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I had VHS tapes. Then I had a lot of Laserdiscs.. Then I bought a LOT LOT of DVDs.. and 'threw away thousands of dollars worth of laserdiscs..Then along came BluRay. No way.. I HAVE all the movies i ever wanted in DVD. And with an upsampling player that is all I 'have to have'. No way way am I going to rebuy anything on Bluray.And THAT is the crux of the BluRay problem. Folks DID rebuy everything on DVD. And then Sony 'Assumed' everyone would also rebuy everything on BluRay? Not gonna happen. BluRay is NOT a big enough jump in quality to make that happen.IMO BluRay was a mistake in the first place. Not a big enough jump in quality to make EVERYONE (like me) say HolyCow I gotta have that!Now with DVD, the minute I saw a DVD on a HiDef TV and compared it to a laserdisc it was a no brainer, I HAD to have the DVDs.. BluRay. NO. it is hardly any better than upsampled DVD.Sony should have just waited.. The HD-DVD would have been fun for a few folks but it would have failed even without the BluRay competition because it too was nothing better in a meaningful way.They SHOULD have waited for the next generation and 4x 4000 level.. Then they could have cleaned house.IMO CD, and DVD ruined all the big companies because they made billions on those product introductions. And expected to do it over again, and again. Not gonna happen.
I agree with you about the audio, streaming audio in most cases sounds horribly compressed. After watching the first three seasons of Game of Thrones on bluray, watching season 4 on HBOGo has been a true testament to the mediocrity of AQ and PQ of streaming.However, HDDVD and Bluray equal in everyway? Come on, HDDVD was a deserved flop. The format held 20 GBs less then bluray. Equality? Studios were already cutting corners with HDDVD releases a year after release. Remember Transformers? They had to put a second rate DD+ audio track, instead of lossless because they ran out of space. Furthermore, they generally used low bit rate VC-1 compression to conserve space, which, IMHO, does not compare to the higher bit rate stuff we see on bluray today. Do you think HDDVD could have ever fathomed providing us with a 3D or high PQ transfer with lossless audio? Never.
Hahaaaa...perhaps I made an overly generalized statement. But for all practical purposes, I stick by my thinking. I won't get into the reasons for fear of re-opening the BD vs. HD-DVD wounds. The Transformers thing? ... There were BD discs that did not offer TruHD as well. Still, I get your point. I think mine is still valid regarding costs, however. Competition makes for a better deal for consumers. Are you happy with the current state of affairs regarding BD prices? And I'd surely like to have 15 buck BD discs (still) than TruHD on Transformers.
Don't forget Netflix and Red Box still rent physical media, though I read recently Red Box plans to reduce its footprint this year.Bargains abound buying used on Amazon and you'll find the same titles usually cheaper on eBay because Amazon artificially restricts who can sell Bluray / DVD through their site to keep used prices much higher in some cases (think deals for content on Amazon streaming had any influence?)In many places, used media stores (CD / DVD / Bluray) remain great places to buy as well, where you can rekindle a connection with leafing through stacks of physical media.These are the antidotes to silly new prices, though as others noted some new titles drop in price quickly after release or are available very competitively when pre-ordered.
***I don't typically rewatch anything.
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
..."partner up" with somebody to split the cost of a BluRay. One of you gets the disc, the other one gets the download code...
Blu-ray is a ways from dying
Sales figures say otherwise. It will become a niche consumer medium with at best a second life as backup storage for servers, etc.
Isn't 4k rising to any degree of prominence somewhat undermined by the very fact that blu-ray is struggling? I mean if folks are choosing the convenience of streaming over the higher video (and audio) quality already available on BR, I find it a bit unlikely that they'd run out and shell out $$$ for hardware upgrades in high enough numbers to drive for higher res. Some will, obviously, but I'm not sure it's going to see mainstream adoption any time soon. Particularly when the entire reason that streaming lags BR already is bandwidth. (of course, I see 4k as a solution in search of a problem as far as video is concerned, being pushed on us by the electronics industry as opposed to being driven by any real grassroots demand)
Awhile back, didn't Microsoft "predict/proclaim" that the bluray format was basically DOA?