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#19441 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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Not only would that be the right thing to do, nobody will know what the **** you're talking about. It could be your Rosebud. Talk about a win/win. |
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#19442 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#19443 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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The streaming provider/content/hardware CF continues, some more here.
I really hate being hostage to marketing people as in no Atmos on most 3D movies, no immersive audio on several Blu-ray titles while the UHD Blu-ray does have immersive audio. At least I can buy and use the UHD version. |
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (12-09-2019) |
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#19444 | |
Blu-ray King
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#19445 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Yes you can look at my previous Posts, I just try and defend Digital because the hard core people that prefer Discs put down the Digital people. They say we don't appreciate Quality, and it's all about convenience. The Streaming Quality has come up, and it will get better. Just like Streaming from a Disc or Streaming from a Server, it's all about set-up and your equipment.
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#19446 | |
Blu-ray Count
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![]() I really doubt it. You already think streaming is awesome, so why would you want to pay more? Streaming customers are already happy, so why would the providers want to spend more? Just imagine how wonderful lossless audio would sound delivered via your TV's speakers if streaming were to ever offer it. ![]() We do not put down "digital people"; we kill them in video games. ![]() This disc buyer is a digital renter; I use digital services. If the quality wasn't acceptable, I would not spend my time or money using them. Acceptable quality is not the same thing as best quality; a distinction that you can not comprehend. For purchases, I want the best quality AND I want real ownership. Discs give me that; digital does not. Last edited by Vilya; 12-10-2019 at 08:22 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Dynamo of Eternia (12-10-2019), Ender14 (12-10-2019), sapiendut (12-10-2019), Steedeel (12-10-2019), Wendell R. Breland (12-10-2019) |
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#19447 | |
Blu-ray King
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#19448 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The problem is not the setup. The problem is the excessively low bitrate used by providers. Just count your lucky stars that you’ve never seen a disc in action and/or have the proficiency to see the artifacts of streaming. |
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#19449 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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Don't get me wrong, the bleeding edge folks definitely do their part but - to pick one example - if everybody who wanted more hard drive space was willing to pay for it hard drive manufacturers would have very little incentive to squeeze every single byte out of every single platter (or to eliminate platters entirely, for that matter). The people who want more stuff but aren't willing to pay for it are the people who drive innovation because suppliers know they can lure some of those cheapskates away from their competitors by offering more for the same price. Bigger hard drives, bigger TV screens, higher resolutions, deeper blacks, brighter colors, better streaming quality, more channels, fewer commercials...all of these are ways suppliers can try differentiate themselves from competitors and as such they all provide incentives for suppliers to find ways to provide more for less. So yeah, the cheapskates are going to be the ones who drive the quality of streaming forward. Uh huh. So when in this very post you called them cheapskates sniffing around for free codes you meant that in the good way? You were what? Praising their frugality? Let's be honest, the people who 'want the best and are willing to pay for it' aren't always shy about sneering at the great unwashed and their unenlightened ways. Which is fine. Just own it. |
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#19450 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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You really believe cheapskates is the reason we have had all the advancements in audio and video? Not from where I sit, quad sound in 1972, 7 channels of audio in 1987, 78" projector in 1984, LaserDisc 1984, βetamax Hi-Fi in 1984, etc., etc. None of this was designed for the cheapskate market.
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (12-10-2019) |
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#19451 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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#19452 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I have been streaming video since the late 90's and continue to stream several hours a week. It is mostly TV stuff. |
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Thanks given by: | Vilya (12-11-2019) |
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#19454 | |
Blu-ray Count
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I live on a fixed income myself and I create budgets every month that account for every last penny. I am very efficient with most of my spending and that allows me to splurge on certain other hobbies. One of streaming's biggest selling points is its low cost. If streaming were to improve their quality by substantially increasing their bitrates that would result in more bandwidth and more data usage which in turn would result in more cost to their customer. Higher costs to deliver better quality could lessen the attractiveness of these streaming services especially when their customers are already largely satisfied with what they are getting now. Why do the providers need to improve their quality when few are asking them to and when it would raise their costs to provide it? Costs that they would have to pass on to their customers who don't show any interest in paying extra? There's a saying that if it ain't broke, don't fix it. I can not recall reading any posts here from a single streaming advocate who has expressed a willingness to pay more to get more. The masses drive some innovation particularly as regards efficiency and getting the most possible for the least cost, but the enthusiasts spur cutting edge advancements because we are the ones willing to pay for them. The penny pinchers wait for the price to drop years later if they adopt the new technology at all. We are talking about people who still listen to modern movies and TV shows with their immersive audio tracks via their TV's speakers, or, maybe, a low cost soundbar. These are the people that still think that DVD quality is great. They do not so much motivate innovation as they wait for it to go on sale- and they may still pass on it even then. My comment about sniffing around for free codes was specifically aimed at the person that I quoted. He comes here to this website to get cheap codes from disc buyers while simultaneously hoping for the demise of the disc market. Disc buyers are the very source for many of his bargain finds, yet he trolls us with his moronic posts. He bites the very hands that feed him. Last edited by Vilya; 12-10-2019 at 04:48 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Dynamo of Eternia (12-10-2019), Ender14 (12-10-2019), Leslie Dame (12-10-2019), sapiendut (12-10-2019), Steedeel (12-10-2019), Wendell R. Breland (12-10-2019), zarquon (12-10-2019) |
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#19455 | |
Blu-ray King
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#19456 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I find it hard to believe the Trinnov Altitude 32 was designed for cheapskates. In the following video Blu-ray was mentioned several times, streaming was never mentioned.
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (12-10-2019) |
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#19459 | ||||||
Blu-ray Prince
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That's pretty freaking remarkable. And who drove that? I would argue that it wasn't the 'you can have my Kuro when you pry it from my cold dead hands' crowd. I would argue that TVs keep getting bigger, better and cheaper primarily because manufacturers are chasing the dollars spent by people who shop in big box stores. Quote:
And suppliers know they know. Compression is going to get better, delivery is going to get better, storage is going to get cheaper and this will in large measure be driven by just plain folk. Quote:
Which is why suppliers are investing tons o' capital in trying to find cheaper and more efficient ways of giving consumers what they want. Just look at commercials for mobile plans or cable plans or the like. They all tout how more you get with them and how much you save doing it. Unlimited data, faster speeds, more devices doing more things at the same time...consumers want more and suppliers want to give it to them. Streaming is going to continue to get better and that's going to be driven primarily by just plain folk. Quote:
And it's not like the desire for more and more speakers has changed the way speakers work. Speakers more air. That's pretty much the long and the short of it. But to your point, I'm not dismissing the role of early adopters. They definitely play a part. But Home Theater did not become A Thing because of enthusiasts oohing and ahhing over their Betamaxes or their LaserDisc players. Home Theater became A Thing when the masses embraced VHS. Quote:
Or were they motivated by hopes of a somewhat bigger score? Quote:
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#19460 | |
Blu-ray Count
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Remarkable improvements to internet infrastructure may have occured in urban areas like where you live, but not everyone lives in population centers like Chicago. No improvements to internet service have occurred in my region and many here can not get anything better than 25 Mbps ADSL internet. They can barely stream what passes for 4K on Netflix now and the internet service providers have shown no signs that they plan to improve anything anytime soon. What internet providers exist in rural areas like mine have no competition; they literally charge what they want and they impose data caps. My ISP has raised my rates over 40% in just three years; my options are to pay it or do without. That's the reality outside of your internet Emerald City of Chicago. If better codecs come along they will benefit discs every bit as much as they will streaming. Even if the big telecom giants decide to run fiber to every Hooterville in America, fat chance, that does not automatically mean that streaming providers will up their game. More bandwidth and more data usage will increase costs, not lessen them, and will the typical streamer who pays $10 per month to stream be willing to pay more both to their ISP and to their streaming provider to access better quality that they never asked for in the first place? I doubt it. Streaming quality has been stagnant since 2015 despite urban areas like yours offering 1-10 Gbps internet service. Not one streaming provider has taken advantage of that bandwidth and increased their bitrates. Why is that? Because they see no need and it would cost them more money and that cost would have to be borne by customers that hate price increases. My mobile phone bill has only gone up, not down, and my "unlimited" data has a data cap. AT&T, in their fine print, clearly states that once I exceed my data cap, they will throttle me effectively neutering my so-called unlimited data. They won't charge me more, but they will make my using more data a miserable experience. The devil's in the details; you gotta read that fine print. AT&T was recently fined $60 million for their misleading claims about their "unlimited" data. "it (AT&T) began throttling data speeds in 2011 for its unlimited data plan customers after they used as little as 2 gigabytes of data in a billing period." https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/pres...sled-consumers AT&T still does this; they were just required to mention this little detail in their terms of service that they know few people will ever read. AT&T can't seem to go a year without being fined for one deceptive practice or another. The telecoms want to give it to their customers alright and give it to them good. Your comment about speakers is just uncharacteristically stupid of you. A true multi-channel surround sound home theater trounces any soundbar in existence and while speakers do move air it is not that simple. A mere fan moves air; speakers do a hell of a lot more than that. Speakers vary in quality immensely and almost all of us know this. Home theater is still a niche; it is not mainstream as many people do not want the expense and/ or do not like the aesthetics of them. Being mainstream is not important, anyways. Being viable and being profitable are. Mainstream adoption certainly helps, but we have always had many luxury categories that the average customer never delved into. VHS never offered anything more than Hi-Fi stereo; there was never any requirement for a multi-channel multi-speaker home theater set-up to take advantage of it. Most people already owned stereos; these VCRs were just able to make use of something that many people already had. I bought my first Hi-Fi vcr in 1986 at a cost of $800 back then. It was a damn long time later before Hi-Fi stereo vcrs were consumer friendly priced. Laserdiscs were the best home video entertainment format for over a decade, yet they were never embraced by the VHS satisfied public. Yet, they were still deemed profitable and worth making as many niche products are. DVDs were not all that attractively priced in 1997 nor were the players, but that eventually changed because the enthusiasts embraced them first, the research and development costs were recouped thanks to these early adopters, discs and players became more affordable and then, and only then, did these products become mainstream. It is probably a safe assumption to make that any company that markets a new technology has hopes that their product will be a big hit, but they will be happy with a profitable niche market, too. Many luxuries exist that their manufacturers knew full well would never be found in every one's home, but they also knew that there were enough quality minded consumers to justify their investment. Enthusiasts drive innovation; they always support it first when it is in its infancy and at its most fragile economic state of deployment. The masses come along years later when there's a sale and a bargain to be had. They ride on the backs of the enthusiasts. Last edited by Vilya; 12-10-2019 at 11:42 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | sapiendut (12-10-2019), Steedeel (12-11-2019), Wendell R. Breland (12-11-2019), zarquon (12-10-2019) |
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