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#4481 | |
Member
Nov 2012
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However, I don't see digital distribution being done as cleanly as it is in other markets like PC games (i.e. Steam). There you have an account that allows you to download the game as many times as you need to so for me there is no worry about disc failure. If digital movies can be delivered like that I'd be fine with it. It would also make things like recalls a lot simpler. Though I'm not sure that would be a good thing for studios. |
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#4482 | |
Special Member
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But, if it were the Dark Knight Rises with the IMAX sequences, or Sound of Music, or maybe Patton...I would go with the blu ray. |
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#4483 |
Power Member
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To answer the original OP, "Why did Blu-Ray not take off like DVD?"
The answer is complicated. DVD was simply in the right place at the right time. VHS was cumbersome and expensive and the studios and retailers were more than happy to push VHS out the door. DVD was smaller to stock on store shelves, and was cheaper to manufacture. DVD offered a whole revolutionary experience versus VHS such as not having to rewind movies, having chapters and navigation menus, improved quality, smaller form factor, extra features, etc, etc. Again, right place at the right time. Blu-Ray is almost entirely an improvement on PQ/AQ. Yes, there are some additional advanced features, but outside of PQ/AQ, the format is not quite as revolutionary as DVD was to VHS. It is more expensive to manufacture than DVD. Blu-Ray is often more expensive to buy for the consumer and many people are simply content with paying less and getting lesser quality. In addition, there are a lot of mediums to get content. DVD. Streaming. Cable and sat on-demand and VOD. Redbox vending machines. Etc. Consumers have never had so much choice in delivery and content wit home video, so we may never see a single format dominate the way DVD did for years. The American public, for the most part, is content with still watching content in standard definition. Look at cable/sat channels and streaming for example. The vast majority of content is standard definition and people seem content with it. Aside from all this though, look at the revenue. Optical media, which includes both Blu-Ray and DVD, is still a huge cash cow. Collectors still flock to optical disc in droves and spend billions of dollars a year buying shiny discs. That is not going to change anytime soon. I think digital movie sales will continue to grow slowly, but I see that medium as more of a rental medium and I suspect many collectors, like myself, will continue to buy packaged optical media because it gives us the best experience at a reasonable price. Best PQ, best AQ, extra features, media artwork, etc. We collect. We like the tangible case that we can hold in our hands. Blu-Ray is most definitely a successful format. Not as big as DVD was, but I would argue that we may never have another format like DVD again. It (Blu) pulls in billions of dollars a year in revenue in North America alone and there is still more upside to the format. I don't see it going anywhere. For many years to come it will still offer the best PQ/AQ and 1080p will be the standard for years to come. I don't see any of this changing in the next 5+ years. |
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#4484 | |
Power Member
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#4485 | |
Power Member
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#4486 |
Special Member
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My laptop cant do blu ray nor can my small office tv.
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#4487 | |
Member
Nov 2012
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Last edited by biznus97; 01-09-2013 at 05:55 PM. |
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#4488 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Because America like alot of other places is all about the cheaper alternative. Add that with the average consumer belief that the TV makes it look good and not the player or disc then surround that with first quarter prices of hardware and software and we have the answer
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#4489 |
Senior Member
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#4490 |
Member
Nov 2012
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#4491 | |
Special Member
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The future for ownership will be bluray, the future for renting and mass consumption will be streaming and downloading. Some movies are just fine on iTunes or Netflix, but something like The Dark Knight Rises begs to be watched on blu ray......not so for a movie like Driving Miss Daisy or Hope Springs.... |
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#4492 |
Member
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In the future? We should be talking about that now. Digital downloads should be booming with all those ipads and iphones sold, all those android devices. Roku wishes that set top box sold like blu-ray players.
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#4493 | |
Senior Member
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Digital downloading streaming is booming, the video & audio quality of streaming is not booming |
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#4494 | |
New Member
Jan 2013
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streaming is great for availability, but for quality, not so much. . . |
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#4495 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2011
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studios need to get out of the US-only mindset if they want digital and other mediums to take off. i find it funny that they use Ultaviolet as a selling feature here in Canada but the small print says "United States only". same with some of the features on the blurays. but it is a matter of market. in Asia, video-cd was still selling big time long after dvd was introduced. if i read right, there is still some version of HD-DVD being produced there too.
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#4496 |
Special Member
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Streaming is good enough for those who just really want to watch the movie. I have watched many movies via streaming, just watched The Tourist on Netflix the other day, a movie on my laptop on YouTube, and DVD last night in up conversion on my blu ray player and very soon the Dark Knight Rises. I would not of watched the the YouTube movie on blu ray nor would it be worth watching the Tourist on bluray either.
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#4497 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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But I did not really see something like that in the post you originally replied to, and definitely there was none of that in my post when I originally replied to you when you first objected to drawing a line. In the end, like you pointed out in this post “At some point companies have to look at the numbers and say 'okay, this is done...time to move on’” and so there is nothing wrong with talking about “drawing a line” but there is something wrong with believing and saying “People will stop buying DVDs when they don't want DVDs anymore. That's why companies don't have to draw lines or pick winners and losers”. A company can’t wait until that point to drop an old dying format, a retailer can’t go out and say “I will buy 5 copies of the new movie on the old format just in case someone like pagemaster will decide once in the store that this title is not worth the price difference and so he will prefer to pay less and buy the old format instead” just to eventually sell one copy on the old format (because 4 out of 5 looking at that decision for that movie decided it was worth the extra $) after many months and several price drops and they lose money since the 5 copies they bought from the studio (distributor) cost them more than the profit made on the one that was sold. It is also equally hard for the studio, they need to decide what to produce (quantities and formats) months before they are on store shelves and bought by the public. You can’t say X’s statement was extreme and unreasonable and so I make a claim that is even more ridiculous. |
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#4498 | |
Blu-ray King
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#4499 | ||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#4500 | |
Member
Nov 2012
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Tags |
4-k uhd, blu-ray, ds9, failure, frustrated, oar, star trek deep space nine |
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