Rest in peace VHS
#26
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by sdk
If j6p never found dvd's, do you think studios would put their money into dvd's. Not likely.
If j6p never found dvd's, do you think studios would put their money into dvd's. Not likely.
#28
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by sracer
The only thing that the additional awareness brought was anamorphic releases of Zoolander and Happy Gilmore.
The only thing that the additional awareness brought was anamorphic releases of Zoolander and Happy Gilmore.
What J6P brought to DVD was increased selection, decreased prices, and a huge viable format. A format where Blue Underground can release some obscure film that only a handful of people have ever heard of -- and still get shelf space at Best Buy and get carried as a selection at Columbia House.
What would have happened if they hadn't embraced DVD? See Laserdisc for an example... fewer releases, MUCH higher prices, difficult to find at retail stores, and a format that would collapse as soon as the Next Big Thing arrived.
$19.99 Tron DVD
$129.99 Tron laserdisc
$24.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite DVD
$89.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite Laserdisc
I'm not happy to return to those days. I thank the powers that be that people flock to Wal-Mart to buy the latest DVD of Zoolander or whatever.
#30
Senior Member
I love DVD, don't get me wrong, but am I the only one who likes the fact that a VHS cassette stays on the same spot when you stop watching for the day, and it's really easy to continue watching the next day?
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
I think both media still have a place next to each other in this world.
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
I think both media still have a place next to each other in this world.
#32
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by LolaRennt
I love DVD, don't get me wrong, but am I the only one who likes the fact that a VHS cassette stays on the same spot when you stop watching for the day, and it's really easy to continue watching the next day?
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
I love DVD, don't get me wrong, but am I the only one who likes the fact that a VHS cassette stays on the same spot when you stop watching for the day, and it's really easy to continue watching the next day?
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
#33
Suspended
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Originally posted by marty888
If I leave a DVD in my player, and turn it off, I only have to hit "play" while it's loading once I turn it back on - and it picks up right where it left off. (Philips 747)
If I leave a DVD in my player, and turn it off, I only have to hit "play" while it's loading once I turn it back on - and it picks up right where it left off. (Philips 747)
#34
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by MJKTool
If anything needs to die its the J6P phrase.
If anything needs to die its the J6P phrase.
#35
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by marty888
If I leave a DVD in my player, and turn it off, I only have to hit "play" while it's loading once I turn it back on - and it picks up right where it left off. (Philips 747)
If I leave a DVD in my player, and turn it off, I only have to hit "play" while it's loading once I turn it back on - and it picks up right where it left off. (Philips 747)
#36
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by bboisvert
Not exactly.
What J6P brought to DVD was increased selection, decreased prices
Not exactly.
What J6P brought to DVD was increased selection, decreased prices
Hell even retail at BB the opening week price on most major releases was $14.99. That crept up to $15.99 and now it $16.99-$17.99
#37
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by Timber
I have to disagree on the pricing. 4-5 years ago when internet bargining was in it's hey day I was seeing prices that I could only hope for today.
I have to disagree on the pricing. 4-5 years ago when internet bargining was in it's hey day I was seeing prices that I could only hope for today.
Overall retail prices of DVDs has dropped over time. You may not be getting 3 DVDs for $1 like 800.com was offering. But you can still get discs for dirt-cheap, relatively speaking.
#38
Originally posted by LolaRennt
I love DVD, don't get me wrong, but am I the only one who likes the fact that a VHS cassette stays on the same spot when you stop watching for the day, and it's really easy to continue watching the next day?
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
I think both media still have a place next to each other in this world.
I love DVD, don't get me wrong, but am I the only one who likes the fact that a VHS cassette stays on the same spot when you stop watching for the day, and it's really easy to continue watching the next day?
My DVD player does not do that, unless if I keep it powered up which I do not like.
I think both media still have a place next to each other in this world.
And if any of you invent it, cut me in on the royalty for the idea.
#39
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by bboisvert
You may not be getting 3 DVDs for $1 like 800.com was offering.
You may not be getting 3 DVDs for $1 like 800.com was offering.
The good old days.
#40
Originally posted by Timber
I have to disagree on the pricing. 4-5 years ago when internet bargining was in it's hey day I was seeing prices that I could only hope for today.
Hell even retail at BB the opening week price on most major releases was $14.99. That crept up to $15.99 and now it $16.99-$17.99
I have to disagree on the pricing. 4-5 years ago when internet bargining was in it's hey day I was seeing prices that I could only hope for today.
Hell even retail at BB the opening week price on most major releases was $14.99. That crept up to $15.99 and now it $16.99-$17.99
edit: and you use Best Buy as your example? That's a poor example because ever since they introduced their rewards card, their prices have gone up across the board. Yeah, you may get coupons every now and then if you are a rewards memeber but I will save my money on a rewards card and find my DVDs elsewhere. I have a friend who is a rewards member and saved five dollars on a box set recently, but I found it online for nearly 20.00 less than Best Buy was selling it for, so what is the point of Best Buy anymore? Even if you are a rewards member.
Last edited by calhoun07; 11-23-04 at 03:37 PM.
#41
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by calhoun07
Well, what you present is actually a need that is not being met in DVD. Maybe somebody needs to develop a DVD player where this could be an added feature? Book mark up to ten DVDs for later viewing, and when you put that DVD back in the player, the player recognizes it and knows it's in the data buffer for your book mark and resumes play right where you left off. Hell, if we can put a man on a moon, somebody must be able to come up with a few more computer chips that would allow DVD players to do that.
Well, what you present is actually a need that is not being met in DVD. Maybe somebody needs to develop a DVD player where this could be an added feature? Book mark up to ten DVDs for later viewing, and when you put that DVD back in the player, the player recognizes it and knows it's in the data buffer for your book mark and resumes play right where you left off. Hell, if we can put a man on a moon, somebody must be able to come up with a few more computer chips that would allow DVD players to do that.
#42
Originally posted by bboisvert
My Pioneer DVD player from 1998 does this. A lot of DVD players have a bookmark feature.
My Pioneer DVD player from 1998 does this. A lot of DVD players have a bookmark feature.
#43
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by calhoun07
and you use Best Buy as your example? That's a poor example because
and you use Best Buy as your example? That's a poor example because
800.com need to attract customers --> 3 DVDs for $1 --> "Yeah! DVDs are cheap!"
Virgin Megastores doesn't care about discounts --> DVDs are full MSRP --> "Ah, crap! DVDs are expensive!"
I find a bunch of DVDs at a flea market --> 10 DVDs for $10 --> "Wow! DVDs are practically being given away!"
The only benchmark should be MSRP, not random, individual retailer discounts. MSRP on DVDs has gone down over time.
#44
DVD Talk Gold Edition
calhoun07...
My first Panasonic player that I bought back in 1998 would automatically resume play on a DVD if you left it in the player and hit Play next time. My newer Panasonic players allow up to five bookmarks (called Position Memory), and you can take the DVDs out! Check this website to see if your player DOES have that functionality:
http://www.videohelp.com/
My first Panasonic player that I bought back in 1998 would automatically resume play on a DVD if you left it in the player and hit Play next time. My newer Panasonic players allow up to five bookmarks (called Position Memory), and you can take the DVDs out! Check this website to see if your player DOES have that functionality:
http://www.videohelp.com/
#45
DVD Talk Special Edition
Joined: Oct 2000
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From: The Archives, Indiana
Originally posted by sracer
Umm, there were plenty of discs available before J6P found DVDs. The only thing that the additional awareness brought was anamorphic releases of Zoolander and Happy Gilmore.
Umm, there were plenty of discs available before J6P found DVDs. The only thing that the additional awareness brought was anamorphic releases of Zoolander and Happy Gilmore.
#46
DVD Talk Legend
I think that the emergence of TIVO and DVRs in general have done more to hasten the demise of VCRs lately than DVDs.
DVDs did a lot of damage in terms of low-cost, high-quality, sell-through movies, but they didn't offer any recording capabilities. You can watch FIGHT CLUB 8 billion times in pristine digital glory, but your $100 player ain't gonna record "Golden Girls" (Collector's Series!). The VCR still had some viability, but TIVO/DVRs pretty much are eating up that potentiality at life. Groin, and
DVDs did a lot of damage in terms of low-cost, high-quality, sell-through movies, but they didn't offer any recording capabilities. You can watch FIGHT CLUB 8 billion times in pristine digital glory, but your $100 player ain't gonna record "Golden Girls" (Collector's Series!). The VCR still had some viability, but TIVO/DVRs pretty much are eating up that potentiality at life. Groin, and
#47
DVD Talk Hero
Originally posted by Matt Millheiser
I think that the emergence of TIVO and DVRs in general have done more to hasten the demise of VCRs lately than DVDs.
DVDs did a lot of damage in terms of low-cost, high-quality, sell-through movies, but they didn't offer any recording capabilities. You can watch FIGHT CLUB 8 billion times in pristine digital glory, but your $100 player ain't gonna record "Golden Girls" (Collector's Series!). The VCR still had some viability, but TIVO/DVRs pretty much are eating up that potentiality at life. Groin, and
I think that the emergence of TIVO and DVRs in general have done more to hasten the demise of VCRs lately than DVDs.
DVDs did a lot of damage in terms of low-cost, high-quality, sell-through movies, but they didn't offer any recording capabilities. You can watch FIGHT CLUB 8 billion times in pristine digital glory, but your $100 player ain't gonna record "Golden Girls" (Collector's Series!). The VCR still had some viability, but TIVO/DVRs pretty much are eating up that potentiality at life. Groin, and
#49
DVD Talk Legend
Originally posted by bboisvert
Not exactly.
What J6P brought to DVD was increased selection, decreased prices, and a huge viable format. A format where Blue Underground can release some obscure film that only a handful of people have ever heard of -- and still get shelf space at Best Buy and get carried as a selection at Columbia House.
What would have happened if they hadn't embraced DVD? See Laserdisc for an example... fewer releases, MUCH higher prices, difficult to find at retail stores, and a format that would collapse as soon as the Next Big Thing arrived.
$19.99 Tron DVD
$129.99 Tron laserdisc
$24.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite DVD
$89.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite Laserdisc
I'm not happy to return to those days. I thank the powers that be that people flock to Wal-Mart to buy the latest DVD of Zoolander or whatever.
Not exactly.
What J6P brought to DVD was increased selection, decreased prices, and a huge viable format. A format where Blue Underground can release some obscure film that only a handful of people have ever heard of -- and still get shelf space at Best Buy and get carried as a selection at Columbia House.
What would have happened if they hadn't embraced DVD? See Laserdisc for an example... fewer releases, MUCH higher prices, difficult to find at retail stores, and a format that would collapse as soon as the Next Big Thing arrived.
$19.99 Tron DVD
$129.99 Tron laserdisc
$24.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite DVD
$89.99 Night of the Living Dead Elite Laserdisc
I'm not happy to return to those days. I thank the powers that be that people flock to Wal-Mart to buy the latest DVD of Zoolander or whatever.
The entrance of DVD into the mainstream has indeed caused a significant drop in prices. Without J6P there would never be a $5 bin at Walmart... nor $1 DVDs at Target. So for that I thank them.
As long as we also acknowledge that the acceptance of DVD has also pushed in a "dumbing down" of DVD titles... more and more are being released in pan-and-scan.
#50
Originally posted by calhoun07
I've never seen one with one, or I just don't know how to use it if I have one that does it! I had a Toshiba DVD player before and now have a Malata.
I've never seen one with one, or I just don't know how to use it if I have one that does it! I had a Toshiba DVD player before and now have a Malata.




x100!