Posted: Wed May 30, 2007 11:59 am
OK WAIT...I'm wrong...this isn't a new standard per se, just a way of delivering the signal that's better than what we have?
If so I'm all for it
If so I'm all for it

When, and if, that stuff ever makes the street...wanna take a guess at what that kind of thing will cost?AndyDursin wrote:OK WAIT...I'm wrong...this isn't a new standard per se, just a way of delivering the signal that's better than what we have?
If so I'm all for it
Yeah no kidding. Most people don't even have an HDTV yet, it's gonna be a tough sell!Eric W. wrote:When, and if, that stuff ever makes the street...wanna take a guess at what that kind of thing will cost?AndyDursin wrote:OK WAIT...I'm wrong...this isn't a new standard per se, just a way of delivering the signal that's better than what we have?
If so I'm all for it
All you have to do is put football in HD on those sets and it sells itself.AndyDursin wrote:Yeah no kidding. Most people don't even have an HDTV yet, it's gonna be a tough sell!Eric W. wrote:When, and if, that stuff ever makes the street...wanna take a guess at what that kind of thing will cost?AndyDursin wrote:OK WAIT...I'm wrong...this isn't a new standard per se, just a way of delivering the signal that's better than what we have?
If so I'm all for itlol.
Now I KNOW Blu-Ray will win for sure.AndyDursin wrote:Definitely a good job by Toshiba and HD-DVD this week: Amazon sold out of the A2, hitting #1 for ALL electronics (not just DVD players), it made the front page at Yahoo, front page at Slick Deals, and Harry Knowles gave it his ringing endorsement (for whatever that's worth, lol) at AICN.
As I've said, it's good for the consumer when the price goes down. The A2 is a solid product and if anything this moved a lot of standalone units, increasing the marketplace for HD-DVD software.
We'll see how these new player sales translate to software sales later this year when the numbers come out, but if there was any doubt which format Walmart would want to endorse for low-cost players, I can tell you as I have from the very beginning HD-DVD has the decided edge in that department. This little promotional experiment has absolutely confirmed that in my mind.
When there's an appetite for a product, companies will start to look and listen. And this again confirms my theory from the very beginning that price is going to go a VERY long way in determining who wins "the format war," regardless of the amount of spin Sony tried pushing about why Blu Ray was "better" and why it justified its inherent expense.
Both of these formats are great, I enjoy my Blu Ray discs as much as anyone, but one format costs a lot less than the other. That's been my POV from the beginning of this, and I think it's just as valid now, possibly more than ever after seeing this in action -- especially if it translates to software bumps later on (and right now it's safe to say neither format is doing much of anything, which is another reason why this was good for awareness of HD-DVD and these formats in general).
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I totally agree, which is why I think it's simply unfathomable why Fox hasn't done very much to support Blu Ray. If you look at it, they've released really only a smattering of titles, most of which have looked great, but then they have basically no content on them. I mean, who wants to pay $30 (the retail is $40!) for ROCKY in HD when the only extra is a trailer. Of all the studios playing this game their titles have really surprised me the most as being lacking -- if they were doing a great job I think it would be helping Blu Ray big-time, but they haven't, not even with the titles they have out there (HOOSIERS was a big disappointment as well). Lionsgate is another Blu Ray exclusive studio that really has limped forward with pretty mediocre titles that I've seen; of recent discs I've watched, DIRTY DANCING does not look good at all in HD.These can be (and obviously are) good things short term at least, but in the end, you've got to have plenty of compelling content to back it up or it really doesn't matter if you give the hardware away or not.
Yup. Supposedly these studios are waiting to be able to include BD-Java, BD+, and some of those other "advanced features" so they can optimize for the format.AndyDursin wrote:
I totally agree, which is why I think it's simply unfathomable why Fox hasn't done very much to support Blu Ray. If you look at it, they've released really only a smattering of titles, most of which have looked great, but then they have basically no content on them. I mean, who wants to pay $30 (the retail is $40!) for ROCKY in HD when the only extra is a trailer. Of all the studios playing this game their titles have really surprised me the most as being lacking -- if they were doing a great job I think it would be helping Blu Ray big-time, but they haven't, not even with the titles they have out there (HOOSIERS was a big disappointment as well). Lionsgate is another Blu Ray exclusive studio that really has limped forward with pretty mediocre titles that I've seen; of recent discs I've watched, DIRTY DANCING does not look good at all in HD.
Universal can't hold up HD-DVD by itself.
HD-DVD did what it had to: stayed afloat with virtually no programming for several months, and now they've increased advertising (saw spots with the SOPRANOS guy last night on TV), getting the word out, and being active about promoting the players with rebates and sales -- plus more content is coming. Universal is doing an excellent job ramping up the catalog titles plus TV exclusives like HEROES and BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, which are going to do well. Between them, the few Warner exclusives for the time being (MATRIX, BATMAN), the other Warner & Paramount tiles, etc., I think it's shaping up nicely for them.
Not yet.
Blu Ray really needs some more "A list" exclusives because I think they are missing the golden opportunity in the here and now with consumers looking at HD-DVD's sales and price point as a better, lower cost alternative, and acting as such.
Right.It's like how they priced the PS3, the longer they wait for BD-J and whatever else they're doing, they're reducing whatever lead they have in the marketplace. Of course it may all be relatively small numbers, but the longer HD-DVD stays "alive" the worse it's going to be for them.
Plus, the best titles I've seen in terms of an overall package are usually Warner titles, so they're not format specific (though MATRIX and BATMAN BEGINS remain HD-DVD only for the moment).
The attach rate talk is the kind of stuff the MS guys post at AVS.
But we're not really going to know the ramficiations of the player sales for a few months time, so it's going to be interesting to see what happens. The more units Toshiba is able to sell, the bigger pool of people with dedicated movie players there will be, who you know are going to buy movies. That coveted "attach rate" would also stand if people bought standalone Blu Ray players, but their price compared to HD-DVD really does not make them a viable option for most consumers.
I've seen you say this before and I disagreed with it and I had some link to back myself up. Can't find it now. Somewhere earlier in this thread...
By comparison, the PS3's attach rate is going to lag because not everyone is going to buy a movie with it, hence the sales numbers of CASINO ROYALE, which show PS3 owners will buy a "big ticket" title but aren't going to gobble up movies the way someone with a dedicated player is going to.
People may hate "the format war" but we'd have never seen prices like this if only one format was winning -- and that is not a bad thing.
And that takes me a step closer to enjoying this show in great HD without the damned commercial interruptions."Lost: The Complete Third Season -- The Unexplored Experience" follows December 11 on DVD and Blu-ray Disc. The 23-episode, seven-disc set comes with a one-on-one with star Matthew Fox, a featurette on "The Others," a documentary chronicling 24 hours in production and a selection of never-before-seen flashbacks. Also included are behind-the-scenes looks at 10 episodes, audio commentaries,
Sorry but I do think I'm being objective hereBe honest, though, Andy, and step back and be objective for a moment:
Doesn't the super low costs of the Toshiba players combined with 5-7 or so HD-DVD disc giveaways look like a firesale to you?
It certainly does to me and, yes, I'd say the same thing if I saw it happening on the BD side.
Yes, the prices look great. Yes, the spike on Amazon sales and what not looks great, but to me? That looks like a firsale to me all the way.
There's no way Toshiba can keep burnin' it like that long term. They have shareholders to answer to like anyone else.
Exclusive content.AndyDursin wrote:
In terms of discs, I haven't seen any inherent advantage to Blu Ray over HD-DVD. Have you?
I wouldn't necessarily agree with that. The PIRATES discs are indeed fantastic, but how many of their titles had dropped special features in comparison with their SD counterparts? Looks like things are changing now, but it was not that way with most of the discs they brought out up until a few weeks ago.On the other hand, you can look at what Disney has done thus far...that's how ya do it right! Smile Their discs have just been fantastic all the way around!
So technically, visually and otherwise, you at least concede that there is no difference in terms of picture quality and sound between these formats?Eric W. wrote:Exclusive content.AndyDursin wrote:
In terms of discs, I haven't seen any inherent advantage to Blu Ray over HD-DVD. Have you?