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LG was fighting in the courts to release a player that would handle BlueRay and HD DVD formats. I have not heard anything lately but this seemed like a winner for we the consumers. I love watching movies on my Pioneer 50" Plasma and I have really wanted a higher definition player. However, I am one of the people who bought a betamax tape players back in the days of the VHS and Beta format wars. Beta had a superior picture but Sony lost the marketing war. Bottom-line is that I ended up with a player which presented me major problems in obtaining rental movies. I do not plan to duplicate that mistake this time around. Sometime earlier this year I told friends a this format war would be settled by Blockbuster. I see Netflix mentioned in an earlier thread but I cannot see Netflix being competitive with Blockbuster if you life in an area that has Blockbuster Stores. There new program is unbelievable and I cannot imagine this deal lasting too long!Ken
Betamax recorders were also available from Toshiba, Pioneer, Aiwa and NEC, in addition to Sony.Consumers burnt by the Beta/VHS are acutely aware of competing technologies, and this is a key psychological factor preventing the average consumer embracing High Def.
Betamax recorders were also available from Toshiba, Pioneer, Aiwa and NEC, in addition to Sony.
I was back in the UK a few months ago looking at high def sets, and to be honest the gap between a good PAL 625 signal and high def was apparent but not sure if it's enough to get the average Joe excited.
Well I am betting on blu-ray to win...it sure looks like it will from my vantage point, at this point. I might buy the Sony BDP-S300 this week, but I am on the fence. I bought my Sony SACD player because it was a killer CD player and the SACD was bonus... this time I have really good (u/s) DVD players so the sony will be blu-ray only.
I just completed the audio portion of a HT setup, but still use a 27 inch direct view. From my perspective (that of a casual user) the lack of cooperation has made video way too confusing to commit serious money into for the screen, broadcast, and now HD disk sources.
I quit using Blockbuster when I saw that they only carried very current releases. I could not find many movies I was looking for that were over a year or two past the release-to-DVD date. Stock was very depleted compared to the past. I mostly watch "older" movies which I read about online. Blockbuster perhaps is now appealing to the PS3-owning households who may rent a game and also a Blu-Ray movie - not a very significant market in my eyes. I don't know anyone who owns a Blue-Ray player, or a PS3, or an HD-DVD player for that matter. I personally plan to use my Oppo DVD player in my HT system or my little Toshiba DVD player in the bedroom/on trips for the forseeable futureI'm not betting on Blu-Ray to win yet either. It is still a marketing battle, announcements do not create reality.Do Playstation 3 owners even watch Blu-Ray discs? And do they watch more Blue-Ray movies than XBox HD-DVD player owning gamers watch HD-DVD movies?Toshiba is theroreticaly about to release HD-DVD burners for laptops and PCs. What effect will this have?And who won the DVD format war? DVD-R or DVD+R
Well, I bought an HD-DVD machine today. My brother found a stack on clearance for $150 @ Wal-Mart, and at that price I couldn't say no. He hooked it up and tried it out on his hi def 42" LCD and verified that it works properly (I have no video rig right now and am a few weeks away from moving). I also think Bluray will "win" but for $150 it's a no-brainer. And even if HD-DVD folds, I will have a few years worth of enjoyment under my belt. My plan is to buy a BRD player when prices come down a bit more and continue to buy whatever I want to watch regardless of formats. Life is short and I could get hit by a bus next week- I want HD now!