Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
HD-DVD still exists. It is the blue-ray/Sony fanboys that are proclaiming this nonsense, and the newsmedia is on their side. The battle with Toshiba is what is over. The battle with Microsoft and HD-DVD itself will never end, I promise you. As long as we buy HD-DVD (which we still continue to do) then there is that demand that Warner and Best Buy was talking about. When HD-DVD sales rise again, what will happen next? Hmm. Only time will tell.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
While I enjoy your enthusiasm... I have to keep myself grounded in reality. With the sell off of players we will see a small increase in market share, but that will come to an end once paramount and Universal go blu. I hope I can keep getting HD-DVD for a while. I have 130 now and growing, and will continue to purchase these discs for as long as they are made.
What can I say? I am a sucker for Dark Red.
What can I say? I am a sucker for Dark Red.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
Quote:
What can I say? I am a sucker for Dark Red.
me too
[Post edited by r-u-serious on Feb 22, 2008]
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
I Hear That!
Cannot wait for Beowulf. Ah, the eye candy!
[Post edited by wolvinator on Feb 22, 2008]
Cannot wait for Beowulf. Ah, the eye candy!
[Post edited by wolvinator on Feb 22, 2008]
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
I must say I do not see HD-DVD sales rising again.
Oh and as for the war, well bluray is sitting in the Eagles Nest drinking the expensive wine.
[Post edited by KungFuTaco on Feb 22, 2008]
Oh and as for the war, well bluray is sitting in the Eagles Nest drinking the expensive wine.
[Post edited by KungFuTaco on Feb 22, 2008]
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
February 2008
February 2008
I too am waiting for:
Beowulf
I am Legend
Bee Movie
Sweeney Todd
Their Will Be Blood
They are going to be my Super Special "Limited" Editions!
Beowulf
I am Legend
Bee Movie
Sweeney Todd
Their Will Be Blood
They are going to be my Super Special "Limited" Editions!
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
people on both sides of the fence need to stop identifying themselves emotionally with these formats. its ghey.
Toshiba bowed out because they saw MS wasn't going to lift a finger. That's it. It's done.
If you'd worked a little harder, you might have been able to afford both. like me.
Toshiba bowed out because they saw MS wasn't going to lift a finger. That's it. It's done.
If you'd worked a little harder, you might have been able to afford both. like me.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
November 2007
November 2007
Quote:
The battle with Microsoft and HD-DVD itself will never end, I promise you. As long as we buy HD-DVD (which we still continue to do) then there is that demand that Warner and Best Buy was talking about.
Come on dude, give it a rest. How is the war not over when no one will be making HD DVD players anymore??? Sure the existing player base will continue to account for disc purchases but that will become an increasingly smaller percentage as more Blu Ray decks are sold and no more HD DVD players are available for sale.
Get with reality, I know it sucks that the superior format lost, but move on like the rest of us.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
September 2006
September 2006
"The War's over, we're all just folks now."
Friday, February 22, 2008
Member since:
January 2008
January 2008
The OP's title is sound, but the premise is not. Regardless if your opinion of HD-DVD, there are no more players being produced. All of the content providers have announced their intent to switch to Blu. There really is no more point in arguing that HD-DVD will prevail in a format war between Blu-Ray that is essentially over now that the primary backer of the format (Toshiba) has thrown in the towel.
That being said, I think that Blu-Ray's next hurdle is mass adoption of the DVD market. Note that I don't think that downloadable HD content is going to be much of a player. The market is 'trained' to obtain physical media and any VoD marketing has alot more to overcome than Blu does in that regard - although it could revolutionize the rental business.
Blu-Ray's success or failure is going to be directly linked to getting more HDTVs into homes. Period. The cost of a Blu-Ray player, while considerably more than you'd pay for an HD-DVD player is chump change compared to getting the standard definition TV folks to switch to HDTV. I think that's why we are starting to see retailers throw in a 'free' Blu-Ray player with the purchase of some HDTV's.
I don't expect prices to go up for Blu-Ray as many here have suggested. Blu-Ray has a much more difficult struggle ahead than a format war and will need to keep the incentives there, and to adapt them to the mass market.
That being said, I think that Blu-Ray's next hurdle is mass adoption of the DVD market. Note that I don't think that downloadable HD content is going to be much of a player. The market is 'trained' to obtain physical media and any VoD marketing has alot more to overcome than Blu does in that regard - although it could revolutionize the rental business.
Blu-Ray's success or failure is going to be directly linked to getting more HDTVs into homes. Period. The cost of a Blu-Ray player, while considerably more than you'd pay for an HD-DVD player is chump change compared to getting the standard definition TV folks to switch to HDTV. I think that's why we are starting to see retailers throw in a 'free' Blu-Ray player with the purchase of some HDTV's.
I don't expect prices to go up for Blu-Ray as many here have suggested. Blu-Ray has a much more difficult struggle ahead than a format war and will need to keep the incentives there, and to adapt them to the mass market.