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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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| ![]() $49.99 | ![]() $29.99 1 day ago
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| ![]() $80.68 | ![]() $96.99 |
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#6541 | |
Banned
Oct 2017
Nunya
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These same folks will just start firing up their Roku TV's and spin things on Hulu/Netflix/similar services to get their fix. |
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#6542 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Sigh another problem with digital I own a few things on microsoft but they disabled playback so I cant play the movies from my windows 7 pc now. Theirs basically now no way for me to play microsoft videos. I dont see how this could not possibly become a problem for other venders eventually where they give you the ultimatum of losing your collection or upgrading your tv, computer or mobile device.
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#6543 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Now that MA has launched in the US, I'd recommend people only buy from the big 4, VUDU, iTunes, Amazon and Google. Someone was right a few pages back, digital HD is still in a format war phase, bet on the wrong horse and you risk losing your collection. |
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#6544 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#6545 | ||||
Special Member
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CinemaNow wasn't very good either. It was hard to find which movies you owned and it didn't have a lot of the movies I had on Vudu. So I just stuck with Vudu. Quote:
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I remember how huge the movie section at Best Buy used to be in 2009/2010. Now, it is tiny. And it sucks because I enjoy browsing the movie section and picking up the occasion title. Quote:
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#6546 | |
Active Member
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Thanks given by: | The_Donster (02-07-2018), Zu Nim (02-07-2018) |
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#6547 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Enough of my hd dvds went bad that I didn't wish to keep them around any longer. Thankfully the overwhelming majority have been released on blu since those early days and often with a lossless audio upgrade. LD is a different story where the discs at least play but the picture is non-anamorphic and many discs may be excessively soft and/or suffer from dot crawl or white specs, etc. It could also be that my players are simply old and worn. And vhs is one of those things that is nostalgic from growing up in the video store era but I'd rather not collect them.
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#6548 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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If a physical disc goes out of print, you still have your copy. And you can buy second hand copies through ebay, resale stores, etc. if you missed out on it or your previous copy gets damaged. In other words, even if the studio stops supporting the title, they have no control over the the copies previously distributed. With digital distribution, if sales gradually slow down over time as more people build a digital "collection" and get to a point where they have most of their available favorites, resulting in their purchases slowing down, there will still be an ongoing cost to continue hosting those files on servers to allow them to be streamed or redownloaded as necessary. If things get to a point where they aren't getting enough income to justify the cost of continued support of all of those files, they could potentially opt to remove the less popular ones from their servers, rendering any such title inaccessible to those who already paid for it. Even if you have it downloaded, unlike many music files that are DRM free, movie files tend to be more locked down, so there could be issues watching them in the future if a service changes, goes under, or whatever. Or if the studio decides it's not popular enough or they just don't want it out there for one reason or another, they could pull it. Or suppose it's still available, but a decade from now something that isn't a big deal now becomes controversial in the future, and they edit something out of the movie to accommodate that. The next time you stream it, it's the altered version. Suppose a studio or filmmaker wants to pull a "George Lucas" by only making an updated/altered version of a movie available and not the original version. Rather than being able to hold onto your own physical copy, even if it was the original version when it was "purchased" digitally, the next time it is streamed, it may not be that same version. A case where something kind of along those lines actually happened was around the time Disney's The Sword in the Stone came out on Blu-Ray. They "remastered" it, which involved A LOT of really bad DNR (look up the review here on this site). The movie had already been available for some time through iTunes, but was released using an older master that was used for the previous DVD that, while not perfect, didn't have the issues that the DNR introduced. But somewhere around the time of that Blu-Ray release, the iTunes file was updated to the badly DNRed version. Presumably anyone who had the older file downloaded could still watch it, but if they ever need to redownload it, they will end up with the lesser version. By contrast, while watching a standard def DVD may not be the optimal way to experience a movie, at least anyone who owns it still has that mastering as-is, and it's not going to be covertly replaced with a different version. There are a plethora of potential issues with this. Last edited by Dynamo of Eternia; 02-06-2018 at 08:59 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | moviegeek1992 (02-07-2018), Trace Buster Buster (02-07-2018) |
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#6549 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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Also the law of diminishing returns is very much a real thing. Even if there is a format later on, available only digitally, that manages to surpass the quality of 4K Blu-Ray discs, I do question how much better that could possibly be. Time may prove me wrong on this, though I doubt it. While the manufacturers of TVs and such want to get as many repeat sales as possible, at some point available PQ and AQ will plateau, and there won't really be a way for people to get noticeably better picture quality without going to a substantially bigger screen, the size of which most people likely wouldn't have the space for. |
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (02-06-2018) |
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#6550 |
Active Member
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I still have a few laserdiscs because they're not available in digital but I've had no desire to watch them in that format. They include the Director's Cut of Scream and the non Special Editions of the Star Wars Trilogy. Instead, I watch the theatrical version of Scream and the special editions of Star Wars on digital.
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#6551 | |
Active Member
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I cannot envision a scenario where a studio thinks it's worth pissing off consumers to save $2 per years. Especially when all it would take is for one new buyer to cover the cost. |
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#6552 |
Blu-ray King
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In the event that we can’t keep our movies (own our movies). Hopefully we will have much better but I wouldn’t bank on it. You guys forget, we don’t have Movies Anywhere, we aren’t protected even if we WANTED to go that route.
Last edited by Steedeel; 02-06-2018 at 09:45 PM. |
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#6553 | |
Blu-ray King
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Thanks given by: | moviegeek1992 (02-07-2018) |
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#6554 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If something is edited for whatever reason, couldn't one then track down a physical alternative for that one title? It's not like every title in one's digital collection will be edited. |
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#6555 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#6556 | ||
Special Member
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Thanks given by: | flyry (02-07-2018) |
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#6557 |
Special Member
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Another 50 million homes in the U.S. should have access to gigabit internet by the end of the year. (Not people - homes.) No data caps, of course.
Charter/Spectrum: We’ll Offer Gigabit Speed Nationwide by the End of 2018 Looking forward to the next set of comically pessimistic posts about the future of digital. |
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#6559 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Also their was never anything that forced you to upgrade from vhs to dvd etc you could skip a format and use the old format in your own little bubble for years (decades) (they only stopped making vhs players a few years ago). If I decide to upgrade I would like it to be my choice not a company or studios choice who has a direct incentive for me to re-buy my collection. Last edited by veritas; 02-07-2018 at 03:20 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (02-07-2018) |
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#6560 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | Indy64 (02-07-2018) |
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