Comments on: It's official: Toshiba announces HD DVD surrender
The consumer electronics giant says it will stop producing HD DVD players, effectively conceding the high-def format war to Blu-ray.
The consumer electronics giant says it will stop producing HD DVD players, effectively conceding the high-def format war to Blu-ray.
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raising the surrender flag this fast after Wal Mart came out for 'ole Blu was a
shocker. I hope the HD DVD fanboys who spammed all of the different Blu-
ray suport groups are happy now. Buh bye.
What's up with Paramount? Are they still sulking or what? Join 'ole Blu and
get over it already. We need Star Trek and Transformers on Blu-ray ASAP or
yesterday, whichever comes first. Michael Bay isn't quite as PO'ed as before
and would like to get going on Transformers 2. I hope.
http://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=415
Don't rush to by Blu-Ray yet though. The standalone players are only compatible to the Format 1.0 or 1.1 Blu-Ray standard and not the future 2.0 standard (unless you intend to buy a PS3 for playback - with a separate remote control purchase). Prices will likely drop on the 1.0 and 1.1 format machines later this year, but I doubt the new 2.0 players will be cheap. We also don't know if Sony will have much reason to drop the Blu-Ray disc prices now that HD-DVD is out of the picture.
I wouldn't be surprised to see a Toshiba Blu-Ray player in the future. Maybe they will offer an exchange policy for upcoming players? Doubt it, but then again who knows? Toshiba recently inked a deal to work with Sony on Cell-Processor development so there isn't that much bad blood between the two companies. Also Sony only holds apparently a 30 percent stake in Blu-Ray.
These firmware specs don't change the HD picture quality, these specs are only feature enhancements. How many times in the past 10 years have you listened to the director's comments or changed viewing angles while watching a standard dvd movie?
Blu-Ray will be around for years because it's convenient to have the media and not be tied to a subscription HD download. These subscription based HD downloads are not 1080P and the audio is also compressed. The HD download companies, i.e. Amazon Unbox, Apple Tv, do not have the infrastructure or bandwith to stream a 1080P on demand video to you.
In order for Companies to make a lot of money consistently, patents are licensed. The Sony bashing is extreme. Sony is a licensee but there are essential 16 other companies that have patents for blu-ray.
Now, I personally don't have a problem spending $399 on a PS3, or a similar amount on a standalone player; plus about $1K/year for disc rentals or purchases. But, like most here on Crave, I'm an early adopter (paid $5K for a 50-inch plasma in '04) and not struggling to make ends meet (I don't think cnet or Crave are bookmarked too often by the food stamp set, do you)?
But it's the low and lower-middle socieconomic groups that BluRay needs to win over. That's a huge market - think of them as everyone from welfare bums to the working poor to struggling middle management families dealing with mortgage stress. They're not buying high-end highdef panels, but rather whatever's priced attractively at WalMart, and they won't adopt BluRay until prices come much closer to that of regular DVD.
So let's hope those prices come down. Otherwise, you'll see limited BluRay movie selection for the next couple of years, by which time we'll all have access to highdef downloads making physical media pointless, anyway.
There will always be two markets for everything. Today, you have the $50 DVD player. That's for the welfare bums you speak of. They're the same people who were buying VHS players when DVD players were $500. Or did you forget that period entirely? DVD players WILL still be available 10 years from now. TODAY, I can still purchase a laserdisc player from Pioneer. I even purchased a professional SVHS player/recorder just six months ago. Media formats will live for decades! VHS is still plentiful in people's homes. Millions still own DVD players and they continue to buy new DVD players. It took over 10 years for DVDs to dip into the sub-$100 market. Let's give Blu-Ray at least five years to do the same.
Get 'em while they last!!
HD-DVD lost!!
THE future is blu!!!!!
Either ride the wave of change of get your butt rolled over!!
keep writing em.
you'll need something to do to get over the pain.
just let it all go, its good for you.
better you take it out on us on the internet than someone you love ;)
LOL
I just happen to have a PS3 too and couldn't praise it more that I already have in this thread.
For the last few years Ive been given the task to work with a Digital Signage system. Basically Im working with displays that playback creative off all types. Currently Im using an MPG2 playback solution via networked PC's. Does the job and seems to be fine. I have however tested a few Blu-Ray players to appeace upper management. If it was possible to use PS3s and have the ability to control playback then I would have gone that route ;) Well I was hoping. Im not sure what most nay-sayers are basing their viewing opinions are but I will give you all the benefit of the doubt due to a few reasons. To sum it up, there are so many varying ways of setting up a system and trust me Ive gone thru hell and back. The best results Ive seen are, PS3 playing back Apocalypto on a Panasonic 103 inch tv. Does this mean we all should give up cause we cant afford one? I think Im happy with my Panny 42 at 1024x768 along with the PS3 ;)
challenges from avenues such as Apple TV, Vudu, and the Netflix set top box.
The future is not in optical devices but in downloadable entertainment. We are
still a ways away but not as far as we once were. Games and Movies will head in
this direction. Your next XBOX or PS may not have an optical drive. That will be
what want, so I don't have to get off my couch to change games.
Once the open source community grabs hold of this capability, it will run for the long haul.
The key will be to provide either a cleanly written driver that is maintained by Toshiba, or to give a basic driver set that is fully open.
Another key element would be to provide a user friendly, basic program that will allow creation and viewing of the high def movies, as well as mass storage.
Not a difficult task.
AND
It keeps the assembly lines running.
Who knows, may even one day beat out the other guy
- Be Careful What We Wish For!
- by Ironpeddler February 21, 2008 7:59 AM PST
- OK, the war is over...and the winner is the non-supportive, worst customer service driven, number one company known for price gouging...SONY. What makes everyone at CNET think the BluRay player prices will come down? I bet they stay the same or go UP! That's the corporate model at Sony...and it's not customer driven, it's profit at any cost driven. After being stung by them on 5-6 products (PC DVD recorder, projection TV, AV receiver, 2 DVD players, VCR, etc) only to get no warranty service..."go local"...my money will stay in my pocket before I give it to SONY again.
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