In Reply to: Which B-D movies take advantage of the higher capacity? posted by 4season on August 20, 2007 at 16:30:36:
Both formats have way more than enough capacity so B-D's advantage is largely hypothetical. One other consideration is that B-D discs are easier to damage physically.
Still, this is just another format war based on licensing dollars. I am probably going to sit on the side for a while, at least until a respectable universal player comes to the market.
I can barely stand the thought of putting more dollars into the Sony coffers (owned an SCD-1, have a Qualia RPTV that took three months for Sony to supply a replacement bulb).
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Follow Ups
- RE: Which B-D movies take advantage of the higher capacity? - Larry I 06:33:00 08/21/07 (5)
- "B-D discs are easier to damage physically"--you've done stress tests? - Jazz Inmate 09:52:21 08/21/07 (1)
- RE: "B-D discs are easier to damage physically"--you've done stress tests? - Larry I 13:07:47 08/21/07 (0)
- I disagree 25G or 30G will be sufficient for ALL movies. - oscar 08:19:06 08/21/07 (2)
- Nothing will be sufficient for ALL movies - Jack G 10:12:46 08/22/07 (1)
- We'll need 2-3 Terabyte discs for the Uncompressed video movie releases. :0) - oscar 18:50:10 08/22/07 (0)