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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals » |
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#7521 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Our internet connections and streaming services do occasionally go tits up. A few weeks back I was watching The Clone Wars and my router died - no connection. That was the end of the evenings viewing pleasure. A few days later I couldn't get certain episodes to play on my PS3. Now I know my players and discs can become unplayable, but I was cut off completely. With my players I have back ups and I have other physical movies or shows to watch.
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Thanks given by: | mredman (09-05-2015) |
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#7522 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Chicken Littles are on one end of this debate, ostriches with their heads buried are on the other end. Personally, I would rather be the former and spend my time and resources building up my collection, instead of just taking it for granted that nothing is changing. To each his own, but during "Streamageddon" at Netflix two years ago my queue went from 280 titles to 75 overnight and that's the future. Meanwhile, plenty of DVDs and Blus are now OOP and commanding premium prices, something that will only continue. So I choose not to sit back and believe the glass is half-full and shall remain so. My advice? Continue to build your physical media collection NOW while it's still relatively available and affordable.
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#7523 | ||||
Blu-ray Ninja
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*Actually nothing today is expensive compared to what movies cost when collectors bought used 16mm film prints, Laserdiscs or the first VHS titles that were available for sale. I've posted details about this before. Quote:
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Another factor is that aside from the big hits, with all the competing streaming companies, most of whom seem to have exactly the same titles, there's going to have to be more differentiation in the future, otherwise some of these companies are going to go under because there's now too many players doing exactly the same thing. The other thing that's going to happen is that as physical media declines, the studios are going to get greedier in terms of their revenue needs from the streaming companies and title or sub fees are going to go up, just as they have on cable TV where each of the cable networks demands more money per subscriber, especially the sports channels. The networks get this money regardless of how many people actually watch their channel - they get paid based on the number of subs to the cable system. So today we have "cord cutting" because cable TV fees are perceived to be too high. Five years from now, we'll have "streaming cutting" because those fees will be too high as well. And there's one other factor: just as the phone companies have pretty much gotten rid of unlimited usage data plans, if people start doing a lot of streaming (especially 4K), the ISPs will start clamping down as well. And if they start charging based upon data usage, I think you'll see a lot of people running back to physical media. I'm not defending physical over streaming or vice-versa. As I posted a few posts back, "different strokes for different folks" and they're both going to exist for some time to come, although streaming is growing and physical media is in decline. |
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#7524 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Zoet knows his shit. Damn. I actually thank you - for i learned more about this stuff via your post |
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#7525 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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Also, I think data caps for home internet are a reasonable thing. Bandwidth is a finite resource and to me it makes sense to let supply and demand distribute it appropriately - people who value the highest streaming quality may have to kick some extra cash to their ISP, others will be content with lower quality. What that means for streaming's economic viability, who knows. Last edited by 42041; 09-05-2015 at 10:27 PM. |
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#7526 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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#7527 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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![]() Looking at census data, people without internet access in the US seem to be statistically most likely to be elderly and/or low-income. The same groups, predictably, also spend the least on whatever the census defines as audio-visual entertainment. |
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#7528 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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That's false advertising. Even if it's a mistake, if it's in the advertising they must honor it under the law. But they refused, because they are an evil "bait and switch" company. The guy was like "It was a free app, you didn't lose anything" to which I replied "But I pay for the bandwidth that I used to download your app. Your download caused my bandwidth to go slightly up and that counts against my monthly limit" and he told me to just go away, and he wasn't going to honor the advertising. I told him I'd tell everyone B&N is dishonest, and he told me to do whatever I wanted because it wouldn't hurt them one bit. With a very snobbish tone in his voice. |
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#7529 |
Member
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It took me awhile but I am just now getting into Blu-Ray in a significant way. The future seems clear. I was hesitant buying DVDs after investing in Laserdisc. Laserdisc won't play in a DVD player but DVD does play in my BDP. And my Blu-Rays and DVDs will play in the next gen 4k players. I see very little risk of losing my investment in movies like I did with my Laserdisc collection. Quality of Blu-Ray is good enough such that I won't have to upgrade to 4k for most of my now growing collection. It will be years before 4k takes hold in a big way and at bargain prices. The disc evolution is backward compatible.
Streaming will be for the masses and it will grow and likely take a little from Blu-Ray but the discs will be around for a long time. Discs can be had at bargain prices and streaming just adds some competition so it is likely bargains will stick around too. |
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Thanks given by: | mredman (09-06-2015) |
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#7530 |
Active Member
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I just recently really got interested in blu-ray once I realized I was going to have cataract surgery and would really be able to notice the difference the format could offer. The stuff I really care about I'll upgrade to blu-ray or I'll simply purchase blu-ray when new things come out (e.g. Jurassic World). I'll never be able to afford to replace all my dvds into blu-ray, and some don't even have a blu-ray release. I cannot fathom how some can afford such a switch.
I have no wi-fi at my apartment so I don't do any streaming services, and having seen that Netflix could just remove stuff at will, I don't like the idea of having them dictate what I can and cannot watch when I want to. Physical media is the only real way to control what I want to watch. |
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Thanks given by: | donidarko (09-10-2015), HarcourtMudd (09-07-2015), mredman (09-06-2015), Optical Disc OCD (09-10-2015), Packerfan75 (09-07-2015) |
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#7531 | |
Senior Member
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OK, done ranting. |
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#7532 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#7534 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Arrow obviously use the clear cases too.
What I really like is the thicker, more solid case. Even the early Viva Elite cases were so much thicker than current ones. Yens cases are thicker, but they have square tops that look weird. Nothing's perfect! Burn it all down! |
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#7535 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Without fail, every generation goes through trends where "vintage" items come back in style. One day many years from now, Blu Ray Players and Discs will be the hot item again just as we have witnessed these Retro Video Game Stores and Vinyl Records come back into vogue with the young generation.
I don't see the complete death of a physical format in my lifetime as I can't imagine Movie Companies turning their back on the still significant number of consumers who still don't even have the internet and/or don't have the ability to use computer or internet for even the most basic needs. There are still a large number of people that can barely google something, let alone purchase a movie and access the content through a site that requires them to remember a username and password. The company I work for deals with licensing and they are pushing all renewals to be done online only. There are still a significant number of people who claim they don't have internet or simply refuse to make purchases online with their credit cards for fear of their Card information being stolen by "Internet Hackers". It's not just limited to the older segment of consumers either. |
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Thanks given by: | mredman (09-06-2015) |
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#7537 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Streaming should be considered an alternative to renting (with titles moving in and out of availability), rather than an unlimited on-demand library that takes the place of purchasing movies.
If you want to watch a film or TV show repeatedly, purchasing a physical copy or a download (if the playback rights can't be taken from you) is the way to go. |
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Thanks given by: | jej826 (09-06-2015) |
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#7538 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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#7539 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#7540 | |
Senior Member
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Tags |
4-k uhd, blu-ray, ds9, failure, frustrated, oar, star trek deep space nine |
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