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Hd Dvd Dead?
http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...8&forumid=16&s=
Is it true????
yup.
http://www.highdefdigest.com/
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| Originally posted by chinamon yup. http://www.highdefdigest.com/ |
listen here's the bottom line, HD-DVD didn't work hard and fast enough to keep up with the highdef market. No matter what system you bought for bluray it would adapt to do just about anything the format is made to do, where as HD-DVD didn't, I mean only certain players did certain things, I think the thing that killed it the most was it had a cheaper add on for 360 but it was quite useless as it only did 1080i, no HDMI support, never played TrueHD which was really the only lossless format out there it supported and it wasn't even on this.....what did they expect? even a PS3 will do just about as much as my BD30 will and that is a high end player.

for the first time in my life i have made the right choice.
blu-ray ftw!

LMAO perfect response.
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Originally posted by DarkAngel |
Yup! It's pretty much dead! Once Toshiba officially leaves then look for the other companies to start jumping over to Blu-Ray!
I hope there are tons of HD DVD sales! Can't wait to pick up some awesome bargains.
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| Originally posted by chinamon for the first time in my life i have made the right choice. blu-ray ftw! |
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| Originally posted by pete242 listen here's the bottom line, HD-DVD didn't work hard and fast enough to keep up with the highdef market. No matter what system you bought for bluray it would adapt to do just about anything the format is made to do, where as HD-DVD didn't, I mean only certain players did certain things, I think the thing that killed it the most was it had a cheaper add on for 360 but it was quite useless as it only did 1080i, no HDMI support, never played TrueHD which was really the only lossless format out there it supported and it wasn't even on this.....what did they expect? even a PS3 will do just about as much as my BD30 will and that is a high end player. |
I will never pay for overpriced non complete players, especially for a technology coming from Sony.
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| Originally posted by exstasie I hope there are tons of HD DVD sales! Can't wait to pick up some awesome bargains. |
does this mean that regular DVDs are on their way out in favour of BluRay now too?
I"m sick of all the changes. Nothing is in place for more than 5 years before something else comes out that forces you to re-purchase everything. Goddamn capitalist fucks the lot of them. There's going to be a revolution one day I tell you....
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| Originally posted by Dj Smitty20 does this mean that regular DVDs are on their way out in favour of BluRay now too? I"m sick of all the changes. Nothing is in place for more than 5 years before something else comes out that forces you to re-purchase everything. Goddamn capitalist fucks the lot of them. There's going to be a revolution one day I tell you.... |
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| Originally posted by Cro_Addict sketchy post |
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| Originally posted by Dj Smitty20 sarcasm dude. Anyway, don't you get sick of the constant "ok you have to buy this now because it's new and cutting edge". "BUY IT BUY IT BUY IT NOW!!"? It's getting to be a bit much if you ask me. But then again, I haven't purchased a DVD in close to two years, although I did get the complete Kubrick collection for Christmas. Are regular DVDs soon to be obsolete too? |
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| Originally posted by Dj Smitty20 Are regular DVDs soon to be obsolete too? |
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| Originally posted by malek A solid Toshiba A30 player at 160$ has more features than your overpriced BD30. Its obviously not the technology that killed hddvd because its still miles ahead of the bluray camp. Its false hype and buisness intrests that killed it, consumers are losers once again. I will buy only a combo player when it'll hit the 80$ mark point, till then I'll gladly download these movies I will never pay for overpriced non complete players, especially for a technology coming from Sony. |
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| Originally posted by Dj Smitty20 sarcasm dude. Anyway, don't you get sick of the constant "ok you have to buy this now because it's new and cutting edge". "BUY IT BUY IT BUY IT NOW!!"? It's getting to be a bit much if you ask me. But then again, I haven't purchased a DVD in close to two years, although I did get the complete Kubrick collection for Christmas. Are regular DVDs soon to be obsolete too? |
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| Originally posted by pete242 does the A30 bitstream like a BD30 does? does the A30 play DTS HD MA like the BD30 does? and how often does Panasonic and Sony send out firmware upgrades to keep up its technology compared to Toshiba? combo players? please they kept fucking up, the samsung combo player which would be the first to bitstream high end audio codec formats took forever to get released and once it did, it flopped....so go ahead and waste your money on an $80 combo player. Yes keep the downloads going I am sure it will kill the ability for manufactures to make higher production and keep costs low, ya good job. |
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| Originally posted by pete242 nah, DVD is not going anywhere, highdef will not kill the market, bluray will not take over, it is too expensive to go mainstream, a rather expensive hobby. DVD may not be as flexible as the bluray format, but if all you want to do is watch a movie and don't need all the fancy gadgets then DVD will be the way for awhile till BD is cheap enough to own as a burner and we have faster connections to download 50-80 GB worth of data. Everything has its time. |
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| Originally posted by malek I certainly think that downloadable media will kill blu too, a device with 1+ terabyte of space, with wifi and ethernet for 200$ is not that farfetched in 2 years or so. Cable and DSL internet speeds are being upgraded with speeds of up to 30MBps. XBOX 360 live lets you download 720p movies now for a few bucks, Itunes too... its just a start. |
The way I see it, is that ISPs might have a major role in those movie downloads... and why not. I know Rogers and Videotron already have rental stores, and already offer streaming HD movies with their PVR terminals.
I don't think they would put a cap on movies you would download from them, the technology is there, its just a matter of time before all the pieces come together.
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| Originally posted by pete242 NAS systems which can handle up to 4.9 TB at this time imagine how much we can store on these things once network vaults become of more mainstream use and easier to understand how to use, |
At my previous workplace, we were looking at getting a NAS for 100TB for a start
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