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#161 | |
Banned
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#163 | |
Senior Member
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Hi Josh, thanks for checking out my pics, I'm overwhelmed by your comments....and nice gear yourself! Well if you must know I live in Westchester county in a 1.2M home. I will be moving to a much larger room soon, and with bigger PBN speakers. The Compact reference speakers...getting a good deal. I'm sorry that you had to live in a trailer home....it must be nice to be living large now ehh ? ![]() |
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#164 | |
Senior Member
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#165 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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suggestions@criterion.com |
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#166 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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When digitizing my vinyl collection I find a notable improvement recording at my sound card's full 192/24 sampling rate over 96/24, but not everyone finds this as important as I do. If I had to make a choice between a improved color space and improved audio sampling rate for UHD, I'd take the improved color in a heartbeat. At the very least we can both agree that mandated 24 bit sampling is something worth putting in the 4KBD spec and that UHD will be awesome. ![]() Last edited by singhcr; 04-07-2014 at 08:13 PM. |
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#167 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2011
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love the arguements in this thread
![]() I have a question about the idea behind this thread - why does dvd have to go away because blu-ray is around? Look at music - mp3s and iPods have been around for years now yet artists still release physical cds all the time. There is no issue with having 2 formats out there for that so why can't we have 2 formats for video. I mentioned it in a thread before but it baffles me why home video seems to want 1 format only when most other things out there come in multiple formats and people like it - cell phone, cable/satelitte, etc. If people want it and the demand is still there, why bother getting rid of dvds? |
Thanks given by: | DustnBones001 (05-17-2015) |
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#168 |
Blu-ray Guru
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DVD and BD are essentially the same product at this point.
The only reason to keep DVD going is for legacy portable devices like the player in your minivan. Personally I wouldn't want my kids taking my BDs in the car. But there are so many options for potable movies anymore I can't see DVD being viable for more than another 5 years. DVD was designed for a SD world and that's why it needs to go away. The transition to HD is pretty much over and DVD is living on borrowed time for being a viable format for new releases. |
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#169 | |
Blu-ray King
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I love my bluray but we may be the last gen of people who care about quality enough. |
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#170 |
Blu-ray Guru
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You're missing the point Steedeel. There are other options for getting SD video. DVD players don't connect to Tablets and Phones.
I am saying for disc based players there is little need DVD any longer. Anyone that buys a DVD player at this point for a TV over an entry level BD is wasting their money unless they are connecting it to an SD set with no plans of ever upgrading. BD players are cheap in the grand scheme of things now and factor in low cost catalog titles there is little reason to buy a DVD only player. |
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#171 | ||
Active Member
Sep 2013
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I also think that the DVD boomed because the idea of "ownership" was attached to DVD. VHS was rental format before DVD, so in other words, DVD boomed when it was released. I also remember special features being all the rage when DVD came to market, bluray does not offer anyone anything extra aside from better picture and better sound (if you have the right equipment) |
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#172 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2011
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#174 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Apr 2011
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okay but why do you get rid of it? Simple example - look at vhs. When dvd came along, there was a reason to get rid of it in the market place - better quality, more durable, etc. Your only reason is that it is SD quality and there are other ways to see that content. Same can be said for HD and blu-ray. Why doesn't everyone just download from iTunes and then you don't have to worry about all these discs? Unless you are getting rid of SD totally, there is no reason to get rid of dvd, and no reason that doesn't apply to blu-ray as well. For some things, dvd is a better format choice than blu-ray - tv shows for example. I mean, the first few seasons of Smallville are not HD quality and that show is just over 10 years old. All putting on blu-ray would do is increase the price as no studio is going to toss a season of shows onto 1 or 2 discs.
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#175 | |
Active Member
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DVD is never a better format than blu-ray. A DVD might be more convenient, for say, playing in a minivan, but it is physically impossible for it to be "better". Cheaper maybe, but not better. You know what else wasn't shot in HD? Every movie and television show made over the first 90 years or so of filmmaking. Virtually all of which benefit immensely from blu-ray. Smallville WOULD look better on blu-ray, if not ridiculously so. Have you seen the Star Trek: The Next Generation blu-rays? Holy cow, what a difference. A MASSIVE improvement over the DVDs, and that show came out long before Smallville. It's seriously a new experience watching it in HD. The blu-ray of the 1960's low-budget science fiction series, "The Prisoner", is a revelation on blu-ray. The Twilight Zone? Freakin' awesome. In terms of cost effectiveness, however, I agree with you. Studios will probably never go back and release shows like Smallville, unfortunately, because consumers sadly haven't embraced blu-ray like they did DVD, and are willfully denying themselves a better home viewing experience. I would die happy if they released Buffy on blu-ray - the DVDs look God awful. Last edited by coljohnmatrix; 04-07-2014 at 11:30 PM. |
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#176 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#177 |
Member
Apr 2014
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Like any industry its supply and demand. The market for DVD has to be still sufficiently large to keep DVD alive. These consumers that keep this market going obviously care less about PQ and just want to watch the movie.
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#178 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Feb 2014
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Something else people already know, but is worth repeating: you can go back and play regular DVD's on a Blu player. Though this is old news now since the Blu format has been around 8 years at this point, when you really think about this, it's truly amazing that Blu is the first home video format that allows you to play a a new format as well as the previous format. So, since I'm guessing DVD's are cheaper to produce that Blu's (maybe), that's another reason DVD's are sticking around - i.e., if a company just chooses to make a regular DVD, then the market is huge since anyone with either a regular DVD player or a Blu player (or both) can watch this. Last edited by AnamorphicWidescreen; 04-08-2014 at 01:22 AM. |
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#179 | |
Blu-ray King
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I just wonder if the people enjoying dvd now will be the same people who will happily sit in their living room watching the lion king or Shawshank (two very popular DVDs I believe) on their smartphone in a not too distant future. By the way, I don't mention tablets as I believe they will go the same way as the netbook. So to summarise, I think bluray is the gold standard and although I hope 4k is a huge success I am not sure it will be. If it isn't, bluray will be judged as the best in town. Once we can't go up in quality anymore, there is only one way we can go. Let's hope my fears don't pan out for decades to come but the obsession with mobile along with the acceptance of inferior quality (DVD) is a lethal combination that home cinema fans like myself may never recover from. |
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#180 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Buy a BD player. They also play DVD. That way you can buy new releases in HD goodness or get a DVD if the BD isn't available. Do you see the logic? I could understand if BD Players were still $300+ but at less than $100 why would you buy DVD only? |
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