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DVD War Looms As Advancements Draw Closer
I saw this on Yahoo News. It has quote from Geoff/DVDTalk.
DVD War Looms As Advancements Draw Closer |
I must agree, I'm not clamoring for something new. I know that technology must advance, and eventually will. However, DVD really has just taken hold and to release a new technology aimed at the mass public would be DIVX-ical.
<P>Admitted, I am not (yet) into the whole tech side and have not even made the steps beyond a 27 inch TV, my trusty APEX that has lasted through the years and given nary a lick of trouble, and a pieced together surround sound system (I don't even have cable TV!). I expect that soon I will be venturing into the big screen realm and building a home screening room, but even then I would not be willing to scrap everything that I have. Hell, VHS is still hanging strong (not in my house, but as an industry). How long have we been predicting recordable DVDs? Nah, another Chicken Little article. |
Well Abob, I do hope you realize that we do in fact have recordable DVDs, and have for some time now. Think of it as a little piece of sky hitting you in the head :)
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I'll throw in my $0.02. I too feel that there is not a large enough perceived difference between High Def dvd's and regular dvd's (like there was between dvd and vhs).
DVD vs. VHS you had: better image quality multi-track sound chapter skipping special features more? High Def DVD vs. DVD you have: better image quality more? After a few weeks of watching my HD-Projector I DO see a difference in image quality between HDTV and DVD however I have 2 final points. 1. I don't know that the difference warrants another entire format. 2. While new movies have looked better (Pearl Harbor, Mummy Returns) I don't think older movies look all that much better. Film transfers and restoration can only do so much to a non-new release movie. MHO. edit: Something else that I (and the article) overlooked was DVD players that upconvert to HD signals. I think this could be a big market as people would rather fork over $250 for a new dvd player than replace their entire collection. |
the sooner hd-dvd (or blu-ray) comes the better. especially when you consider that many early releases will be crappy dvd transfers and bare bones, just like the early dvds use ld transfers and touted 'animated menus'.
the sooner hd-dvd comes, the sooner studios get their act together and start doing proper releases. technology advances way too slow because too many people try to hold it back. |
Originally posted by DVD Josh Well Abob, I do hope you realize that we do in fact have recordable DVDs, and have for some time now. Think of it as a little piece of sky hitting you in the head :) |
Originally posted by Abob Teff OK, I was a little vague in that statement! :brickwl: What I meant was that while we do have recordable DVDs, they still are not as mainstream as they were supposed to have been by now. It still is not a "mass consumer" (or Joe Sixpack if you prefer) product. (Ducking the falling sky.) |
If the studio's buy into this, I wonder how many re-releases there will be?
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The best mass consumer usage for them would be television recording, but as long as the VCR works just as well, they'll never take off, as practically everyone owns a VCR. |
Originally posted by Abob Teff I must agree, I'm not clamoring for something new. I know that technology must advance, and eventually will. However, DVD really has just taken hold and to release a new technology aimed at the mass public would be DIVX-ical. CDs have been around for over 20 years, and nothing has seriously challenged them. People aren't going to buy new equipment and rebuy their music library just for better A/V quality. CDs offered a lot more over cassessetes and records than that, like track selection, more durability etc. I believe the same will be true with DVDs. Joe Six Pack isn't going to upgrade to HD-DVD just to get better picture quality. Not to mention most of them don't have HD sets. |
Originally posted by Rubix the sooner hd-dvd comes, the sooner studios get their act together and start doing proper releases. technology advances way too slow because too many people try to hold it back. |
Originally posted by Rubix technology advances way too slow because too many people try to hold it back. I'm happy with what I have, and have no reason to upgrade ever as far as I'm concerned. I think some people are just too wrapped up in having the latest technology and/or care more about marginal A/V improvements than just enjoying films. But to each his own I guess. |
The only other advantage I could see with a newer format is the slimming down of boxed sets, especially TV shows. For example, I'd love to be able to fit a whole season, or more, of a show on one disc (with a 'play random episode' option too!). If anything, it would be a little more economical. :up:
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Bring it on! Death to DVD! DEATH TO DVD!!!!
heh :P I liked the random episode idea by the way. |
Originally posted by Randy Miller III The only other advantage I could see with a newer format is the slimming down of boxed sets, especially TV shows. For example, I'd love to be able to fit a whole season, or more, of a show on one disc (with a 'play random episode' option too!). If anything, it would be a little more economical. :up: PEACH |
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