So Disney is now all Blu-Ray: Thoughts, scares....predictions?!
Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD...the format war is about over...
Moderator: Moderators
-
demonofaj
- Portablizer Extraordinaire
- Posts: 2553
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2005 2:52 pm
- PSN Username: ajsen1gma
- Steam ID: demonofaj
- Location: NYC (718)
- Contact:
Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD...the format war is about over...
Well, guess what, Blu-Ray will and I think just did win. Apparently, Disney has now agreed to make all HD media on Blu-Ray. Admit it, it's over, remember the whole DVD suxorz claim? Disney made DVD's, and BAM: DVD was the new standard in entertainement. However, now that you think of it, Blu-Ray is the superior, boasting more space and wonders...and being backed up by BIG moguls...whereas HD-DVD is rather small, and is backed up by big moguls. But I will always have a special place for HD-DVD...but should I buy that external HD-DVD drive for my 360 now?
So Disney is now all Blu-Ray: Thoughts, scares....predictions?!
So Disney is now all Blu-Ray: Thoughts, scares....predictions?!
"Life's a female of the dog species, then you die.."
-
gamer2
- Senior Member
- Posts: 3611
- Joined: Tue Jul 27, 2004 12:38 pm
- Location: You spam, SANTA Jason gets you!
- Contact:
Disney isnt the reason that DVDs ended the VHS. Its because of the PS2 being able to play DVDs.
anyway, neither will win. Its way too soon for a new format we are going to see a repeat of what happened in the 1980's between VHS, Betamax, and Laserdisc.
allthough Beta and LD were better picture and stuff, VHS has been around longer and outsold them. Problebly Blu-ray will beat out HD-DVD and suffer a fate like Laserdisc. Living in mediocrity to a lesser product
anyway, neither will win. Its way too soon for a new format we are going to see a repeat of what happened in the 1980's between VHS, Betamax, and Laserdisc.
allthough Beta and LD were better picture and stuff, VHS has been around longer and outsold them. Problebly Blu-ray will beat out HD-DVD and suffer a fate like Laserdisc. Living in mediocrity to a lesser product


-
gamemasterAS
- Senior Member
- Posts: 3310
- Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2005 10:30 pm
- Steam ID: lolz1337face
- Location: Ohio
- Contact:
-
demonofaj
- Portablizer Extraordinaire
- Posts: 2553
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2005 2:52 pm
- PSN Username: ajsen1gma
- Steam ID: demonofaj
- Location: NYC (718)
- Contact:
I'm not kidding, I remember this format war back then (VHS vs. DVD) and the fact that uh... I think it was Toy Story or the Blob that came out on DVD, parents rushed out of their houses and bought them. I think Sony acquiring Disney is a big step forware for Blu-Ray...and I really want an external Blu-Ray player for the 360...nothing is (impossible)....look at Ben's 360 laptop, Kazing.
"Life's a female of the dog species, then you die.."
-
Triton
- Moderator
- Posts: 7397
- Joined: Mon May 24, 2004 12:33 pm
- 360 GamerTag: triton199
- Steam ID: triton199
- Location: Iowa
- Contact:
there really was no dvd format war tho due to the fact that there were no real competing formats, vhs was on the way out. vhs won the vhs/beta war for one reason
PORN! no joke, sony wouldnt let them have porn on beta so vhs kicked their ass even tho beta was better quality.
i for one think hd-dvd has the advantage due to costing less (cheapest BD player is 500$ ps3 cheapes HDdvd is the one for the xbox 360 which with the core package is also 500$ total. plus can be used in PCs as well, with some hacking. also its easier to make red laser diodes than the blue ones
PORN! no joke, sony wouldnt let them have porn on beta so vhs kicked their ass even tho beta was better quality.
i for one think hd-dvd has the advantage due to costing less (cheapest BD player is 500$ ps3 cheapes HDdvd is the one for the xbox 360 which with the core package is also 500$ total. plus can be used in PCs as well, with some hacking. also its easier to make red laser diodes than the blue ones
Visit us at Portablesofdoom.org
-
bicostp
- Moderator
- Posts: 10491
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2005 5:47 pm
- Steam ID: bicostp
- Location: Spamalot
- Contact:
This is a major blow to HD-DVD. (Just think about how many marques are owned by Disney... they're like the GM of the movie industry.)
I thought VHS won because it was easier to record to... Maybe I'm wrong.
I thought VHS won because it was easier to record to... Maybe I'm wrong.
Twitter
http://www.pcwgaming.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
If you want a Dropbox account, please use my referral link
http://www.pcwgaming.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
If you want a Dropbox account, please use my referral link
You sure that Disney jumped to a different ship all together, and not just offer their movies in both formats. I know that there companies like Fox that are going with both.
Also I agree PS2 is what made DVDs popluar. It came out and suddenly kids had a video game console and the parents had a DVD player. Sony's doing the same thing with thier Uber console the PS3, offering Blue-Ray on it so people will start buying the Blue-Ray format of movies.
About BetaMax, it's biggest flaw was the time it had. It's video capasity was 1.5 hours best, 3 hours standard, and 4.5 hours longest. That didn't work out that great for say movies that were over 90 minutes. VHS gave you at the best quality 2 hours and so it was picked up for that simple reason. S-VHS was the format that finally made it back up to BetaMax quality.
The biggest flaws with LD was it's size and the fact it scratched easily. Back when they were released people were not educated enough as to how to take care of a LD, the fact it was easily scratched likely made it so that the average consumer would stop buying it thinking it's too fagile. The size things is obvious, the damn thing is bigger then a vinal record and those things were pretty big. So at the time was it really work it unless you were as Jones put into high quality video? No.
Also I agree PS2 is what made DVDs popluar. It came out and suddenly kids had a video game console and the parents had a DVD player. Sony's doing the same thing with thier Uber console the PS3, offering Blue-Ray on it so people will start buying the Blue-Ray format of movies.
About BetaMax, it's biggest flaw was the time it had. It's video capasity was 1.5 hours best, 3 hours standard, and 4.5 hours longest. That didn't work out that great for say movies that were over 90 minutes. VHS gave you at the best quality 2 hours and so it was picked up for that simple reason. S-VHS was the format that finally made it back up to BetaMax quality.
The biggest flaws with LD was it's size and the fact it scratched easily. Back when they were released people were not educated enough as to how to take care of a LD, the fact it was easily scratched likely made it so that the average consumer would stop buying it thinking it's too fagile. The size things is obvious, the damn thing is bigger then a vinal record and those things were pretty big. So at the time was it really work it unless you were as Jones put into high quality video? No.
vskid wrote:Nerd = likes school, does all their homework, dies if they don't get 100% on every assignment
Geek = likes technology, dies if the power goes out and his UPS dies too
I am a geek.
-
XPCportables
- Posts: 1020
- Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 3:27 pm
- Location: The end of time...
-
Reploid Ayla
- Posts: 500
- Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2004 2:08 pm
- Location: Portland
I don't think size or durability should determine whether or not any particular format is better than another. There actually is a way to use not only vinyl records, but laser discs as well in a fashion that not only produces ammmazing results and produces very minimal wear (if any at all with laser disc). Laser Discs are also normally smaller than vinyl records at .2 inches smaller. As far as the durability of laser discs, they are not that different from a vinyl record. Both are indeed fragile, but laser discs don't even get physically touched by a diamond tipped phonograph cartridge or tape head. This means, if you're not a copulate idiot, then taking a twelve inch disc out of a paper sleeve and placing it on a tray without touching the disc should be pretty simple. As for records. If you don't have the time or patience to spend two minutes cleaning a record and waiting for it to dry before playing it then you probably shouldn't be listening to music. Also about needles and wear and such...If your crap boombox cd drive causes friction wear on the bottom of your cd do you keep playing and copulate up your cds? or do you go not be an poop egress and fork out the cash to buy a new cd player? Then why on earth wouldn't vinyl and turntables be any different? If you know what you are doing and have one hundred and fifty dollars, you can get a player that wont even begin to harm your records until 5000 hours. So when comparing anything digital to either analog format, you're just an poop egress for praising a machine that crap in your eyes and ears...Sparkfist wrote:
The biggest flaws with LD was it's size and the fact it scratched easily. Back when they were released people were not educated enough as to how to take care of a LD, the fact it was easily scratched likely made it so that the average consumer would stop buying it thinking it's too fagile. The size things is obvious, the damn thing is bigger then a vinal record and those things were pretty big. So at the time was it really work it unless you were as Jones put into high quality video? No.
/analog rant
-
XPCportables
- Posts: 1020
- Joined: Mon Aug 08, 2005 3:27 pm
- Location: The end of time...
You guys are looking at this all wrong, Most people don't have HDTVs right now, but in 2 years I think that you might see quite a bit different numbers. Anybody who is about to invest in a new TV at this point, is not going to buy an SDTV, they will buy an HDTV. A 32" HD tube tv is as cheap now as our 32" SD Trinitron was 4 years ago when we bought it. And when we make our next TV investment in a year or two, we will probably go for the same price range and screen size, which will be an HDTV. If you look at the TV section of any electronics retailer, they have maybe one or two rows of SDTVs and then the rest is HD. The next wave of people upgrading their TVs will go HD, and then people will begin buying the movie format that looks best on their TVs.


