|
Audio Asylum Thread Printer Get a view of an entire thread on one page |
For Sale Ads |
63.16.18.78
In Reply to: Blu rays potential fatal blow over hd dvd posted by Greg T on January 25, 2006 at 11:45:02:
Universal has also come out and stated they will release some Blu ray material also.
On the other hand Sam Sung has announced a universal machine with a street price of $300 to $400.
Follow Ups:
There will be no universal player from Samsung or anyone else...thats old news.
Blu Ray having eight major studios that support only Blu Ray....as well as the fact that the PS3 will put more Blu Ray players into more homes than all other players from both formats combined = no incentive from Blu Ray for a Universal player.You can pretty much stick a fork in it with M/S being the only real backer of hd dvd.
But as we have seen many times before M/S vs the world = an M/S defeat.
Toshiba would have gladly come to terms with Sony and agreed on a comprimise....without M/S being involved.
The article in this week's Newsweek claims which format wins ultimately may not matter much because everything is moving quickly to smaller physical formats playable on portable video devices. In a couple years all CD-sized DVD formats will be laser disks of the past regardless of resolution.
With progressive-scan 480p DVD players now available on sale for about $20--the price of a single recent-issue DVD movie, its tough to replace a format that virtually everyone already owns the equipment to play, or raise the price on DVD movies to cover the additional cost of a higher resolution, even if the new DVDs can still be played on the old equipment. In this world a $300 player and a pricier $30 1080p DVD is for the carriage trade, not something for the mass market, and the mass market is happy running their $20 players and cheaper, lower resolution DVD's--that still look quite good even on a wide-screen TV, thank you. So the movie industry, which lives on volume, is not going to walk away from that for sure any time soon regardless of technical issues.
This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors: