It's not the royalties that are keeping blu-ray player prices high. It's still in the early adopter phase. The PS3 ensures that blu-ray has a solid future ahead. Blu-ray adoption is ahead of the adoption rate of DVD when it was first introduced.
HD-DVD was the competing standard that died after lackluster studio support.
Greg: It may seem expensive, but the 40GB Playstation 3 at $400 is a great blu-ray player, in addition to being a great games console. Pair it with an HDMI capable display and it provides glorious visuals and sound. It can fold when idle as a bonus You can throw an install of linux on as well if you wanted to explore something new.
Sony has a long history of introducing failed media formats. I've yet to see anything compelling about BluRay; there aren't even any movies released thusfar that make me want to go out and repurchase them (there were for HD-DVD).
Some people suggest that BluRay will eventually have a library of titles that rises above mediocre, but I've played a grand total of two BluRay titles in the 18 months or so that I've had a BD-ROM drive and at this point I think the right thing to do is to hold off until the drives and media get real price parity with DVD, or someone brings a workable High Definition download service to market.
I suspect the latter will happen before the former, particularly given Sony's control over the BluRay format.
Sony has a long history of introducing failed media formats. I've yet to see anything compelling about BluRay; there aren't even any movies released thusfar that make me want to go out and repurchase them (there were for HD-DVD).
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I suspect the latter will happen before the former, particularly given Sony's control over the BluRay format.
I've noticed that Blu-ray isn't exactly flying. Prices for players are still 4-6 times a DVD player. Do you think Sony will kill it by charging too much for royalties?
Sure wish the price of BR recorders would come down faster. DVD±RW media will only hold 215min of Standard Def. video of decent quality/bit rate, and that's for dual layer, assuming you have a player that will not fumble up on playing those.As previously predicted, prices for Blu-ray disc players are expected to fall below the $200 mark, perhaps even as low as $150 per unit. Sales are likely hurt by the high price of Blu-ray movies, which are often more than $30. Glasgow himself says discounted prices of the movies themselves could jump-start sales of Blu-ray players. Compared to sales of DVD players and recorders, which totaled some 142 million in 2007, Blu-ray has a long way to go.
Glasgow also mentions the TV industry is not skyrocketing as hoped. "There are less consumers... willing to spend money. I believe 80 percent of that is just consumer confidence," he says. Glasgow believes the slow market will allow established companies like Sony that have access to credit take the time to develop new products for the long run while competitors struggle.
The cuts to permanent employees represent about 5 percent of Sony's total regular workforce of about 160,000.... The news brings renewed difficulty for Sony, which has improved substantially since taking on Sir Howard Stringer in 2005 and undergoing a major revitalization effort in the years since. Most of the company's impending difficulties are believed to stem from a plunge in demand for its BRAVIA HDTVs as home users try to save money, though the company has yet to truly be successful with the PlayStation 3 or the accompanying Blu-ray format and has typically been one of the smaller players among major PC vendors.
What are you talking about? HD-DVD had all the same DRM stuff as Blu-Ray.In short I am extremely unhappy that HD DVD lost, it was free of this stuff and technically a better system too, even if it did have higher hardware requirements in stand alone players. At least the current BD players came around and saw the light there.
What are you talking about? HD-DVD had all the same DRM stuff as Blu-Ray.
They both have the same AACS protection. Both require HDCP on your display. Now BD also has BD+, but that has been broken wide open too.Not really. HD was broken much sooner, and permanently. It may have claimed to have DRM, but it didn't stop me, and that is why I chose it. Now that BR has been re-sealed, I have once again put off making the switch. If they had left it alone, I would already have a 1080P projector and be buying a few BR disks a month. As it is, I have a BR drive for my computer, one movie, and never bother. If I buy a movie in DVD and want to see it in 1080P on my LCD I download it.
I'm renting from Netflix. I stopped buying DVDs several years ago. I bought a few HD-DVDs in the various closeouts for about $5 each. I've bought a few Blu-Ray discs, but have tried to be very picky about what movies I'm buying, and not pay more than ~$10 each for them.I don't know about actually buying the disks one way or the other, but I am still buying DVD. I am thinking about upgrading netflix for the few BD movies they do have though. May consider one of the HD satellite systems eventually too.
Digital Playground announces its 100th adult Blu-ray release
by Darren Murph, posted Mar 24th 2009 at 11:39PM
Make no mistake, the crew at Digital Playground has been busy. Real busy. Since going Blu-ray exclusive last June, the famed adult film studio has pushed out a staggering amount of titles on the high-def format. A full 100 of 'em, in fact. The company's Bad Girls will be its 100th Blu-ray release, a 100-minute feature (fitting, no?) that is slated to ship on March 31st. 'Course, you'll be paying a $30 premium for the BD edition over the $29 DVD, but how else will you truly be able to appreciate that RED ONE footage?
[Via I4U News]
And the answer is NO.Someone is still replying? I think we know the answer by now. :mrgrn:
I hope that the new server has a flood control feature.
The forum is configure with zero seconds of wait time in between posting so you could post as many replies as you wanted. We haven't had an issue with this, but I can put in a 5 second wait (or any amount) for flood control if you think there is an issue here?
You may prevent your users from flooding your forum with posts by activating this feature.
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Yes, but I must the last person not to have a player BD yet. Of course I have no HD TV sets so it would be pointless to collect BDs that cannot be watched.
I have two LG HD-DVD/Blu-Ray drives.
Both. One is in my HTPC which is connected to my 57" RP-CRT Hitachi in my great room via HDMI. The other is in my Q6600 (office PC) which is also connected to the 52" Samsung LCD in my office via HDMI.That is for TV or the computer?