from the picture and sound of VHS videotape, and for many that was more than adequate. In addition, DVD players that can convert images to near high-definition quality can be found for under $100, hundreds less than a true high-definition DVD player, further reducing the urgency to upgrade to one of the new formats."
Waiting For Dual (Score:5, Interesting)
Another group of prospects are waiting for ripping capability, so they can assert their fair use rights (even though they don't have any under the DMCA).
I don't predict either format will "win" nor "die" over the next few years. So, by each camp resisting dual-format, all they are doing is hurting the whole prospective market.
Lastly, a HUGE number of consumers can't even tell the difference between DVD and HD quality! The difference in sound is total marketing drivel. But the difference in picture- oh yes, it is major. But that goes to show... if most consumers can't even tell the difference, why should they pay more?
DVD vs HD quality (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:DVD vs HD quality (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:DVD vs HD quality (Score:5, Insightful)
Seconded. I want to be able to stream all of my movies from my home server on demand, not fiddle around with discs that can be damaged. But a big point with the DRM is that if one of the formats didn't have it, that format would suddenly become safe to invest in. It wouldn't be ideal to have to re-burn all of my HD discs if the format went under and everyone used Blueray, but I (a) wouldn't need to as I could play them from the file and (b) would at least be able to without as much cost as replacing them if I so chose.
Get rid of the DRM and you're not taking a big risk in buying that media.
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No. 1080p delivers a full 1080 line frame, non-interlaced, every 1/60th of a second.
The main issue right now is that there aren't very many 60 fps sources. The PS3 can generate true 1080p during gameplay, that's one - but movies shot on film are typically 24 fps, converted to 30 fps using a technique called 3:2 pulldown, so a 1080p display keeps the same image up for (at least) two complete frames, resulting in an effective
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:5, Interesting)
Almost completely agree (Score:5, Insightful)
Although there may be some that can't tell the difference in quality, I think a far larger proportion of people just don't care about the increase in quality (myself included). I've seen demos in stores. I've seen a Sony disc that tries to show the difference side-by-side on the same movie (splitting the screen of a scene to show the left side as DVD and the other as Blu-Ray). Yeah, it's way better, but I don't give a crap! I don't have the cash, or the desire, to upgrade my television. DVD is good enough for me, and will be for a long, long time. I do not have interest in paying one cent more for the better quality video.
Never mind how much more difficult it is to rip the content!
Re:Almost completely agree (Score:5, Interesting)
I tend to watch most DVDs on my laptop these days. I upgrade roughly every three years, so in two years I might end up with a BD or HD-DVD drive. At that point, I might start watching movies on whichever format the drive supports. I don't buy DVDs anymore though, I only ever rent them. I rarely want to watch a film more than once, and so I'd rather pay a fixed rate for access to new films than buy them individually. In two years, if someone is offering a download service over the Internet then I'd use that instead of renting disks in any format, as long as it's not tied to Windows and offers a flat-rate cost.
Re:Almost completely agree (Score:5, Insightful)
The greatest thing DVD did for home video was making letterbox/anamorphic widescreen mainstream.
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Either some of the scanlines are wasted showing back bars. Boo fucking hoo.
Or
The cinematographic effects, the mood, the artistry of the movie is wasted as continuous shots are broken down into pans and scans or secondary elements of the frame are thrown away on the telecine floor. This is a serious matter indeed.
I have a 27" 4:3 TV from 1998 and a job. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Almost completely agree (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Almost completely agree (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course a BMW is a better car than a Hyundai, just as HD-DVD/Blu-ray are better than DVD. Most people don't care about that, either. They can't justify the benefits, given the increased cost. From 2006 sales figures [autoblog.com], Hyundai sold 455,012 cars, while BMW sold 274,432. Seems more people, by your own example, agree with me.
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Mind you, being a non telly owning wierdo, I don't actually know how usual it is to have a large TV, if it's very common to own one of those monster HD sets, and people still aren't buying HD players, then I imagine there might be a problem getting them to upgrade. For me, a dvd on my 19" wide screen monitor is more than enough, quality wise.
Personally I think this is all happening bec
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:5, Insightful)
Whoa, there. People DO have fair use rights under the DMCA. Those rights haven't gone away. The peculiar situation introduced by the DMCA is having fair use rights, but not being able to legally exercise them because of the encryption and the illegality of circumventing it.
It would be kind of like paying to have the right drive your car on the street because you have a license, insurance, etc., but not actually being able to exercise that right because there is a wall built at the bottom of your driveway by the people who own the road, and it is illegal to knock it down.
[Okay, *you* come up with a better car analogy]
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, instead of a wall at the bottom of your driveway you have a motorized gate with a numeric keypad. You need a code to open the gate so you can drive your car, but the people who own the road won't give it to you. You could easily download a road-gate-code-cracker, but that's been made illegal.
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The good news is that they want to get rid of the keypad. The bad news is that their planned replacement system involves calling them up and explaining why you need to travel. (If you are North of the Equator yo
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:4, Funny)
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I totally disagree - they can tell the difference (from my experience), and I'd be completely shocked if double-blind tests didn't bear this out. The color space and resolution differences alone are _very_ apparent to anyone who's looking at the test material.
It seems like some people don't get that, just because it's not as large a jump as from VHS (a terrible format) to DVD (a reasonably decent format), that it'
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Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:5, Funny)
Mmmmm, breadsticks...
The HD war will be won by Asia (Score:2)
Thankfully, there's a handful asian companies in Korea who are listening to you : Samsung and LG are slowly introducing such dual player. Now we only have to wait until the price drop enough and no-name constructor join the game. (And maybe, by then, the player will also be compatible with China's variant - EVD? I think...)
Re:Waiting For Dual (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:More than quality (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyone else hate idiots like this? (Score:2, Funny)
From Wikipedia:
In physics, a quantum leap or quantum jump is a change of an electron from one energy state to another within an atom.
So a quantum leap is a very, very tiny change, usually smaller than a nanometer. If the writer is stupid enough to think a sub-nanometer change means something big, why would one take anything he has to say seri
Re:Anyone else hate idiots like this? (Score:5, Informative)
It is this that I think that the article is referring to (correctly). Being a physics geek, I had to set the record straight.
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Re:Anyone else hate idiots like this? (Score:5, Informative)
If you had kept reading that very same Wikipedia page, you would have seen this:
In the vernacular, the term quantum leap has come to mean an abrupt change or "step change", especially an advance or augmentation. The term dates back to early-to-mid-20th century, coinciding with the discoveries of quantum mechanics. The popular and scientific terms are similar in that both describe a change that happens all at once (revolutionary), rather than gradually over time (evolutionary), but the two uses are different when it comes to the magnitude of the change or advance in question.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_leap [wikipedia.org]
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The only thing worse than language Nazis are the people who think they're qualified to be language Nazis, but are actually just pedants who are lost in misinterpretation and warped logic.
Wrong definition (Score:3, Funny)
Dude, you totally are confused. Here's the Wikipedia definition of Quantum Leap:
"Quantum Leap is an American science fiction television series that ran for 96 episodes from March 1989 to May 1993 on the NBC network."
So since it's TV, a "Quantum Leap" is something like "Jumping the Shark". And we all know that sharks are white, and that white is the color of snow on mountains, and mounta
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Okay, fine. You tell that to Scott Bakula.
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DVD/HD (Score:3, Interesting)
Sounds familiar. Anyone?
Why not support both? (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess Warner Bros. actually gets it and is reaching out to the biggest market possible, whereas the rest are picking sides and supporting their pet formats.
I remember for the longest time certain studios refused to release their movies to DVD because they were trying to push their own, stupid, proprietary systems. They eventualy caved (and I finally got Braveheart on DVD!). I see the same thing happening here.
For the record, from this casual observer's view, Blu-Ray is doing a much better job in brand recognition. Perhaps it is the catchy name, since HD-DVD sounds more like a spec than it does a product?
Not quite the reality i think. (Score:2, Informative)
I saw lots of people looking and buying bluray films at bestbuy this christmas. HD-DVD was in the same isle, all you had to do is turn around. Not as many folks there. More were looking at Blu-ray.
My father bought a bluray player,
My friends father bought a bluray player.
I own both format players
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HD-DVD still has incredible backing. And the largest retailer in the world, Walmart, recently announced they will only carry HD-DVD in their stores. This "fight" is not ending anytime soon. We need cheap, dual-format players.
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I know they said they got hd-dvd to 51 Gigs, but from what i understand (and i could be wrong) is that they're not sure it will make it out in the market due to capability problems. It was more of a PR stunt than a reality.
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But wait... Blu-ray starts with B, oh yea. I guess color imagery trumps typography.
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I can testify to that.... (Score:5, Interesting)
So, I wait. Wait and see.
I did it by accident (Score:5, Funny)
I needed to do Linux development on a Cell processor, so I picked up a PS/3 and a 24" LCD monitor. At the time I thought that I needed an HDCP-compatible monitor in order to use the PS/3 in high-res mode. (I didn't realize that you only need a HDCP-enabled monitor if you want to watch Blue-Ray movies at high-res.)
So I accidentally joined the small group of people with a high-def setup. Oops.
You do not even need HDCP for that (Score:3, Informative)
You can watch Blu-Ray movies from a PS3 just fine in HD over the component or plain DVI outputs (analog or no HDCP). The only thing that doesn't do Hi-Def over that connection is upscaling normal DVD's.
How about "Phoning Home" and DRM? (Score:2, Troll)
1) DRM
2) The ability for the players to "phone home".
3) Any other "feature" that makes it more difficult for the consumer. By this I mean anything that forces the user to do something he does not want to like the PUOPs on standard DVDs. You can be forced to watch previews when you start a disk without having the option to skip forward or advance the track
Re:How about "Phoning Home" and DRM? (Score:5, Insightful)
The kids got a stack of DVD's for Christmas. I'm bordering on _FURIOUS_ that on some of them we have to sit through about 3 minutes of previews and "You wouldn't steal a car... video piracy is stealing" warnings. Honestly... it's crap like that that makes me want to just download instead of purchasing. Why on earth should someone who's actually doing what the recording industry wants and buying instead of stealing be the one who has to sit through the warnings and ads???
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On kids' DVDs no less. They're tugging at your pants, "I wanna watch Belle and Beast!" You're trying to skip through FBI warnings and whatnot, they're slowing having a meltdown.
I think the CyberHome DVD player my sister has ($30 from RadioShack *last Christmas*) is superior to my Pioneer. Hers has an Autoplay feature that automatically skips ahead to the biggest chunk of video and starts playing. Which is, usually, the movie. Right now I'm thinking of ripping the kiddie DVDs and re-burning them as simple
Huh? (Score:2)
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Maybe somebody at the MPAA was convinced that when you rip a DVD, you get the whole thing and "pirates" release the movie with propaganda and all.
Yep... that's why it so prolific (Score:3, Interesting)
The fact that media companies think they can control what I consume by shoving ads/branding/corporate-ethics-of-the-day just ensures that I'll look elsewhere. I'm not sure if media companies understand how obvious that is - or perhaps they believe they're entitled to piss me off, and therefore it's a "moral" issue not grounded in the reality of what people actually do.
To sumerise the argument: corporate greed is
Re:How about "Phoning Home" and DRM? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Region-specific disks do not exist to serve consumers best in their native language, they exist to make it possible for studios to sell region-specific distribution rights with some veneer of confidence in the buyer that cheaper content from different distributors in other regions won't be imported to undercut the regional exclusivit
Killing their customer base (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Killing their customer base (Score:5, Insightful)
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How many are staying out of this because they don't like the copyright 'protection' which really hurts the functionality and ends up hurting the experience of legitimate users?
On slashdot these may be real concerns, but for most of the populace I bet this is a non-issue. I am reasonably tech savvy, but have never been interested in ripping any DVDs, watching them on my computer, etc. I think most of us sheeple are pretty much the same, in that we watch our DVDs once or twice and then enjoy the warm, fuzzy feeling of knowing that it is taking up space in the media center.
Reasons I haven't jumped in (Score:5, Interesting)
The jump from DVD to High-Def DVD will buy me a better picture, and that's it. And I get to worry that I'll chose the wrong format and it will be worthless in 2 years. The dual format ones are still too expensive.
So, I wait for the dust to settle before I toss more money into the bottomless technological gizmo pit.
The Real Problem (Score:3, Insightful)
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From what I've seen, the war is not so much VHS vs Betamax. Both those formats got great traction. With the adoption rates against the established standards, th
One company could change everything: (Score:3, Interesting)
Disney's DVD retail business is quite profitable, and they sell a LOT of DVD's for the family market, especially given the large number of animated features Disney has done since Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937. While Disney is firmly in the Blu-Ray camp right now, I'm sure they are aware of the rapid drop in the price of HD-DVD players and they could easily jump into the HD-DVD market (my guess in around six months). Since most HD-DVD discs are encoded with the VC-1 or AVC (H.264) format, there is no real need to use the extra capacity of Blu-Ray discs, and with the new 51 GB triple-layer discs, HD-DVD has erased the Blu-Ray 50 GB storage capacity advantage.
Besides Disney, if Toshiba can lower the licensing fees for the HD-DVD format, that could interest companies now selling only Blu-Ray discs to support HD-DVD. After all, it was the generous licensing requirements for VHS that allowed VHS to overtake Sony's Beta format, and Toshiba could easily do the same against the Sony-supported Blu-Ray format. We will find out what happens at the Consumer Electronics Show in January 2008 which side will take the initiative to expand its presence.
By the way, don't expect people to download high-definition movies on a large scale until broadband speeds become vastly faster than now; downloading a single movie that could be as large as 15 GB is a pretty daunting task even with Verizon's FIOS fiber-optic broadband system.
Upconversion sub$100? You get what you pay for. (Score:2)
After using it for less than two days i boxed it up and went back to my 5 year old Panasonic RP56 Progressive Scan DVD player. The picture was much better on the RP56 than on the cheapie upconverter. The general usability and responsiveness was also much worse on the cheap upconverter.
Well (Score:2, Flamebait)
Bluray: Why would I spend hundreds of pounds on a technology that would render my DVD collection (of around 100 DVDs) obsolete with no real gain? Will my TV be compatible?
HD-DVD: My existing collection is compatible, great. Now, let's look at the price....ouch.
I'm sitting it out until I can get a HD-DVD player from the web for less than 100 quid. Why do Sony insist on making formats that are incompatible with others? They've lost before (Mini-disc, which
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Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
Repeat: Blu-Ray players play DVDs just the same as HD-DVD players do. The only imcompatibility is that Blu-Ray players will not play HD-DVD and HD-DVD will not player Blu-Ray.
My apologies if this is not what you meant, but it is how I read it and want to avoid others making the same mistake.
Only really big screens benefit (Score:2, Insightful)
HD versus DVD (Score:4, Interesting)
- HiDef is fighting with HiDef*... tick
- HiDef for the average user gives no gain... tick
- HiDef cannot be (in theory) copied to your MP3 player to watch the movie on the player... tick
- For computers, HiDef only works on that abomination called Vista... tick
- HiDef disks (pressed or recordable) are expensive... tick
- One HiDef format is backed by Microsoft... tick
- Neither HiDef format has a "cool" name... tick
Now with all those ticks, let's all rush out and buy into the HD format.
Or, you could stick to what you have now, and rip** the DVD for your MP3 player to watch on, not have to get into the whole "this cable is not compatible with this type of HD content" crap, not get into "you machine thinks you're really a hacker and your new hardware has decided to offer you shitty vision" instead of what you paid for, not have to worry about full HD pixel ratios or interlaced / progressive video, and not have producers enforce region coding (cartel protection).
* I bought superior Betamax, don't want that kinda purchase again.
** in some places legally.
The article might be a little late.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Movies, schmovies (Score:2)
I could use a 25 GB recordable format. It's not just a slight incremental upgrade from 4.7 GB DVDs.
The new formats are a reason why I decided against upgrading my 4-year old PATA DVD burner -- there's little point in buying a slightly faster drive for the same old format. I'm waiting for Blu-ray burners to become a little more affordable and ubiquitous.
Amazon has Toshiba HD-A30 for less than $250.00 (Score:2)
Who wants to buy a betamax? (Score:2)
They briefly mention the Betamax vs. VHS format war of the 80s in the article. I was around for that particular battle, and I remember my dad coming home with a brand new, shiny, expensive betamax machine. Six months later, it was obsolete and we couldn't find videotapes for the damned thing, so we had to go buy another brand new, shiny, expensive VHS machine.
Who wants to spend a small fortune o
People said the same thing about DVD ten years ago (Score:2)
Video quality output of High Definition is better (Score:2)
If you're going to complain about how cookie-cutter movies these days are, then it behooves you to not give the labels any money until they... well... make something original.
Locked room (Score:2)
Put the CEO and top executives of Sony and Toshiba in a locked room with a water fountain and a single bathroom/toilet available. Slide pizza under the door every day with random toppings. Let them out only after they have decided which format is the one.
The adoption problems are manifold (Score:3, Interesting)
1.) 16:9 widescreen displays are still not pervasive enough to warrant upgrades. (This will change in 2009 after analog broadcast is dead) (My 60 year old mom hates "those black bars" on the top and bottom of the 4:3 display - she's gonna freak when there are "those grey bars" on the sides!)
2.) Cost. Retailers are dumping fairly recent DVD's for as little as $5.00 per disc. HD-DVD & Blu-Ray are easily 6-7 times that.
3.) Format confusion. Blu-Ray is being marketed as "Blu-Ray HiDef" and HD-DVD's are also marketed as "HiDef" i.e. "Harry Potter & The Order of the Phoenix - on DVD and HiDef" (There isn't a Blu-Ray version available yet).
4.) HD-DVD has combo discs (i.e.: Harry Potter, above) that will work on current DVD players as well as HD players - this allows the consumer to continue to add to their library of movies, while defraying the cost of hardware upgrade into the future. Blu-Ray forces you into expensive gear NOW in order to watch the film you've just bought.
Some advice:
Until this shit gets sorted out, the people who currently have large libraries (i'm thinking 200+ DVD's) are not going to offload their old movies and upgrade their films to HD-DVD/Blu-Ray. It's time for those "Proof of Purchase" coupon-looking things in most DVD packages to be useful. Furthermore, If Sony wants to sell more BRD players they need to cut their costs in half and stop trying to bundle their PS3 console with the player. Not everybody wants to play video games. Microsoft hedged their bets and made the HD-DVD an add-on component, which, though not very attractive inside the t.v. cabinet, provides function for VERY low cost. (I got mine + Heroes Season 1 on HD-DVD for about $180)
Why bother? (Score:2)
Doesn't Sony always loose? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm almost serious in thinking "Bluray will loose because it is Sony". I don't know *why* sony always looses, but I can't think of one example where there were multiple standards and Sony won (game-consoles don't count as they are not standards).
All that said: I've in the "wait and see" crowd myself. I'm less worried about the players than investing in a media library that will self-obsolete. The desire for better quality created my LaserDisc collectio
Most (older) customers have no reason for HD (Score:5, Interesting)
He's a war movie fan. Especially 2nd World War. From Tora Tora Tora to Midway, from Battle of Britain to One Bridge too far, he has them all. He wants them all. He watches them all. When DVD came out, he was one of the first to go and get a DVD player, because now his previous movies would never go grainy from being watched a million times over.
Now, his movies have been made in the 60s and maybe 70s. Sound? Mono. MAYBE stereo. 5.1? C'mon, be sensible. Film quality? At DVD level you already saw the flaws, why bother with HD?
For him, there is no reason at all to even consider HD. Whether HDDVD or BluRay is moot for him, he's happy with his DVD.
And that's another problem. When someone is a fan of 60s movie, or of a movie star from the pre-80s era, he simply does not benefit from HD.
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Media cost is prohibitive too... (Score:2)
Cheers,
And the content is much more expensive. (Score:3, Informative)
Same on DVD $16
Three to six months later
Blu-Ray/HD, $25
Same on DVD $10
Astounding Breakthrough in Signal Processing (Score:3, Insightful)
Chinese dvd player manufacturers have managed to find a way to violate the laws of logic and extract more information than is present in a signal? I must have missed the headline.
I have good news for all of you. (Score:3, Funny)
I bought an HD-DVD player.
-F
Re:Who cares? They're cheap. (Score:5, Interesting)
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No, the real looser in this battle of the stupid is the
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Besides, I don't think Food Network is broadcast in HD yet.... that's what I mostly watch. That and the home improvement channels.
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Better yet, my provider offers Food Network in HD, but only if you use their stinky Scientific Atlanta cable box.
They are using switched digital, so cable card users (Tivo HD) are screwed on most of the HD channels.
Switched digital is apparently on demand cable service, so they don't pipe all the HD channels into everyones house. The low demand channels (ESPN2, Food, MTV) are only piped on demand, and cable cards don't do that yet.
BTW, Tivo HD is awesome. Just got one, and it is 10x better than the SA box
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[...]
So what's the solution, in the meantime you're going to waste your expensive high def TV watching shitty standard format DVDs?
You are under the false assumption that everyone has bought an HDTV. In any case, those who do have HDTVs get HD programming (from cable/satellite/over-th
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It's not so "vast" anymore. I think 30% of US households have an HDTV now, and it's increasing pretty rapidly. 70% being SD-only households is a lot but it's ever shrinking.
And the current players may be "cheap" for you, but they won't really be "cheap" for most people until you can get a player for $30.
I bought my Toshiba HD-DVD player for $99. The $30 cheap DVD player probably costs more than that in the long run. I'm willing to bet that a person wou
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The same reason I have been dissapointed with my Laserdisc purchase. The promises were big. The movies could be pressed much cheaper than making a tape. The format was free from copyguard as it conformed to the NTSC spec at broadcast quality.
Royalties and reluctant movie studios killed it. I was rewarded with poor s
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(I actually have an HD-DVD player now, since I ran across a good deal when I needed a new player anyways, but I will only purchace combo discs for the foreseeable future. For compatability with our other six DVD players as well as hedging my bets.)
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TNG style" and don't want to be overcharged by Sony to do it.
Physical DVD jukebox tech is gravely lacking while at the
same price being absurdly overpriced.
Due to current laws and policies, it's simpler to pirate something
than just exercise fair use with the copy that you happen to have lying
around.
It's technologically easier to be a mooch than to buy a copy and "do it right".
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Ahhh well, the graphics card and TV I could live with, Vista? No way.
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Evidently, so is capitalization :-p
I don't really understand your comment though. Isn't picture quality the most important feature of a TV/video player? I mean, don't people buy TVs and video players to SEE content?
I suppose audio quality is way overblown for stereo systems and lens quality is way overblown for phothographic equipment?
A major advantage of HD TV and HD broadcasts is that the channels are broadcast in the correct ratio, so there is no str
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I was reading the The Death of High Fidelity [slashdot.org] article earlier and I'm wondering about a potential parallel here.
If we ignore the bullshit like DRM the real push seems to be about picture quality. From my admittedly anecdotal experiences a hell of a lot of people seem pretty happy to put up with poorer image quality by sourcing their films through downloads (legal or otherwise). They seem happy to put up with a loss of quality if it brings convenience (ignoring the "free" aspect for the present). As with a