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As for streaming equaling the quality of Bluray, I personally find that hard to believe. Maybe on a 32 inch set you watch from across the room, but on anything bigger or closer, it's no where close. See, eg:
About to put even more pressure on physical disc formats, Gray said, is the High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) video compression standard, which doubles the amount of data that can currently be streamed while keeping the "high-definition" format. HEVC can support 8K Ultra-High Definition content with resolutions up to 8192x4320
What kills me about Bluray is that they package everything with DVD, Bluray, and electronic file. I simply want the Bluray. Just sell me the Bluray disk for $10 and forget about the other crap.
Actually those of us with kids like having multiple formats included. Blu-rays for the home player, DVDs for the road trips and streaming for those times when you're waiting at a public place and the kids are acting up and you need something to distract them on your iPhone.
There could be both, solely Bluray for those of us who want it and three formats for others. For some reason, there isn't.I have a three year old and a six year old, but try not to use electronic devices for the kids. For instance, we have no (that is, zero) kid iPad apps. We have let them watch DVDs on the iPad for very long trips in the car, but it's been rare. We're the family at the table in the restaurant with a "dinner bag" filled with crayons, legos, books, etc., and we don't let them use electronic devices. Maybe when they're teens or tweens, but until then, we prefer to engage them in conversation.
There could be both, solely Bluray for those of us who want it and three formats for others. For some reason, there isn't.
One thing not mentioned here...streaming AUDIO...in my experience is awful and not at all up to even DD disc standards. The bandwidth just isn't there for quality streaming in anything I've seen. I do see that there is a 4K streaming service model in the winds. Perhaps then the video will wow us...although there are still bandwidth limitations everywhere. And will signals be compressed...thus compression artifacts in gear? Netflix is talking 4K and can't even meet 1080p standards.Dunno, guys. I'm sticking with BD. And oh yeah...I think we all lost when BD killed off HD-DVD, which was in every way the equal of bluray. No competition = higher prices. (Note BD discs went directly from <~$15 to $30.)A link ... http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/everything-need-know-streaming-ultra-hd-2014/#!OGUfd