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#8561 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#8562 | |
Blu-ray King
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#8563 | |
Blu-ray King
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#8564 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I know you guys separate Physical and Digital, but now it's all shot in Digital with a few exceptions. So don't you think the next natural step will be to Distribute this Content from a Server? If Movies are put on Hard Drives for Distribution to Cinemas. To me it makes natural sense to Distribute these Movies to Cinemas and Home Theaters from a Server.
Last edited by alchav21; 04-27-2018 at 07:40 PM. |
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#8565 | |||||
Blu-ray Prince
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What is it about this particular form of interaction that scares you so? Quote:
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Books, movies, newspapers, western civilization itself were all going to be laid waste by the idiot box. Entire generations of mind numbed zombies were going to drag society to its inevitable doom. Or not. Quote:
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-28-2018), The_Donster (04-28-2018) |
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#8566 | |
Blu-ray King
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#8567 | |
Blu-ray Count
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#8569 |
Blu-ray Count
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I think it is safe to say that I love film, too, but I am confident that conventional film making will continue unabated despite this new, and yet unproven, aberration.
I can't think of any form of home entertainment that has eliminated any other form, with the possible exception of serial radio dramas; television has pretty much buried them. Even so, many of those radio broadcasts are still available on disc or by download; there just aren't many new ones that I am aware of. Plenty of room at the home entertainment table and you are free to invite only the guests that you prefer. Last edited by Vilya; 04-27-2018 at 06:54 PM. |
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#8570 |
Expert Member
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When Avatar had a colossal box-office success almost 10 years ago, a lot of people were afraid that 3D films would take over eventually and the studios would only care about 3D.
And look, they are still doing "conventional" films and 3D has its place. Relax Steedeel, even if interactive films become a reality in the future, a lot of film makers will create their films the same way they do now or 10 or 20 or 50 years ago. I honestly can't imagine a director like say, Paul Thomas Anderson creating interactive adventures if that becomes a reality. [Show spoiler] And lets say interactive films are the only thing that studios do in the future... we still have over a century worth of regular movies to enjoy without worrying about such thing. |
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#8571 | ||
Blu-ray Prince
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I mean yeah kids use touchscreens and so what.
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It's weathered innumerable challenges and changes over the past century or so and is not only none the worse for wear, it's better than ever. The vast majority of these damn kids today either already love film or will learn to love it as they grow older. And the ones that don't? They'll find something else they enjoy and that's fine too. |
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#8572 | |
Blu-ray Count
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Where the data is located, how it is accessed, and who has control over it is relevant. It is not "natural" that everyone should want to relinquish their possession of that data and instead rely on a server farm, proprietary software, and their ISP to access it. All this accomplishes is the placement of unnecessary hurdles in the playback chain and necessitates requirements that the consumer has zero control over. Disc playback is not burdened with any of these requirements. Disc, disc player, hdmi cable, display, electricity, modern AVR, and speaker array and you have everything you need for the best in home experience possible. Disc advocates want to have the data in their possession. They want full control over it. Disc still offers the highest quality and the most reliable and consistent performance. Disc playback never has to pause for buffering nor does its image deteriorate due to fluctuations in resolution. No dependence upon inconsistent ISP's nor reliance upon overwhelmed and poorly maintained servers. Having a commercial movie theater rely on internet access to present a public showing of a movie is patently absurd. The fact that theaters DO NOT rely on servers, and the internet connections to them, is ample proof that doing so would be a very, very bad idea. Too many ways for too many things to go wrong. Theaters audiences expect a reliably consistent experience and the highest quality in image and sound reproduction. That is why they rely on a local hard drive, and SSDs at that. Server based content can not, and does not, meet that standard. Remote access to servers only increases the risk of failure. Audiences dislike failure. Edit: corrected myself here: https://forum.blu-ray.com/showpost.p...postcount=8647 Last edited by Vilya; 04-30-2018 at 09:19 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-28-2018) |
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#8575 |
Special Member
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When I merged my libraries together for VUDU, I noticed it gave me Jason Bourne (2016) in my iTunes library in 1080p HD. I downloaded and watched this in iTunes on my desktop PC and quite honestly for the file size it is, the encode looks pretty good. I'm using a 24" Samsung LED 1080p monitor. I tried hard to find fault in the encode and had a hard time. I wonder if with newer Apple devices being more powerful that they can use more aggressive encoding settings and make it look better than it used to.
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#8576 | |
Expert Member
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#8577 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#8578 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If you want an example of why its bad to put your faith in a company doing the right thing when it writes eulas to do whatever it wants you should look at moviepass. They put in their eula that they can basically change the deal whenever they want and they are now going from 1 movie a day no limits to 4 movies a month for at least some people to no repeat viewings of the same movie for anyone. This is a subscription company so they are only screwing people who have a yearly pass but it could just as easily happen to people using vod services like Vudu or iTunes because they put stuff in like we reserve the right to charge steaming fees discontinue service etc.
When you agree to a license with a company like photobucket, walmart or moviepass (all 3 of these guys have done skumy things with tos before) and you agree to letting them do skumy things if they so choose expect them to eventually do those skumy things. Last edited by veritas; 04-28-2018 at 05:50 AM. |
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#8579 |
Blu-ray King
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It just so hapoens, interactive films cannot be pirated.
Last edited by Steedeel; 04-28-2018 at 08:49 AM. |
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#8580 | |
Blu-ray King
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