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#141 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jun 2007
Singapore
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I would without second thoughts. I used to do it with DVDs in the past, paying more for DTS soundtracks. Hell, I had to import a lot of DVDs because many of these DTS-ES DVDs never make it into the region. I did it before and I'll do it again with Atmos. |
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#142 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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And I think it's silly to "complain" when the price of technology decreases. It's absolutely incredible how inexpensive much (not all) technology has become. The fact that one can purchase a CD-R drive or a 16GB USB drive for a price of a pizza is beyond belief. The reality is that the manufacturers underpriced their sets which is why most of them lost money for years and many have now retrenched from the market. At the Value Electronics "shootout" this year, we only saw Samsung, Sony and LG. The Macintosh 128K machine cost $2495 when it was released in 1984. No hard disk, just a single 300K floppy. That $2495 is $5723 in 2014 dollars. My $200 phone probably has 100,000x the computing power. |
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#143 | |
Junior Member
Dec 2012
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It doesn't matter if you spend $5,000 or $10,000 or $100,000 on your electronics, it will still be outdated in a year or two. No one is forcing you to have an Atmos setup. Just like most people didn't upgrade from their 5.1 to 7.1 or 11.2 or whatever. But don't be mad if other people like the new technologies and are willing to pay for the experience. |
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#144 | |
Senior Member
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MY deepest apologies. You are right of course, Enjoy the Denon. |
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#145 | |
Banned
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Thanks given by: | Krelldog1977 (08-21-2014) |
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#146 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#147 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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There's a gap in logic here. I have two outstanding receivers, the Pioneer 84tsxi units. Neither decodes the newer high-end codecs, and I've been using them to play back higher-end audio for about seven years. Decoding is done by the player, and bitstreamed to my receiver. Why should I have to replace it? If a unit that powers up only four speakers (or however many becomes the Atmos standard), can't that be an add-on? What's the reason for this fashion show sales nonsense from the manufacturers? Pass through the basic 5 or 7 channels to existing equipment, and the Atmos module does the rest of the chores. These don't look like high-end speakers, anyway. Full range speakers, at moderate volume, at best. I'd prefer a tweeter-woofer setup, on general principle, but they're not playing back a lot of data form appearances. What are we talking about - 25 or 30 watts apiece, in the home environment, on only a fraction of the source material that most people already have. I'm not going to see Atmos on The Dark Side Of The Moon, or Lawrence of Arabia, and I'm supposed to replace a receiver that works just fine. Doesn't make sense. It's going to be a huge "ask" of most people, audiophiles or not, to rewire homes - possibly with exposed wiring, and some kind of hanging gizmo on the ceiling - for limited content, mixed with variable skill. They should market an "Atmos Bundle" with a small amplifier and speakers to do this. The general marketing idea is to offer a new technology, then lump it all into a single box and call it indispensable. That doesn't make financial sense in this case - most people don't want to sell, trade, or give away perfectly good gear for a fashion statement. This is one type of merchandise that would highly benefit from a clean add-on, though that idea is anathema to most markets. They want to tied in with no way to run away. They'll figure it out, if they can find a focus group of home users that aren't trying to play the "first kid on your block" with all their gear. Otherwise, this thing, as nice as it is, will wait for a while to take off. |
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#148 |
Blu-ray Knight
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You missed my point, if it is strictly Dolby True HD vs Dolby True HD Atmos encoded and your paying a premium for that only.
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#149 | |
Banned
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Again, it's not like 3D where separate discs are usually required. |
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#151 |
Junior Member
Dec 2012
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#152 | |||
Banned
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Well, most receivers for the past several years have been able to decode bitstreamed codecs. I got mine in late 2007. That was nearly 7 years ago. Your player will not decode Atmos. NO player will be able to decode Atmos. Probably never. Most players can't decode EX/ES soundtracks either so for me it was a no brainer to bitstream. In any case, your player will continue to decode the Dolby TrueHD tracks, it will just ignore the extra Atmos data. As will every other player and receiver that decodes Dolby TrueHD and not Atmos. Quote:
Which is precisely the HTiB I was talking about. No speaker hanging required. You just double up the wiring to the surround backs and the main speakers for the Atmos radiators. Quote:
Ever hear of a little company called Apple? Most of their existence is predicated on people constantly upgrading their stuff. Ask any iPhone/iPad user. $500 a pop to upgrade their phone/tablet every year or two (amortized through their plans)? Those who want Atmos right away will have to buy new equipment. Those upgrading gradually over the years will find Atmos already included in their new receivers. I don't see the big deal here. |
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#153 | |
Banned
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#154 | |
Banned
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Knowing about other products. I know about Seiki, Insignia, etc and would never touch those with a ten foot pole...precisely because I do know what they are and where they come from. I'm not ready for a receiver upgrade until late 2015 anyway. |
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#155 | |
Banned
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#156 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#157 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#158 | |
Banned
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![]() Well since it seems you know next to nothing about Atmos, how do you know they will? Quote:
Why are you participating in this topic? Just to threadcrap? ![]() |
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#159 | |
Banned
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People have some of the cheapest BD players, budget TVs, soundbars, HTiBs, etc. on this site. People wondering why movies have to be letterboxed or what Dolby TrueHD or DTS-MA is. You have to remember this is a site for everyone, not just enthusiasts. |
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#160 |
Blu-ray Knight
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The studios have always been likely to use any new technology buzz word to mark up media. You know that, and I know that, lets not kid ourselves. All I said earlier was its something to be concerned about.
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