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I for one will be sitting out until one of these technologies is mainstreamed. The tiny sections of the new formats at the video store is quite comical and I would think they would be much farther along if they decided on one route. I am also waiting on HIdef TV for the same reason. How long until one of the formats goes away?Mike
They can't give away hd dvd http://www.engadgethd.com/2007/07/25/thieves-choose-blu-ray-over-hd-dvd-in-mass-disc-heist/
Quote from: Ears on 25 Jul 2007, 11:43 pmThey can't give away hd dvd http://www.engadgethd.com/2007/07/25/thieves-choose-blu-ray-over-hd-dvd-in-mass-disc-heist/Hey! Now that is funny! I think they know what they are going after, and what sell and don't. So, look like the battle between Blu-Ray vs HD DVD had been decided by thieves! BTW... isn't the Blu-Ray have a better spec when is come to bit-rate and capacity? Take care,Buddy
With Blockbuster going Blu-ray only in their stores, todays Target is going to sell Blu-ray players only in store news , and yesterdays Denon to make two new Blu-ray only players news....its only a matter of time.
Quote from: Ears on 25 Jul 2007, 11:00 pmWith Blockbuster going Blu-ray only in their stores, todays Target is going to sell Blu-ray players only in store news , and yesterdays Denon to make two new Blu-ray only players news....its only a matter of time.The Blockbuster exclusive is only for the US coporate owned store which is around 1400 of the 5000 US BBs. Blockbuster on-line will continue to carry HD DVD.Target is just an endcap buy by Sony that the Sony PR machine spun into something more. The X-box add-on for HD DVD is and will still be available in Target.
Having two competing formats has given us much better players. I think HD DVD was originally going to be 720p and Blu-ray was original using MPEG2 hence the need for the huge disc storage to deliver PQ using MPEG2. I think we need two formats for at least another year to fuel the price war to get player price down to mass adoption level.As for the criminals that might be a bad omen as they aren't known for smarts.
Is Sony's Blu-ray Disc technology set to suffer the same fate as Betamax VCRs?Quite possibly, judging by the news from International Herald Tribune that Toshiba - Sony's deadly rival in the high-definition disc-player war - is licensing its HD DVD techology to Chinese manufacturers for low-cost production.Although the parallels between the Betamax vs VHS war aren't precise, it's worth remembering that it was JVC's decision to widely license VHS that ended up being the deciding factor.The one certain result of Toshiba's licensing decision is that set-top HD DVD players will be available at massively lower prices than Blu-ray players.Confirming that prices of HD DVD are going to become very affordable, the AV Science Forum is reporting that Chinese manufacturer Fuh Yuan has signed a deal to make two million HD DVD players for the giant supermarket chain Walmart (owner of ASDA in the UK).If HD DVD is pitched at affordable prices and Blu-ray stays out of reach of the masses, then the Toshiba system looks certain to grab the lion's share of the worldwide market for hi-def players and win the current formats war.About the only thing that might keep Blu-ray Disc in with a shout is if it, too, gets licensed to the Chinese - and at an affordable rate.If that doesn't happen, Blu-ray Disc might stagger on for few years but looks sure to eventually go to the wall as Betamax did.The above article tells me the format war is far from over.At the same time neither format has a compelling offering in terms of titles available, even if you combine the outputs of both camps it doesn't rock my boat. I'll just sit on the fence and watch it out.
The introduction of CD and DVD formats has demonstrated how a single format can generate success, both camps decided to ignore this even when given the opportunity to agree on a single format. In the meantime prices of both formats players are falling, which can only be good news.