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#1 |
Gaming Moderator
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I sometimes wonder why the two houses are not going at it in a more toe to toe fashion to try and be victorious, and all I can think of are ulterior motives. One may be that both camps realize that downloads are inevitable, despite some strong opinions here to the contrary (I'll get to that later). In many competetive fields it is often the practice not to undermine your competitors too deeply, since you are often in bed with them regarding other specialties in your area, or you may need them for something later. In this instance, if one side (BD or HDDVD) wins, the other will still have opportunities to make profits in the other format. Sony will make HDDVD players and release movies in HDDVD or Toshiba will will make Blu-ray players. They also have to keep the other parties satisfied...those that play both sides of the field. If someone is selling your produce, but you say or do something to hurt their sales of the other product, they make take that as unfriendly and start to take sides. This is the most likely short term scenario, I think. Fight your competitor, but don't knock them out. Sort of like Prosecutors and Defenders or Republicans and Democrats. You see them having beers together after hours.
On the other hand, if the writing is on the wall, and downloads are the future, this may simply be a game for both groups and studios to maximize the return on an investment that will be short lived. While I have read may arguments about why downloadable HD movies will not be feasible in the US for quite some time, I'm not so sure about that. For it to be profitable, it does not need to be universally available. It need only be in major cities. Many rural Americans don't have high speed internet service and are quite fine without it. They still write checks and use postage stamps, too. They don't download things now, and won't feel the need to later. One of the arguments, though, is that even the current high speeds aren't enough to download one disc of BD content in a reasonable amount of time, but I can think of several ways around this at currently available speeds. Let's say you want a new release, you preorder it (there will be limited preorders available, of course, and they will be more expensive). In the days leading up to the release date, it is background downloaded into whatever device you will be using and finally ready to be accessed on the release date. You may also have the option of downloading higher quality content or more bonus content. For a lower price, you can have a lower priority, and the item will be completely downloaded to you at a slower pace and be available at a later time. For an even lower price, it may be available to you for a limited amount of time, after which it will expire and no longer be viewable. Thus making the difference between buying and renting. This has the potential to be enormously profitable, as nothing will need to be manufactured. The only downsides I see are the loss of money from selling collector editions, gift purchases and for some, the act of shopping importantly involves seeing and touching. Does it make sense? |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Aug 2007
VA Beach
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#5 |
Senior Member
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how high is high speed internet going to be acceptable for downloading hd content ?
how many people is going to wait for 2 days for their download to finish before sitting down to watch it for only 2 hours and having to wait for another 2 days for the sequel ? |
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#6 | |
Special Member
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![]() And I have the audio running via fiber optic(toslink) to my 7.1ch receiver ![]() DVDs on my notebook to tv look just as good, if not better than my blu-ray player upscaling them. ![]() We're not that far away from downloads being used. |
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#7 |
Special Member
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You'd be surprised how fast some internet connections are. I bet you'd be able to download a 25GB movie in a few hours. Takes me about 15min to download a 1 GB file.
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Aug 2007
VA Beach
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#9 | |
Special Member
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As for the type of notebook I use having anything to do with the video quality.... probably, its an Apple. They are meant for graphics/design, demos, and presentations. I'd say most movies are made on Apple computers. Also, most movies you watch or even tv shows now feature Apple computers in them. But, I'm not saying a Windows laptop couldn't do the same thing. I know the newer HP's are coming with HDMI outputs, so those would work too. |
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#10 | |
Moderator
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Sure 500GB drives are cheap. But, they still amount to $5-$10 a Blu-ray movie in storage costs. At 100 discs, you'd need 3TB-5TB of storage. And as the number of drives goes up, the risk of failure does too. So, really you want a nice RAID. Or, you can try to build a culture that accepts very low video bit-rates and lossy audio to keep the storage costs down. Hmmm, quite the coincidence that is what Microsoft is pushing with HD DVD huh? ![]() Gary |
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#11 |
Senior Member
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#12 |
Senior Member
Aug 2007
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I'm all for downloads. As long as it remains free and legal in my country. Take that Microsoft!
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#13 |
Power Member
Aug 2007
Vancouver, Canada
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Saying downloadable HD content will take over physical media any time within the next 10 years is just SILLY at best. Think about it. Seriously. Blu-ray discs are 50 GB, do you realize how LONG that would take to download even on the best high speed internet connection?? Internet infrastructure can be upgraded and new technologies released, but that is not going to happen overnight. The only other way to make this a possibility is to seriously compress the content to make file sizes much smaller... more compression = less quality, not a good idea. In order to make this the norm, boxes used to download content will need large hard drives to hold all the data. Lastly, people are fundamentally resistant to change, thus the term 'early adopter'. Some people will always prefer a physical copy of something purchased. If you can't see how silly it is to say downloadable HD content will take over soon... well I don't know what to tell you.
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#14 |
Active Member
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^^
downloading a bd takes a few hours...downloads are here today...the hd rips of bd/hddvd, are just as good sometimes better than the actual bd presentation...I realize that they use compression and filters, but that's just my experience...it also avoids this format war...+ the content is much bigger, since there are many more sources, apart from studios releasing, hd channels provide multiple sources for films/shows/sports not yet released to hdm...sure they're prolly not full blown bd transfers...but still way better than dvd...cheaper too failing hard drives...its easy enough to replace, and u can usually tell when the hdd is about to die, since its a progressive death...sure hdds pile up, but given the alternative, of empty shelf space, I don't mind... |
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#15 | |
Senior Member
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#16 |
Gaming Moderator
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But no one would really have to like it, you see. As long as it was profitable. And the scenario I presented did not require large bandwidth, and anyone, anywhere in the world with a satellite dish would be able to purchase anything that was available.
As I explained, assume today it is announced that Movie X will be "released" for home viewing on December 15th and preorders are being accepted. You pay now, and it is transmitted to whatever hardware you use by the 15th of December. That's pretty low tech even on the existing infrastructure. Sure, you'll need a box full of memory, but that may just be a big Ipod. Maybe it is 10 years away, but I don't think it needs to be. If you've been doing R and D on technology for years, you need some time to make some money on it, before trashing it (which may be what's happening now). And I'm not saying it will necessarily be better, either, but if it's more profitable, it will happen sooner, not later. |
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#17 | |
Active Member
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until they come out, not holding my breath, I'll gladly continue watching the stuff I want to c in hd, not what the Studios want me to watch... I know it'll take time...but for now downloads will suffice Last edited by Bizi Jones; 10-13-2007 at 01:17 AM. |
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#19 | |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
fundamental flaw in downloads as replacement of physical media | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | zor | 28 | 06-26-2008 01:01 AM |
Adams Media Research 2007-2011 projections: BD to outpace all digital downloads | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | Grubert | 16 | 05-05-2008 07:38 PM |
Home Media Magazine Report: Movie Downloads a Tough Sell | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | TheDaddy | 19 | 03-04-2008 05:28 PM |
The true future with downloads: RECESSION!!!!! | General Chat | buckshot | 6 | 01-13-2008 07:14 PM |
Inference Regarding Planned Future Digital Downloads | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | JJ | 27 | 12-13-2007 10:34 PM |
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