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#61 | |
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#62 |
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I watch digital HD and 4K on my phone, ipad, laptop, desktop, and 65inch Oled 4k, so maybe for you its meant to be on just one screen, but for others it meant to be on multiple.
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#63 | |
Active Member
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Renting before you buy and buying on sale is how I grew my collection, my secret sauce |
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#64 | |
Blu-ray Count
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Again, I do not care what most people do nor should anyone else. Most people are fat in the U.S.; does that make being overweight desirable? People are shifting to subscription streaming; you know, one of those recurring monthly bills that you seem to dislike so much. ![]() Subscription streaming is where the strong double digit growth lies, not with purchases. Subscription streaming is up 21.93% while purchases overall are down 11.82% as of the 2nd quarter of this year. Your "most people" just want cheap access to a lot of stuff; they do not want to buy much, if any, of it. Most of my disc purchases include the digital copy, so I have the best of everything. I can watch 2.35 aspect ratio movies on my 5.6" screen phone and my 10" tablet whenever I choose. I have never done so because watching a movie on such tiny screens ruins the experience in my opinion. The only reason that I have begun to redeem any of my many digital codes is to have access to my content when visiting the homes of my friends or my family. I do not watch movies on small screens; I spent a large part of my life stuck with TVs no larger than 25" and I am not nostalgic to relive the tiny screen experience ever again. Digital terms of service allow for your digital content to be deleted, edited, and censored at any time without any compensation. While this may not happen often, it does happen, it has happened, and even one such occurrence is enough of a reason for me to reject digital. What I buy on disc remains mine; no one can alter it for any reason. I expect everything that I purchase to be under my full control; I would never agree, even just in theory, to the terms that digital customers agree to with blind faith; I will not consent to a digital provider being able to delete or modify my purchases at their whim, no matter how often they actually do it. Last edited by Vilya; 09-08-2019 at 04:42 PM. |
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#65 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I agree these threads have the usual gang of "get off my lawn" proclamations that do and do not match reality of the tech. But steeldeel has a point in his post, especially with regards to editing/censorship (or worse, bungled scans) that can be applied at any time to a copy you don't control. Also, these physical vs digital threads devolve into shouting matches between people with differing motives (I am paraphrasing Roger Ebert here): 1. people for whom movies are a way pass the time 2. people who care about the art of cinema There may be varying degrees of the above, but I know people who are (usually) definitely one or the other. If only to pass the time, you're not going to care about how you watch it, just access (naturally going to want something like digital). If an art form, you are going to care about presentation, and naturally going to argue against downgrading the product. Because "quality" does not begin and end with simply accessing the film in whatever form you can get it (especially with movies, with emphasis on image and sound in many movies). I submit that few people have infinite space to store multi-thousands of movies. I went to one of the house of an "old man" I know (a cinephile); his apartment was chockablock with DVDs (also some VHS and Betamax(!)) piled to the ceiling, in every available space. The point being, if you view my collection next to me icon, you see I am more fully digital. I am on the move and could not store or bring with me a huge number of discs. I don't care for the average mainstream titles if they are digital or not, even if they get deleted or altered (I just won't watch if altered against my will). But I also buy physical discs when the art of the movie is important to me, and I want a more long-term version of the movie. I would never watch even my digital movies on a phone or laptop, but I treat cinema as an art, even if I do watch other items to pass the time. Last edited by crackedknee; 09-08-2019 at 04:54 PM. |
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#66 | |
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Thanks given by: | flyry (09-09-2019) |
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#67 |
Blu-ray Count
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I wondered when you would be reduced to just lobbing insults; it is the last refuge of the intellectually challenged.
This "grandpa" is just 57 years-old and he was capable enough of an old codger to retire at age 44. Are you on track to do as well? Enjoy buying things that you do not own and have zero control over. Enjoy needing an ever more costly high speed internet service to access that content. You like recurring bills so much afterall. My "plastic" comes with your beloved ephemeral digital codes, so I have all that you have and so much more besides. I truly own my content in the highest possible quality on an unchanging physical format in my actual possession. All you have is remote access to files controlled by the studios and digital providers; files that can be modified at any time. You gullibly agree to allow both studio and provider to screw you over at anytime and you think that you're the smartest guy in the room. You think that their shafting you infrequently makes the act of being shafted in the first place somehow acceptable. You own nothing with digital. ![]() Last edited by Vilya; 09-08-2019 at 05:02 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | BobSimms (09-08-2019) |
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#68 | |
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I do agree that 4K on tablets/phones doesn't really matter, you cant tell the difference in resolution at that size between 3K & 4K but the HDR is noticeable. Tech will eventually get better and more affordable where that may change. As far as censorship/altering I honestly don’t know of any in my collection other than Star Wars that have been altered. As far as studios in control goes I’ve seen a good change with my upgrades to 4K. I do agree I don't like giving that power to studios but I don’t see signs that they will do anything crazy, it may hurt there future sales. I like to watch my movies on my TV when I want to be immersed but sometimes I want to watch content on the go so it just works for me. Your digital collection is savage. How long since you started? |
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#69 | |
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#70 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Yes, already the streaming tech is catching up, even in the last year give or take. Eventually delivered Mps speeds will equal disc, BUT: not every locale has that infrastructure (I am optimal in my set-up, with my speeds dropping at lowest to 140mps. That doesn't mean there aren't problems. If the signal service DOES get slowed for a few hours, the various streaming services will use their adaptive features to downgrade my stream (in the case of Vudu, HDR drops out or if bad will crash, in the case of FN, video/audio drop-outs or if bad will crash). Censorship/alteration is a definite thing, check this site for an idea of how it works (any people might buy a disc from another country): https://www.movie-censorship.com/ Naturally you would be stuck with the version provided if digital, and could be changed after you bought it at studio whim. My collection was started pretty shortly after joining this site, pretty much all of it comes from this site, about just under 5 years of putting it together. |
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#71 | |
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Your purchase choices do not impact mine, so I do not care what choice you make for yourself. I told the OP at the start of this thread to do what they deem to be best for them and that still stands. Even I redeem some of the digital codes that come with my discs as I see the value in having access while away from home. I also subscribe to a couple of streaming services and I rent video on demand from Vudu. I use all of these because I see their benefits and I also see their limitations. The only thing that I am not doing is making digital purchases by themselves as I see them as a bad deal. A disc purchase typically gives me two or three ways to watch the movie; the extra disc and the code are just limited use bonuses. |
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Thanks given by: | BobSimms (09-08-2019) |
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#72 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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Dolby Vision is beautiful and coupled with Atmos is even sweeter. I wish the One S could output DV for discs so I could enjoy DTS X with DV. |
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#73 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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This is, then, where the censorship/alteration after the fact comes into play. A couple famous examples would Fantasia (correct me if I'm wrong, but a brief scene with the unicorns is zoomed to de-emphasis that one is white and the other is black, i.e. race) and Song of the South (obtainable in Europe, not obtainable in the US). Another example is Eyes Wide Shut, version I saw in Europe was uncut, apparently the US version has a digital figure inserted to obscure one naked female, so the movie could be rated R in the US instead of NC-17. |
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#74 | |
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Increasing bitrates five fold would shatter the data caps that many people have to endure from their ISP. Streaming that much more data would cause both the streaming services and the internet service providers to increase their prices substantially. There is also no real need for any of the streaming providers to increase their bitrates as their customers, by and large, are already content with the quality that they are receiving now. Better codecs could benefit both streaming and physical media, but higher bitrates would still have to be a part of the equation and transmitting more data means spending more money. |
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#75 | ||
Expert Member
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![]() I often watch on the iPad (during long car trips, overseas travel, blackouts, etc) so I do appreciate that new movies are Blu-ray+Digital. Also, the Vudu Disc 2 Digital program especially for titles that port to Movies Anywhere. I create my own 1:1 MKV rips, too, but the iTunes/Vudu/Amazon/Google Play versions are my offsite backup. ![]() Quote:
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#76 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Also: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbKCZpQN72c[/ame]"] Where we were discussing where do we get the info about the tech in this thead: https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread.php?t=320087 |
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Thanks given by: | Night*Wolf (09-08-2019) |
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#77 | |
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The bitrates for Netflix and Vudu still stand at 16 and 15 Mbps respectively; these are not minimums- this is as good as it gets with either of them. Remember, Netflix still only recommends a 25 Mbps internet connection for their 4K content and Vudu still recommends just 11 Mbps- these recommendations have not changed in years. "The max I could ever get Netflix to pull down was 16000 kbps." https://www.howtogeek.com/338983/how...s-netflix-use/ ^The article is from Jan. 2018, but I have found nothing to suggest that anything has changed since then. Netflix's, and Vudu's, streaming recommendations were the same then as they are right now, which also suggests that nothing has changed. Last edited by Vilya; 09-08-2019 at 06:18 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | BobSimms (09-08-2019) |
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#78 | |
Blu-ray Count
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I am inclined to believe that anyone who purchases movies is a significant fan of them. Digital customers likely buy their movies with the same enthusiasm and confidence that I do with my disc purchases. I think their confidence in digital is misplaced, but I can not question their motivation and their love of film just because they choose a different format. They are doing what they feel is best for them, as am I, and our mutual love of movies is the one great thing that we all have in common despite all of the other differences and nuances that we debate here on these forums. |
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#79 | |
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#80 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2018
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