Re: Are you waiting?
- From: Farix <dhstranger@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2007 11:14:16 -0400
Abraham Evangelista wrote:
On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 00:25:46 -0000, Doug Jacobs
<djacobs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
SpaceGirl <nothespacegirlspam@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
They're not though. Both formats offer stacks of interactivity, via Java, which LD could never do. Some parts of both new formats are a *long* way ahead of DVD and LD, but nobody is really pushing what can be done yet. Some of the interactive features on the UK Matrix boxset are pretty cool... even if you didn't like the movies (I didn't) they look VERY nice. Also, as with many HD titles, they are double-sided, so have regular DVDs on the back. So until you can afford a nice HD setup, you can still collect.I agree with the other poster. They are like LD in that they're aimmed at the high-end, home theater crowd - not the mass market (despite what
I totally disagree. Nobody mass marketer in their right minds targets
enthusiasts as a primary market. They might be aiming at them with
higher quality goods in hopes of attracting them as early adopters,
but in the end it'll come down to bringing it to the mass market.
DVD players were upwards of a thousand dollars when they first hit
too, and all it took was some time, and the elimination of the
competing formats. (DIVX, LD, etc.)
It wasn't until the price dropped to about $200 per unit before DVD players began to be adopted on a large scale. Also DivX and LD never were much competition for DVD to begin with. Heck DVD killed the LD market overnight.
Walmart would have you believe!) The high end theater crowd is, for the most part, taking a 'wait and see' stance. No one wants to get stuck with yet another orphaned technology, like Betamax.
Define "orphaned". It's not as if when one of these formats wins the
discs from the competing format suddenly cease playing.
I take the meaning as that the technology is no longer supported. New players and media will not be produced. So if one or the other does break down, the owner is SOL.
In contrast, Sony has the PS3 to kick along Blu-Ray sales, and Toshiba
has scheduled a $199 HD-DVD player for the holiday season. I'll bet
after this holiday, High-Def formats will sport at least an additional
10% market share. And all bets are off when they cut off the analog
TV broadcasts here in the states in 2009.
I'm not sure that the switch from analog to digital broadcasts will affect the player market any.
From a technical standpoint, neither offers you any benefit unless youhave a HDTV, preferably a 50" or larger 1080p HDTV.
Well, neither of them will show you the MAXIMUM benefit unless on a
1080p 50" screeb. But you should be able to tell the difference
between the two even on a 720p set.
To say the least, I've not been that impressed by HDTV's performance over SDTV. For a standard that has a marginally better picture, it doesn't justify the $1,000+ price.
Farix
.
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