View Poll Results: Almost 1 year after HDDVD demise where do you stand?
Still an HD owner, no BD yet




14
11.38%
Had but disposed of HD format, no BD yet




1
0.81%
Disposed of HD format, now or still own BD




12
9.76%
Still own both HD and BD formats




96
78.05%
Voters: 123. You may not vote on this poll
How many are still HD-DVD only?
#26
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Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I was HD DVD only for about a month, when the format was killed. I also went to the Red side because of the price of the player, though I also did think that HD DVD would eventually win ...
However, most of the movies I was into were only available on Blu-ray at the time (December 2007). I had always planned on buying whatever I was interested in on HD DVD if it was available on HD DVD, and on DVD otherwise. Pulling the plug on the format in January radically altered my plans. I figured might as well buy a PS3 asap so I don't blow any more money on DVDs that I would eventually feel the need to replace.
My one regret is not returning my HD DVD copy of Bladerunner for the Blu-ray version when I had the chance. Don't know why I didn't, it was still unopened and well within the return period. Oh well ...
However, most of the movies I was into were only available on Blu-ray at the time (December 2007). I had always planned on buying whatever I was interested in on HD DVD if it was available on HD DVD, and on DVD otherwise. Pulling the plug on the format in January radically altered my plans. I figured might as well buy a PS3 asap so I don't blow any more money on DVDs that I would eventually feel the need to replace.
My one regret is not returning my HD DVD copy of Bladerunner for the Blu-ray version when I had the chance. Don't know why I didn't, it was still unopened and well within the return period. Oh well ...
#27
DVD Talk Limited Edition
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I'm hanging on to Phantom of the Opera, on account of the Dolby TruHD soundtrack, along with several imports not yet out on BD. Also, I believe we will never see Streets of Fire (a personal favorite) on Blu, as it is such a niche movie with limited appeal.
Interesting. I wasn't aware of a difference in bitrate on certain Paramount titles. Is there a list somewhere, or a thread which would provide a summary of these titles?
#28
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I was HD DVD exclusive until Toshiba was forced to throw in the towel. I picked up a Blu-Ray player right after that, but I still have my HD DVD player and all of my discs, they aren't going anywhere. In fact, I still have more HD DVD's than I do Blu-Rays.
Last edited by Maxflier; 01-07-09 at 03:52 PM.
#29
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
+1
I'm hanging on to Phantom of the Opera, on account of the Dolby TruHD soundtrack, along with several imports not yet out on BD. Also, I believe we will never see Streets of Fire (a personal favorite) on Blu, as it is such a niche movie with limited appeal.
Interesting. I wasn't aware of a difference in bitrate on certain Paramount titles. Is there a list somewhere, or a thread which would provide a summary of these titles?
I'm hanging on to Phantom of the Opera, on account of the Dolby TruHD soundtrack, along with several imports not yet out on BD. Also, I believe we will never see Streets of Fire (a personal favorite) on Blu, as it is such a niche movie with limited appeal.
Interesting. I wasn't aware of a difference in bitrate on certain Paramount titles. Is there a list somewhere, or a thread which would provide a summary of these titles?
#30
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
I would never argue Blu won because of tech. That's not how these things ever get decided it seems. Still, it's hard to argue with the fact that lossless is now on all Uni titles. There is something to be said for the extra capacity. Not to mention, IMO, while 30GB may have been plenty right now for most films, you want to have room to grow and do more. Seems like HD DVD was already butting it's head against the ceiling. I am hoping higher capacity can equal more longevity for Blu...
So, I don't buy the idea that lossless releases on BD are automatically superior to DD+ versions on HD DVD, much less that it is due to space limitations. (A Dolby TrueHD track just doesn't take all that much space.)
I'm as guilty of it as anybody. I've spent two years looking for an affordable BD player that is profile 1.1 and has well-implemented multi-channel analog out for my older receiver. Even though I "know" that it would sound no different than if I used the legacy S/PDIF on my system.

Last edited by lizard; 01-07-09 at 02:32 PM.
#31
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I still have both. Only recently has my BD collection surpassed my HD DVD collection. I've been in no hurry to upgrade unless I find a film on BD with better audio and at a reasonable price.
#32
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Somewhere on AVS...I think its about 30 or so Paramount titles with "superior" audio on HD and the same amount from Warner (TrueHD tracks/DD+ for HD DVD and basic DD5.1 for the BD). Only one title has been re-released with better audio from Warner and that is Superman Returns. All the Paramount catch-ups have TrueHD as well.
#33
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I'm in the same boat. Have more BDs as of December. I'm not getting rid of my HD-dvds or upgrading them unless a much better version comes out.
#34
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Lossless and good PQ were certainly possible on HD DVD, as numerous releases showed. That said, the perceived superiority of lossless is mostly hype. I know: HERESY! How dare he say that? I've looked into it and the reports I have read find that most people can't tell the difference between DD640, dts core and lossless on reference audio systems. When it comes to lossless versus DD+, forget it. With the exception of serious audiophiles, those who claim to hear a difference are experiencing a placebo effect, unless the tracks are derived from a different master mix, as may occasionally happen. Most people don't even bother to volume match the different audio codecs when comparing them, much less have the capability to do a blind or double blind test.
So, I don't buy the idea that lossless releases on BD are automatically superior to DD+ versions on HD DVD, much less that it is due to space limitations. (A Dolby TrueHD track just doesn't take all that much space.)
I'm as guilty of it as anybody. I've spent two years looking for an affordable BD player that is profile 1.1 and has well-implemented multi-channel analog out for my older receiver. Even though I "know" that it would sound no different than if I used the legacy S/PDIF on my system.
So, I don't buy the idea that lossless releases on BD are automatically superior to DD+ versions on HD DVD, much less that it is due to space limitations. (A Dolby TrueHD track just doesn't take all that much space.)
I'm as guilty of it as anybody. I've spent two years looking for an affordable BD player that is profile 1.1 and has well-implemented multi-channel analog out for my older receiver. Even though I "know" that it would sound no different than if I used the legacy S/PDIF on my system.

As far as comparisons, I won't argue most people will hear the difference. But that's not a reason to not include it. What I do like is I believe lossless requires less human intervention, and this has less chance for human error creating a poor audio track. Lossless *is* transparent to the master. Lossy may be transparent to the master, provided it's encoded correctly.
#35
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Regardless of the value of lossless, my point is it simply wasn't being done on Uni's HD DVD releases, and now they are using it. That's because of capacity. It's only been their bare bones shorter movies that have come out on BD-25 which have lossless. Conversely, longer movies on HD-30 used DD+. It's just one example of how added capacity gives you the freedom to expand in the future.
As far as comparisons, I won't argue most people will hear the difference. But that's not a reason to not include it. What I do like is I believe lossless requires less human intervention, and this has less chance for human error creating a poor audio track. Lossless *is* transparent to the master. Lossy may be transparent to the master, provided it's encoded correctly.
As far as comparisons, I won't argue most people will hear the difference. But that's not a reason to not include it. What I do like is I believe lossless requires less human intervention, and this has less chance for human error creating a poor audio track. Lossless *is* transparent to the master. Lossy may be transparent to the master, provided it's encoded correctly.
Last edited by Gizmo; 01-07-09 at 03:39 PM.
#36
DVD Talk Legend
Thread Starter
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I was stating from my techno-geek side...as in the larger size capacity for Blu would allow for certain advantages. But at the same time, it took Blu forever to get any kind of interactivity where HD already had it. So one part of me looks at the Blu side and sees that and the other part of me looks at HD and sees something else.
I went Blu first but jumped on HD last November when the prices started dropping to the point of "why not?".
Very unscientific however my first setup was a 47" Phillips LCD with a SONY s300 @1080P and an A3 @1080i. For the most part I found HD looked as good if not better than my Blu discs and the Toshiba seemed to upconvert better also. Even though I went Blu and was technically format neutral, I preferred HD.
#37
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Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
A handful of the HD-DVDs had superior transfers as well. Paramount often used AVC/MPEG-4 for the HD-DVD and MPEG-2 for the Blu-ray on their early releases, and some came out looking better on the former. I've heard people say that Coming To America is one example.
#38
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Unfortunately WB has been an embarrassment on audio no matter what format. At least they didn't screw over the Batman films.
Last edited by bunkaroo; 01-07-09 at 05:26 PM.
#39
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
With DVD, I bought 100+ DVDs almost immediately (a few months). With HDM, I was much more selective from the getgo. I bought the A2 in January 2007 and a PS3 soon afterwards. By the end of the year, I had <20 HD DVDs and <10 BDs. When HD DVD folded, I sold my A2 and the movies and slowly grew my BD collection (still <30).
#40
DVD Talk Legend
Thread Starter
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
With DVD, I bought 100+ DVDs almost immediately (a few months). With HDM, I was much more selective from the getgo. I bought the A2 in January 2007 and a PS3 soon afterwards. By the end of the year, I had <20 HD DVDs and <10 BDs. When HD DVD folded, I sold my A2 and the movies and slowly grew my BD collection (still <30).
#41
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Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Still have more than twice as many HD DVDs than Blu...I'll keep them til they rot. Forbidden Planet, American Werewolf in London, Dune, Star Trek TOS, The Thing, Army of Darkness, Big Lebowski, Children of Men, Dante's Peak, etc etc
#42
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I bought more HD DVDs in 2008 than Blu-rays so that says something. Still have half my collection in HD DVD, but when BDs drop in price I may start replacing them. There is honestly little reason though since most of the BDs coming out have little advantage besides the lossless sound. As much as I want that I'm not upgrading an HD DVD for it.
I have 3 devices now that play HD DVD so I'm pretty secure with holding on to them.
I have 3 devices now that play HD DVD so I'm pretty secure with holding on to them.
#43
DVD Talk Legend
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Laziness is still the biggest issue. For every great Disney release we get lazy crap from other studios with Warner at the top of the lazy list. For all the talk in the beginning about the higher bitrates BD could produce we are still not seeing many discs pushing those limits.
Last edited by darkside; 01-07-09 at 09:46 PM.
#44
DVD Talk Hero
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I bought more HD DVDs in 2008 than Blu-rays so that says something. Still have half my collection in HD DVD, but when BDs drop in price I may start replacing them. There is honestly little reason though since most of the BDs coming out have little advantage besides the lossless sound. As much as I want that I'm not upgrading an HD DVD for it.
I have 3 devices now that play HD DVD so I'm pretty secure with holding on to them.
I have 3 devices now that play HD DVD so I'm pretty secure with holding on to them.

#45
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
I was purple, but rooting red. I thought that HD-DVD's less-expensive replication and licensing would lead to a faster adoption of HDM, and a greater selection of indie-fare. Also, it had less-obtrusive DRM.
#47
DVD Talk Hall of Fame
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Though I've had a Blu-ray player since well before the format war ended, I still have my HD A35 and the 25 or so HD DVDs in my collection. I recently bought The Thing on HD DVD, since it is superior to the BD. The A35 is still my preferred upconverter for DVD. I have no plans to get rid of it or my discs anytime soon.
That being said, I've had my 40GB PS3 for over a year and it is definitely the best overall media player I've ever owned. I'm really loving Blu-ray and am slowly building my collection, which is right at 25 also.
That being said, I've had my 40GB PS3 for over a year and it is definitely the best overall media player I've ever owned. I'm really loving Blu-ray and am slowly building my collection, which is right at 25 also.
#48
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Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
Price was one consideration for me to choose HD-DVD. Stand-alone Blu-Ray players were expensive, and the 360 add-on was an excellent cost-effective method of jumping on the HD bandwagon. The PS3 was(and still is) overpriced for a gaming system, especially since Sony has decided that a disc format is more important than what is encoded on said discs...
For now I will remain HD only. I currently have about 30 titles, but I'm buying on a regular basis now. I have no problem buying titles for a dead format, because they still work, look great, and are cheap. I bought an A20 off of eBay a few weeks ago for $42 shipped and use it as my primary player.
Since I have decided to quit buying SD-DVDs(other than TV shows), I will make the jump to Blu sometime this year, probably with a stand-alone player.
For now I will remain HD only. I currently have about 30 titles, but I'm buying on a regular basis now. I have no problem buying titles for a dead format, because they still work, look great, and are cheap. I bought an A20 off of eBay a few weeks ago for $42 shipped and use it as my primary player.
Since I have decided to quit buying SD-DVDs(other than TV shows), I will make the jump to Blu sometime this year, probably with a stand-alone player.
#49
Re: How many are still HD-DVD only?
1) I still buy HD DVDs when I can. It's getting difficult, because I'm almost at 300 HD DVDs, and I pretty much have everything on the domestic front. It's the foreign titles which I'd like to get but they are still rather expensive. I think Europe had a more solid HD DVD acceptance than the US did, considering how many titles they have versus the US.
2) Space can become an issue, and I think the extra 5 GB on a BD-25 can really make a difference if studios have the intelligence to use it, such as adding a lossless soundtrack which can easily take up around 3-5 GB. Of course, as we know, studios have to use their smarts, and some are really retarded When it comes to using Blu-ray's additional space. Also, with the new features and higher bitrates for movies, an HD-30 disc would probably be inferior, and a BD-50 allows for much more room to play around. But again, the studios have to take advantage of it. And who knows what the HD-DVD equivalents would have been, but it did seem at the time, Blu-ray discs had more space to begin with, and studios who were red, just crammed stuff on the HD-30's and HD-15's. Luckily, the picture is still good. Read between the lines on that one (i.e., how your current DVD collection could be looking several times better if only VC-1 encoded on a typical DVD DL disc--price would be the same...only your video would be several times better; audio is another issue, however).
3) Replacing HD DVD titles with Blu-ray? Probably none of my HD DVD titles will be replaced. King Kong comes to mind, but technically, I won't be replacing it. I'll keep the HD DVD version as well. Some titles might be better if a studio relaxes a video codec, but I won't hold my breath. But if reports say it is better, I will get the Blu-ray version. I think we have enough titles on HD DVD which are superior to the Blu-ray versions due to studios playing around being stupid, so I don't plan on getting rid of anything.
2) Space can become an issue, and I think the extra 5 GB on a BD-25 can really make a difference if studios have the intelligence to use it, such as adding a lossless soundtrack which can easily take up around 3-5 GB. Of course, as we know, studios have to use their smarts, and some are really retarded When it comes to using Blu-ray's additional space. Also, with the new features and higher bitrates for movies, an HD-30 disc would probably be inferior, and a BD-50 allows for much more room to play around. But again, the studios have to take advantage of it. And who knows what the HD-DVD equivalents would have been, but it did seem at the time, Blu-ray discs had more space to begin with, and studios who were red, just crammed stuff on the HD-30's and HD-15's. Luckily, the picture is still good. Read between the lines on that one (i.e., how your current DVD collection could be looking several times better if only VC-1 encoded on a typical DVD DL disc--price would be the same...only your video would be several times better; audio is another issue, however).
3) Replacing HD DVD titles with Blu-ray? Probably none of my HD DVD titles will be replaced. King Kong comes to mind, but technically, I won't be replacing it. I'll keep the HD DVD version as well. Some titles might be better if a studio relaxes a video codec, but I won't hold my breath. But if reports say it is better, I will get the Blu-ray version. I think we have enough titles on HD DVD which are superior to the Blu-ray versions due to studios playing around being stupid, so I don't plan on getting rid of anything.