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BluRay Gets A Boost from Blockbuster

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  • geekbot
    replied
    Originally posted by Displaced View Post
    if not, a good upscaling dvd player would be where id start, i wholeheartedly recommend the Oppo-DV981HD, has the best upconverted picture ive seen from standalone players with built in scalers, and its not the most expensive.
    I've read good things about Oppo. I'm just going to wait for the next generation and DL stuff that looks just as good or better in the meantime.

    Got the Dish Network hooked up yesterday. HD + DVR for less than my analog Comcast subscription. Even after 10 months and the price goes back to normal, the HD Dish will still be about the same as the analog Comcast. The best part is the Dish DVR outputs to multiple TVs so you can watch recorded shows on any TV. Pretty smart solution.

    Oh, and HBO free for 3 months. Who needs DVD players...

    Leave a comment:


  • Galleleo
    replied
    I have build up such a nice collection of DVD's and then I have to switch to Blue Ray or HD DVD and the covers don't match so it looks all ugly..

    Damn technology.

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  • Liquid Blue
    replied
    Not really, Beta Max was a helluva lot cooler to say than VHS, and look where that ended up.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dameon Angell
    replied
    If you take sides now, it's a gamble. But Blue Ray will most likely win out, because it's cooler to say than HD DVD. The general public stupid like that. They can't tell the difference in picture, they're ignorant to the size of the discs, and they won't care about the price so much if it's for something crazy new like that.

    Leave a comment:


  • Displaced
    replied
    geekbot, your tv should (if its a good set ) be able to upconvert 480i/p to whatever its native resolution is.

    if not, a good upscaling dvd player would be where id start, i wholeheartedly recommend the Oppo-DV981HD, has the best upconverted picture ive seen from standalone players with built in scalers, and its not the most expensive.

    that said, the "improvement" isnt mind boggling, and is nowhere near the quality of HD-DVD or Blueray.

    i bit the bullet and got both setups (mainly because i cant get all the titles i want on 1 format), in retrospect id probably have opted for LG's "ultra" player that plays both HD-DVD's and Blueray instead of opting for two separate players, that way, if one format goes defunct, you wont have an obsolete player.

    just my 2 cents.

    Leave a comment:


  • Jerome Scuggs
    replied
    Last night we went to blockbuster (rented blazing angels and that paper mario RPG for the wii, and a season of pete and pete) and at both stores, there were definitely way more HD DVD's in stock than blu-ray

    the thing is, blockbuster runs its franchises a bit less strict than most chains, IMO. we have three blockbusters within driving distance here, and all 3 have different late fees, different "specials", and even different videos. i think that at least in shreveport, HD-DVD is what blockbuster stocks. but perhaps I should wait more than a few days to see what actually happens

    Leave a comment:


  • geekbot
    replied
    Yes, but....

    ...if you wait long enough everything becomes cheap. As time passes, the price difference will go away.

    I just got an HD LCD TV. Spent a lot of money on it and all of a sudden the DVD looks like crap because it's outputting standard def. : (

    Time for a DVD that upconverts? Or wait for Blu-ray and HD-DVD to duke it out?

    Leave a comment:


  • Vykromond
    replied
    I mean, if it's more expensive to produce and the players are more expensive to produce...isn't the consumer going to be handed the cost?
    yes

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  • Capital Knockers
    replied
    I hate all this new stuff. It's always such a big fuss when it all first comes out, it's overpriced, in wars with competitors, and usually breaks or winds up being defective or something. My favourite thing I've ever learnt about technology, is wait. Hell I love my PS2, I bought it, and all the games I've wanted for it, for less then I could of bought the system alone.

    Leave a comment:


  • Subjugation
    replied
    I hope you're right, Jerome. Unless I am misinterpreting the impact of BluRay. I mean, if it's more expensive to produce and the players are more expensive to produce...isn't the consumer going to be handed the cost?

    Leave a comment:


  • Jerome Scuggs
    replied
    blockbuster's influence probably isn't as strong thanks to online rental sites + competitors

    it will be interesting to see what format wins

    Leave a comment:


  • Displaced
    replied
    to tell the difference between blueray and hd-dvd?

    theoretically, you cant, since both are 1080p media.

    althought, from what ive seen on my tv, there are major differences in quality, depending on who has released the movie.

    Leave a comment:


  • Facetious
    replied
    how good a tv do you have to have in order to tell the difference between blu-ray and hd-dvd? 1080i? 1080p?

    Leave a comment:


  • Subjugation
    replied
    Originally posted by NaiLed View Post
    for the dumb people (me), can somebody explain what HDTV is and what blu-ray is
    Basically, they are the next generation of DVD's. I'm not sure if there are other significant differences, but the main difference is HD DVD is less expensive to produce and the players are cheaper to make, and BluRay has a bit better picture quality, has a higher capacity for data storage, but is more expensive.

    Leave a comment:


  • GuruMeditation
    replied
    Can still get HD-DVDs from Blockbuster Online.

    Leave a comment:

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