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#10141 |
Blu-ray Count
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My first DVD player is actually a laserdisc player, too, the Pioneer DVL-909. I bought it in 1998. For $1,000; that's $1,546 in 2018 dollars.
I still have it and it still works 20 years later. I only use it as a laserdisc player now, though, as my Oppo 203 handles DVD playback a bit better. ![]() Last edited by Vilya; 07-19-2018 at 07:07 PM. |
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#10142 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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England
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#10143 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Had waited long enough so in 1985 I purchased the Pioneer CLD-900 (a big, heavy box) for around $1100.00. Procured a Sony βeta Hi-Fi in that same time frame for about $1050.00 Here we are today with boxes that can do UHD video and 12 channels sound for $500 and less. In one perspective that seems like a bargain. |
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#10144 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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My biggest cost to use ratio box was the Sony FMP-X10. At least we got to watch a little downloaded content on it and it would stream Netflix in UHD. I did manage to sell it for about ¼ of what I paid ($440.00) for it. |
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Thanks given by: | CV19 (07-19-2018) |
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#10145 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Then I bought my first Blu-ray Player around 2008-09, Panasonic DMP-BD35. Needed a Media Player found the Buffalo LinkTheater. When I upgraded my Panasonic to the BMP-BD60, I was doing DVD and BD Back-ups since I took all that Junk off it was easier to just play the Discs. I didn't need the Buffalo Player. I was accessing Streaming Providers with the BD60, I liked it and upgraded to the Model I have now the BMP-BDT330. I started Streaming from my HDD and Local Server, and now from my Streaming Providers. So to me it's the Logical Next Step, Streaming from your Provider's Server. So you guys haven't answered my question, what's after the 4K Disc? Last edited by alchav21; 07-20-2018 at 01:32 PM. |
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#10146 | |
Blu-ray Count
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It has never been a better time than right here, right now, to be a home theater enthusiast and movie collector! Last edited by Vilya; 07-19-2018 at 11:48 PM. |
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#10147 | |
Blu-ray Count
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![]() Probably 8K on some "to be determined" type of physical media. Possibly a larger diameter optical disc with more surface area to hold more data? It'll take some work to get 8K onto a 5" optical disc unless a breakthrough occurs in data storage. Consumer hard drives and servers are too expensive and most are too short-lived to make for a viable option. These drives would have to have huge storage capacities to hold very many 8K movies, even if these 8K files were ridiculously compressed. 8K would involve too much data, even highly compressed, for the vast majority of people to stream unless the internet infrastructure improves by an order of magnitude or more. 8K would be like trying to stream four 4K movies simultaneously. I'll consult my Magic 8 Ball later; it predicts the future as well as nearly anyone else can. Last edited by Vilya; 07-20-2018 at 04:22 AM. |
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#10148 |
Special Member
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They probably won't come out with another format after 4K. A lot of movies don't really even have more resolution than that. And it's not like it would even be beneficial unless you have a movie theater in your home. Most likely everything will go in the direction of streaming and downloads like music has. I think they will keep selling physical media as long as it remains profitable, just don't think physical media will go above 4K.
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#10149 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#10150 |
Special Member
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I think you're misunderstanding what I said. I didn't say that they weren't going to keep making physical media. I just don't think physical media is going to extend beyond 4K. I doubt streaming ever would either. 4K is really reaching the limitations of most movies. A few companies are still making 4K UHD players. Oppo left the market because it couldn't sell its players. They priced themselves out of the market. Streaming is getting way more popular but sorry the quality just isn't the same as a disc.
Last edited by stonesfan129; 07-20-2018 at 01:38 AM. |
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#10151 |
Blu-ray Count
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Oppo left the 4k disc player market because their parent company (BBK Electronics- a Chinese multi-national company) wanted them to focus on their core business: smartphones. Oppo has also stopped making headphones and headphone amplifiers for the same reason. The home video and audio section of Oppo accounted for very little of Oppo's overall income. Oppo is the 4th largest manufacturer of smartphones in the world.
At least three other companies are offering 4k players in the price range once occupied by Oppo: Cambridge, Panasonic, and Pioneer. There is always a market for high end components, even if just a niche one. These three companies would not be offering 4K players at these price levels if there was no market for them. 8K displays appear to be on the horizon; some say they will be in stores by 2020 with more consumer friendly pricing by 2023. There will be content of some sort for them at some point. The internet will not be robust enough to stream in 8K anytime soon for the vast majority of us. It would also annihilate data caps for the many of us that are shackled to them. That would suggest 8K content will be on physical media or offered as gigantic downloads. Otherwise, we would just have 8K upscales and that may be all there is at first. 8K displays offer 100 degree viewing angles compared to just 55 degrees with 4k displays. 8K supports up to 22.2 channels of audio. 8K supports frame rates up to 120 Hz progressive compared to 60 Hz for 4K- fast motion is handled much, much better. 8K displays will have 33 million pixels vs. 8.3 million for 4K. This many pixels, 33 million, makes them individually invisible even when just one inch from the screen. 8k comes even closer to matching the full capability of the human eye, more nuanced colors and more details in both bright and dark scenes. 8K resolution can benefit both content yet to be made and existing content. 35mm film can yield up to 6K worth of detail; 70mm can yield up to 12K, and IMAX up to 18K. 8K is also rumored to support 3D, with 4K stereoscopic resolution for each eye, without the need for special glasses. http://www.cinematography.com/index.php?showtopic=72252 Last edited by Vilya; 07-20-2018 at 04:33 AM. |
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#10152 | |
Blu-ray Count
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4K disc player sales are up 150% this year while 4K disc sales are up 130%. Trust the sales data, not your misconceptions. At the end of the first quarter of 2018, 9 million American households owned a 4K disc player and that number is expected to keep growing. 35 million American households own a 4k TV. Again, you need to remember that 35% of Americans do not have broadband internet. Streaming in 4K is impossible for them and even HD streaming is problematic. Last edited by Vilya; 07-20-2018 at 04:49 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Wendell R. Breland (07-20-2018) |
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#10153 | |
Expert Member
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#10154 |
Special Member
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iTunes sells audio tracks that are 256kbps AAC. I believe their movies typically have 160kbps AAC 2.0 and a 384kbps AC3 5.1 track. Audio CDs are 1411kbps 44.1khz PCM. So no, not the same quality.
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#10155 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Netflix continues to look at ways to reduce streaming data rates. Several things I have streamed lately at 1080 has a data rate of just 3.85 mbps. They have openly stated they want viewers with mobile devices to be able to view their content and not use up too much data.
The entire game for streaming video is less data, not more. The Netflix ISP Speed Index for June here. Comcast, the leaded, has a speed (4.13 mbps) that is about half that of a DVD. Any VUDU users here? If so, do you know why they removed their connection speed quality meter from their app? |
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Thanks given by: | Vilya (07-20-2018) |
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#10156 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#10157 | |
Blu-ray Count
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This is speculation on my part, but perhaps they are concerned that the playback of 4k discs on a computer will hasten the eventual cracking of the DRM on these discs. Just a guess, but there must be some reason why they have made the playback of 4k discs on a computer such a chore. On a different subject, I am also going to hazard a guess that you and Groot will be among the first on this thread to own an 8K display. I look forward to your assessments. ![]() |
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#10158 | |
Blu-ray King
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Thanks given by: | Vilya (07-20-2018) |
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#10159 | |
Blu-ray King
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Also, now that Netflix will probably charge the max subscription for 4K HDR, they will need to deliver to pay for all that new content. Having said all that, 4K will be the absolute cap for quality, even way into the future. |
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#10160 | |
Blu-ray King
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Thanks given by: | Ender14 (07-20-2018) |
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