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#2361 |
Power Member
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The implications for UHD Blu going with online authentication will practically be a pain in the proverbial butt for a small number of consumers who don't prefer having to go through a process in where movies or TV shows in 4K will have a limited set of controls for HE use.
If I did afford to get UHD Blu with the TV and some discs it would be very painful for me if I had spent a wheelbarrow full of cash only to find out that a certain number of years that if I am not going to be able to use my small UHD collection if the studios do not give out extra support after a uncertain amount of time. At this point; we the A/V enthusiasts and general consumers don't even know what length of time the studios are going to give us by way of providing UHD support if we get opportunities to play UHD Blu-rays in our home. Such time wasting from their point of view is not giving any ounce of guarantees that it will be a long-term success. Therefore, In the lead-up to this launch, the studio executives along with The UHD-BD alliance must give initial timelines of support in terms for all UHD-BD movies & TV shows to show it's potential market of consumers in which the market itself will be very small. I feel that this is one necessary part of the process that needs to be given to them in order to provide a level of certainty and demand to make the format viable for mass market release. To give a level of say 5 to 10 years for this format to survive will be considered too small for UHD-BD to take lift off to final launch. I would suggest to them that a support of at least 15 to 20 years could be do-able if it is able to last that length of time. Another thing that is needed to be sorted out and finalised is the digital bridge mechanism. The studios and manufacturers have to prepare differing types of software needed to provide this service as it won't come to be implemented very quickly. That level of work has too much detail and finesse because it has to be catered for each type of UHD-BD player being sold on the market and that could be a tough job to implement. |
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#2362 | ||
Blu-ray Prince
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EDIT: Or what if a consumer purchases a new player after the authentication keys are no longer available for download? Is that consumer expected to just throw out a good portion of their collection because it's now useless. Quote:
Last edited by rdodolak; 04-26-2015 at 07:22 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-26-2015), FilmFreakosaurus (04-26-2015), HeavyHitter (04-26-2015), Kirsty_Mc (04-27-2015) |
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#2363 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As for the digital bridge, I think that's what's holding up UHD BD at this point. When the BDA reps were questioned about 4K BD over the last few years they've kept banging on about how important other features were, so they're gonna make a big thing of this digital bridge and they're taking the time to nail it down. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-26-2015) |
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#2364 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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This argument is totally ridiculous but here we are. I can see not allowing any other channel to show that same movie (I.e. blackout) during that exclusive window as it would take potential viewers/subscribers away from said channel. But for those that already purchased the item? Those individuals weren't potential viewers/subscribers anyway. It's plausible that a similar situation could happen with UHD and the key gets deleted until the exclusive window has closed. Or what about a rights issue surfacing after a movie has been released? One thing is for sure, studios will use this concept to also prevent you from viewing the title prior to the release day. You received a title in the mail early, no problem, but you just can't watch it until the release day comes to pass. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-26-2015), FilmFreakosaurus (04-26-2015), HeavyHitter (04-26-2015), Kirsty_Mc (04-27-2015) |
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#2365 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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All valid points, but I'm not bummed about not being able to watch something until release day. I can't redeem UV codes that I get with my early US imports until the official release day, so perhaps it's good that I've dealt with that disappointment already.
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#2366 | |||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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so it should be taken with a big grain of salt 2) this is an ACCS 2.0 doc not an UHD BD doc so the two are not necessarily the same (i.e. maybe ACCS 2.0 basic will be the only thing supported, or maybe it will only be ACCS 2.0 advanced....) 3) if you look at ![]() and ![]() Basic means the "title key" is on the disk, but for advanced where you need to go to the title key server in the second diagram you see "time based release of title key". To me that appears to be for pre-releases purchases (i.e. the content disk/DL is there but useless until release day). that can be a good thing for DL (purchase the film, DL the huge 4k file to the HDD and it is ready to watch on release date/time especially if the movie does not appear on your list to taunt you until release date/time) but terrible for disks a) purchase the film in store, bring it home, put the disk in the player with the kids to watch it just to get a black screen, an error message "no title key" or "you can only watch the film after date/time" b) replication, this might be useful for pre-buys (i.e. the on-line store ships it a week early but you can only see it on release day) but a useless pain after the release date. (i.e. you buy the film on release day in the store, bring it home and you get server is busy and it takes for ever for it to start , something that has happened with BD-live which is why I disconnected my BD player) Quote:
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Put disc in, it reaches out to the server, server is down for maintenance, server is busy, my internet connection is down..... disk dies not play. why would any sane person want that crapshoot? Quote:
1) it is a terrible idea in principle (adds nothing to anyone but can cause terrible issues) 2) I have an internet connection at my home but none in my HT, it was built for watching films and not for anything else like surfing the net (or talking on phone or texting.... all RF is blocked from entering by design ![]() 3) I like to bring films with me when I go on vacation and that most often then not means no internet there Quote:
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Thanks given by: | FilmFreakosaurus (04-26-2015) |
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#2367 | ||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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1) what happens when your player's "memory" is full? 2) I have needed to replace SSDs and HDD's before, and what happens when there is corruption? Quote:
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but you missed two important parts 1) what happens when things don't go well? 2) people purchase films to own them, If I buy X on release day and 20 years later I want to want it on my new TV and player will the title server still be there and will it have the title key for the release I bought 20 years ago on it? Quote:
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Thanks given by: | FilmFreakosaurus (04-26-2015) |
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#2368 | ||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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I think I heard someone saying the same thing about purchasing DDLs from target.
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Thanks given by: | FilmFreakosaurus (04-26-2015) |
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#2371 | ||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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that means that a lot of the films that are distributed here are from what you would call indie, and for example Alliance used to have exclusive rights to distribute the LOTR films (I was discussing that last week in a different thread) and only after 2010 did those rights move to WB. You also have similar examples with what there is no way to describe as "indie", look at Gladiator http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0172495/companycredits it has been distributed by universal, Columbia TriStar, Paramount, Warner at different times and countries. |
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#2374 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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#2375 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Good debate.
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#2376 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#2377 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() When Star Wars HDR shows up digital and UBD sometime in 2016, May The OLED be With You. Its the only way you will be able to see the Dark Side of The Force. I doubt that Dolby Vision Cinema will bother anyone with 106.2 nit highlights, but the $5 ticket premium might. |
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#2378 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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It’s not my fault if the person that did the caption on the graph added one too many zeroes.
Seriously, I thought I’d hit another 0 keystroke. Oh well, I guess mankind is lucky I don’t deal in radioactive substances. Last edited by Penton-Man; 04-27-2015 at 03:51 AM. |
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#2380 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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It's the irony of anything that requires online authentication. Most of those who have completely and happily embraced digital distribution and/or anything that requires online authentication in some way, shape, or form do so foolishly believing that what they are "buying" will truly be theirs "forever." Meaning that they assume that the ability to re authenticate when needed will be there for the rest of their lives. Many of those people will be in for a rude awakening sooner or later. And most of them probably wouldn't have bought into it if a specified support date that could potentially double as an expiration date was specified from the get go. Heck, if anything I wish the studios would start doing that (giving specific dates). It would wake more people up to the problems with digital distribution/ online authentication, rather than them naively assuming permanent ownership. Frankly I think it should be illegal for studios to even advertise the transaction of paying for a digital movie as "buying" it, as it is often referred to in commercials advertising a movie available for download. They should be forced to say something like "License it today" instead of "Buy it today." Let the terminology speak for itself. I'm interested in the additional quality that 4k BD will provide, but only if it allows me the same simple freedom that I already have with DVD and Blu-Ray now. It's not worth it for me to upgrade my movies to a new format that does anything less than that. Last edited by Dynamo of Eternia; 04-27-2015 at 12:36 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-27-2015), HeavyHitter (04-27-2015) |
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Tags |
4k blu-ray, ultra hd blu-ray |
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