Blu-ray Wins!

R. Richard

Literotica Guru
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Jul 24, 2003
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OK Literotica people, the war is over. The HD DVD format will go the way of the eight-track car stereo. The more expensive Blu-ray won. If you are buying new stereo of computer equipment, HD DVD will be cheap but obsolete. Invest in Blu-ray for the future. Comment?

In DVD wars, winner on U.S. Main St is Blu-ray

NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Toshiba Corp may not have officially given up on its HD DVD format for high definition DVDs, but the word on the street on Sunday was that rival Sony Corp's Blu-ray had won the war.
"Blu-ray won. It's fantastic and I trust Sony," said one customer, William, browsing the DVD player aisles at the Best Buy Co Inc store on New York's Fifth Avenue.

"Blu-rays are flying off the shelves, but we have to order if you want HD," said Tania Bonetti, who works in the home theater section of the store, where DVD players cost from $399 to almost $1,000.

Another sales assistant, Michael, said: "We still sell HD DVD's but we are telling customers that Blu-ray won."

And in a sign that Main Street has already anointed Sony the winner, Blu-ray disc prices were slashed drastically at both Best Buy and at the next-door Circuit City Stores Inc, another of America's huge consumer electronics stores.
Both stores' fliers for their U.S. President's Day sales prominently featured select movie titles such as "300", "Ocean's Thirteen" and "The Departed" in Blu-ray format.

"Step into Hi-Def with Blu-ray," said Circuit City's ad, listing discs at $24.99 -- up to $10 less than normal. The ad did not even mention HD DVD format.
Best Buy had the same deals, with some Blu-ray titles as low as $14.99. "I have never seen Blu-rays on sale like this before," said Bonetti at Best Buy.

On Saturday, a Toshiba source told Reuters the Japanese company is planning to give up on its HD DVD format, conceding defeat to Blu-ray.

Separate consortiums led by Toshiba and Sony have battled for years to set the standard for the next-generation DVD and compatible video equipment.
The war, often compared to the Betamax-VHS battle in the 1980s, was blamed for slowing the growth of what is expected to be a multibillion dollar high-definition DVD industry.

Stephanie Prange, editor in chief of Home Media Magazine, said the war's end should boost high-def DVD adoption. "It would definitely help. The two formats, though both were good, have confused consumers and prevented them from moving into the high-def future," she said.

Prange said Sony, which lost its Betamax bid, had its ducks in a row for the current format war. It lined up early studio support and included a Blu-ray player in its new PlayStation 3 video game system, creating an instant customer base.

"This time I guess they learned from their mistakes," Prange said of Sony.
Toshiba suffered several setbacks in recent weeks, including Friday's announcement by U.S. retailing giant Wal-Mart Stores Inc that it would abandon the HD DVD format and only stock Blu-ray movies.

"Toshiba's plan all along was to be the low-price version. If Wal-Mart isn't going to sell their players, who will?" Prange said, noting that Wal-Mart calls itself the low-price leader.

Akeem, the Circuit City sales assistant, said he was still selling lots of players in each format. And for customers who did not necessarily care about the format, there is a model by LG, selling for $599, that plays both HD and Blu-ray.
And Best Buy's Michael said some people were buying Toshiba units, even though they know Blu-ray will be the format of the future. "They figure that HD discs will become cheaper."
 
I watch a lot of movies but was certainly holding out until one of them won. This past summer I bought a widescreen LCD tv and love it.
 
I have a ps3, which plays blu-ray, but I haven't yet tried it out. I did rent a blu-ray movie, I just haven't watched it yet. I have a DVD player that upscales to hi-def, so it will be interesting to see if there's much difference between it and the blu-ray.
 
I watch a lot of movies but was certainly holding out until one of them won. This past summer I bought a widescreen LCD tv and love it.

Good plan! It is dangerous to try to predict the winner when two different technolgies compete. Better to wait for one or he other to emerge.
 
I have a ps3, which plays blu-ray, but I haven't yet tried it out. I did rent a blu-ray movie, I just haven't watched it yet. I have a DVD player that upscales to hi-def, so it will be interesting to see if there's much difference between it and the blu-ray.

Reviews indicate that the HD DVD offers better viewing quality. However,
Standard DVD:
Disc capacity 4.7GB (single layer)
8.5GB (dual layer)

HD DVD:
15GB (single layer)
30GB (dual layer)
51GB (prototype triple layer)

Blu-ray:
25GB (single layer)
50GB (dual layer)
100GB (prototype quad layer)
 
Duly noted.

Now that that's settled, what will HD do to my porn?
 
Duly noted.

Now that that's settled, what will HD do to my porn?

High Density DVDs will show sharper, clearer pictures, including better colors. What pictures are is information. The more information that is put on the disk, the better the viewed picture. The Blu-ray disks have at least 10 times the capacity of a standard DVD. Thus, pictures can be stored in uncompressed format and will view better.
 
Am I the only person that doesn't need his movies in anymore high definition than DVDs already were?
 
Reviews indicate that the HD DVD offers better viewing quality. However,
Standard DVD:
Disc capacity 4.7GB (single layer)
8.5GB (dual layer)

HD DVD:
15GB (single layer)
30GB (dual layer)
51GB (prototype triple layer)

Blu-ray:
25GB (single layer)
50GB (dual layer)
100GB (prototype quad layer)

Politics and lobbyists and commercial elephants.
 
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Anyone who has been following this would have seen that Walmart came out on Friday and said they were dropping HD as of March 1. Now we see that Blue-Ray has been declared the "winner." Walmart stors and on-line is just about the largest seller of DVD's in the U.S. That put the lid on the coffin for HD and nailed it down tight.

It's sad that a skum-sucking, low-life operation like Walmart has enough muscle to determine how we are going to live and what we, as consumers, can buy.
 
Am I the only person that doesn't need his movies in anymore high definition than DVDs already were?

As each advance in video or picture display occurs, many people don't see the need to upgrade. However, skip a couple of upgrades and you suddenly see why they upgraded.
 
Anyone who has been following this would have seen that Walmart came out on Friday and said they were dropping HD as of March 1. Now we see that Blue-Ray has been declared the "winner." Walmart stors and on-line is just about the largest seller of DVD's in the U.S. That put the lid on the coffin for HD and nailed it down tight.

It's sad that a skum-sucking, low-life operation like Walmart has enough muscle to determine how we are going to live and what we, as consumers, can buy.

You only say that because they treat their employees like expendable goods and their buyers could give the Mafia lessons in strongarm pressure.
 
As each advance in video or picture display occurs, many people don't see the need to upgrade. However, skip a couple of upgrades and you suddenly see why they upgraded.

I understood VHS to DVD. That made perfect sense. But this DVD to hi-def DVD just doesn't sound right. I really don't care.
 
Okay, I'm watching the blu-ray movie right now, and I really don't see any difference in quality between it and the upscaling my DVD player already does.
 
Does this mean all my standard DVDs will become obsolete?
Cos that is fucking absurd. It's taken me years (and quite a bit of money) to replace my videos with DVDs.

I am gonna be *seriously* pissed off if I then have to replace all those DVDs.
 
Yes...

Anyone who has been following this would have seen that Walmart came out on Friday and said they were dropping HD as of March 1. Now we see that Blue-Ray has been declared the "winner." Walmart stors and on-line is just about the largest seller of DVD's in the U.S. That put the lid on the coffin for HD and nailed it down tight.

It's sad that a skum-sucking, low-life operation like Walmart has enough muscle to determine how we are going to live and what we, as consumers, can buy.

I'll second that comment!
 
Again, yes...

Does this mean all my standard DVDs will become obsolete?
Cos that is fucking absurd. It's taken me years (and quite a bit of money) to replace my videos with DVDs.

I am gonna be *seriously* pissed off if I then have to replace all those DVDs.

I'll definitely second this one!
 
High Density DVDs will show sharper, clearer pictures, including better colors. What pictures are is information. The more information that is put on the disk, the better the viewed picture. The Blu-ray disks have at least 10 times the capacity of a standard DVD. Thus, pictures can be stored in uncompressed format and will view better.
Yeah I know all that. I've watched a lot of blu-ray movies at one of the magazines I work for, a hifi and home cinema periodical who always have all the latest stuff. And with a 42+ inch HD ready plasma TV, movies with high quality photography, benefits from it. Sportscasts are pretty neat in HD too. Like golf, if you're into that sort of thing. You can actually see the ball now.

Other stuff, like HD newscasts, or movies with a different kind of cinematography, left me pretty unimpressed. Saw Blood Diamond the other week, and it was a better experience on DVD. It looked to...clean and neat in HD.

So what will it do to my porn, other than draw attention to the fact that Tera Patrick has nasal hair?

Unkess I can actually jump into the screen and participate, I don't see how this is an improvement there.
 
Does this mean all my standard DVDs will become obsolete?
Cos that is fucking absurd. It's taken me years (and quite a bit of money) to replace my videos with DVDs.

I am gonna be *seriously* pissed off if I then have to replace all those DVDs.
Nah, that probably won't happen. Disks are the same physical format, and any blu-ray or HDDVD player I've seen so far can read DVD, and even CD's.

And hey, you can even now still get a new VHS player, a decade after dvd was introduced.
 
Does this mean all my standard DVDs will become obsolete?
Cos that is fucking absurd. It's taken me years (and quite a bit of money) to replace my videos with DVDs.

I am gonna be *seriously* pissed off if I then have to replace all those DVDs.

No. It just means that if you have a Blue-Ray player, you should only buy Blue-Ray disks from now on. Otherwise, I see no problem with keeping your old movies on their old disks. DVDs are only slightly behind with visual quality to the point that non-tech snobs won't even notice.
 
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