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Old 08-09-2023, 06:35 PM   #1
scififan73 scififan73 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RocShemp View Post
The VHS resurgence I'm aware of. Same for new audio cassettes. But I always chalked that up to Hipsters/Millennials (or whatever they're called these days) simply being weird for the sake of being weird.





I see your point, but it still seems weird to waste money on a lesser alternative when there are two better options (BD is quite a leap from DVD). It kinda reminds me of my cousin who would get mad when DVD purchases included a BD of the movie and would throw them away. She also got mad when I suggested she should have kept the BDs to at least future proof her collection. She then angrily told me not everyone could afford a new BD player or HDTV. To which I said she should haven then sold the BDs to reduce the cost of her DVD purchases. She was none too happy with my suggestion.
I can relate to your cousin, i experienced much the same thing when i was working at Future Shop and a customer informed me with an angry, offended battle cry there was " no way!" she would be replacing her vhs tapes.
This if course was at the onset of the dvd revolution, circa 1999 or 2000.

It's weird. Yes, i can understand not wanting to upgrade " everything", but as a collector, when a clearly superior technology emerges you wouldn't think there'd be such resistance.
It's almost like a religious thing, and someone had disproved the existence of their god or something.
Such a stubborn resistance is not rational.
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Old 08-09-2023, 08:17 PM   #2
apollo828 apollo828 is offline
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Originally Posted by scififan73 View Post
It's weird. Yes, i can understand not wanting to upgrade " everything", but as a collector, when a clearly superior technology emerges you wouldn't think there'd be such resistance.
It's almost like a religious thing, and someone had disproved the existence of their god or something.
Such a stubborn resistance is not rational.
Huh? If customers throw a fit, that's one thing, but I swear some people here seem to be completely incapable of understanding that not everybody wants a Maserati. Some are fine with a used Ford. The cultural zeitgeist centers around streaming and the odd theatrical release. Optical players simply aren't that high a priority for a lot of people. Amazon Video removed some movie? Who cares. They added a bunch more, and they're actively shoved in your face via algorithms. That's plenty for many people. Maybe not for people here, which is fine, but pretending that Grandma's irrational because she hasn't bought a new optical player in 25 years and hasn't watched anything on it in the last 5-10 years is seriously elitist. (Growing up, my grandparents had an 8-track player. They were content with the tapes they had. Believe me, it wasn't because they were savoring every last detail of the audio on some fancy system.)
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Old 08-09-2023, 08:33 PM   #3
scififan73 scififan73 is offline
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Huh? If customers throw a fit, that's one thing, but I swear some people here seem to be completely incapable of understanding that not everybody wants a Maserati. Some are fine with a used Ford. The cultural zeitgeist centers around streaming and the odd theatrical release. Optical players simply aren't that high a priority for a lot of people. Amazon Video removed some movie? Who cares. They added a bunch more, and they're actively shoved in your face via algorithms. That's plenty for many people. Maybe not for people here, which is fine, but pretending that Grandma's irrational because she hasn't bought a new optical player in 25 years and hasn't watched anything on it in the last 5-10 years is seriously elitist. (Growing up, my grandparents had an 8-track player. They were content with the tapes they had. Believe me, it wasn't because they were savoring every last detail of the audio on some fancy system.)
As regarding the other member's cousin: to stubbornly even consider the possibility of one day maybe upgrading and just tossing blu rays in the trash (no interest in possibly selling or gifting on either) does strike me as completely irrational, not elitist.
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Old 11-21-2023, 04:01 AM   #4
WelshCollector WelshCollector is offline
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I've got a 4K/HDR TV, and standard Blu Rays look fine to me and I've yet to see a film that's improved significantly enough from 4K/HDR to want to start collecting those.

In fact I can honestly say that I don't like whatever HDR does to a film image. Maybe my TV isn't up to a high enough standard, or maybe my settings are off, but HDR (streaming) usually makes the image too dark. I've only even seen really amazing 4K/HDR on nature documentaries where there's lots of natural light, I don't like it on films.

VHS to DVD was a huge leap, DVD to Blu Ray was a jump. Blu Ray to 4K feels more like a tweak, and given the price of the players, I don't want to make it at the moment. If I could see a big enough difference in quality, I would.

It's not a competition and I'm not dissing anyone who loves 4K. I'm just wondering if my experience is common and explains why there isn't more energy in the 4K player market. Factor in that not everyone has upgraded their set to 4K, and I can see why the physical market is stalling on 4K discs and players.
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Old 11-21-2023, 11:44 AM   #5
Naiera Naiera is online now
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Originally Posted by WelshCollector View Post
Maybe my TV isn't up to a high enough standard ...
Unless it's an OLED then this is likely the explanation.
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Old 11-21-2023, 02:48 PM   #6
Cortiz Cortiz is offline
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Unless it's an OLED then this is likely the explanation.
Even BD looks phenomenal on OLED. I know it does on my Sony 95K so he has a point. There's a definitely an upgrade from 1080 to 4K just not not as noticeable as the Jump from VHS to DVD or DVD to BD. Many people will not think the upgrade justify the investment and I don't blame them.
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Old 11-22-2023, 01:48 PM   #7
Geoff D Geoff D is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WelshCollector View Post
I've got a 4K/HDR TV, and standard Blu Rays look fine to me and I've yet to see a film that's improved significantly enough from 4K/HDR to want to start collecting those.

In fact I can honestly say that I don't like whatever HDR does to a film image. Maybe my TV isn't up to a high enough standard, or maybe my settings are off, but HDR (streaming) usually makes the image too dark. I've only even seen really amazing 4K/HDR on nature documentaries where there's lots of natural light, I don't like it on films.

VHS to DVD was a huge leap, DVD to Blu Ray was a jump. Blu Ray to 4K feels more like a tweak, and given the price of the players, I don't want to make it at the moment. If I could see a big enough difference in quality, I would.

It's not a competition and I'm not dissing anyone who loves 4K. I'm just wondering if my experience is common and explains why there isn't more energy in the 4K player market. Factor in that not everyone has upgraded their set to 4K, and I can see why the physical market is stalling on 4K discs and players.
Close your curtains
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