rossatdi said:
corroded said:
(cut for brevity)
I also disagree with Khell, they only put off a minority of early adopters, in a time where either formats where prohibitively expensive for most. In fact two of my friends got blu-ray capability as soon as the competition died off.
I'm suspecting a lot of those who don't rate blu-ray haven't seen blu-ray. It's a futurama joke but I swear to god blu-ray is
better resolution than real life.
Example. At the beginning of The Dark Knight in the bank heist scene. I saw that film 6 times in the cinema (yeah, yeah, I know) but it wasn't until I watched it on blu ray that I noticed the thread The Joker ties to the grenade is purple.
I am impressed with BluRay actually. I watched a demo of it (a scene from Speed) and I thought it was a documentary. It looked like live TV! I though it was a special feature on the disc but the resolution was unreal! Yes it is expensive, but so was EVERYTHING else at launch. Just a few examples:
Beta. but it failed.
VHS. It was very successful because of superiority over Beta. It had inferior sound due to a smaller read head than Beta, but the longer amount of play time on a VHS cassette allowed 90-150 minutes of play (i.e. a full movie) while Betas could only hold about 60 minutes. It held up past everything that cam to kill it: Laserdisc and VCD. It even held up in the days of DVD until the market finally adopted it.
Compact disc: It replaced cassette tapes and game cartridges and became a popular computer storage device. People still buy CDs for music today despite growing love for he old analog vinyl record (which I think sounds really good) or, more importantly, MP3s and MP3 players.
LaserDisc. it failed because of design flaws and did not improve upon anything enough to outdo VHS for is price and bulky disc.
DVD. it was really expensive. People bought PS2s until stand-alone players went down. That helped Sony then (but not as much now), along with the subsequent release of smash hit games. Finally when the players got cheaper, people grabbed them off the retail shelves like canned goods during DEFCON 4. Their larger storage capacity allowed them to replace CDs in computer storage and game storage.
To me, the Blu Ray is the next step. The thing is, even if you can buy film and music online and have it all digitally, there are a lot of people out there, younger and older alike (myself included) who want to buy their music and film in a tangeable form; they want something they can physically hold in their hand instrad of a screen that says "download complete".