Page 1 of 6 1 2 3 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 25 of 144
  1. #1
    Da Dragonball Kid L.J.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Posted in da cut
    Posts
    3,577

    Blockbuster to favor Blu-ray HD discs over DVD format

    LOS ANGELES - Blockbuster Inc. will rent high-definition DVDs only in the Blu-ray format in 1,450 stores when it expands its high-def offerings next month, dealing a major blow to the rival HD DVD format.

    The move, being announced Monday, could be the first step in resolving a format war that has kept confused consumers from rushing to buy new DVD players until they can determine which format will dominate the market.

    Blockbuster has been renting both Blu-ray and HD DVD titles in 250 stores since late last year and found that consumers were choosing Blu-ray titles more than 70 percent of the time.........

    http://www.elpasotimes.com/entertainment/ci_6164939


    Found this at another forum and thought I'd post it here. Any thoughts?

  2. #2
    Loving This kexodusc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications
    Posts
    9,025
    Quote Originally Posted by L.J.
    Found this at another forum and thought I'd post it here. Any thoughts?
    Yeah, glad I didn't buy that HD-DVD player Friday - I found one that early Toshiba model on sale for $215. Looks like those things are gonna be orphans soon enough.

  3. #3
    Suspended PeruvianSkies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3,373
    Quote Originally Posted by L.J.
    LOS ANGELES - Blockbuster Inc. will rent high-definition DVDs only in the Blu-ray format in 1,450 stores when it expands its high-def offerings next month, dealing a major blow to the rival HD DVD format.

    The move, being announced Monday, could be the first step in resolving a format war that has kept confused consumers from rushing to buy new DVD players until they can determine which format will dominate the market.

    Blockbuster has been renting both Blu-ray and HD DVD titles in 250 stores since late last year and found that consumers were choosing Blu-ray titles more than 70 percent of the time.........

    http://www.elpasotimes.com/entertainment/ci_6164939


    Found this at another forum and thought I'd post it here. Any thoughts?
    Not sure if anyone here remembers the thread where I said this awhile back, but this doesn't surprise me too much. Two reasons: PS3 and appeal factor. People tend to gravitate towards things that are eye-appealing and the color 'blue' is known to stimulate more attention than 'red' when it comes to advertising. As silly as it sounds if you walk down an aisle filled with both formats you can check to see where you are drawn in as a test. Also, PS3, whether it is dominating xBox or not, is definitely drawing more people towards Blu-ray.

  4. #4
    Loving This kexodusc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications
    Posts
    9,025
    Quote Originally Posted by PeruvianSkies
    Two reasons: PS3 and appeal factor. People tend to gravitate towards things that are eye-appealing and the color 'blue' is known to stimulate more attention than 'red' when it comes to advertising. As silly as it sounds if you walk down an aisle filled with both formats you can check to see where you are drawn in as a test.
    This is a major reason why most major operating systems come stock with blue window borders/backgrounds etc. Doesn't hold true when it comes to cars, for some reason.

    Quote Originally Posted by PeruvianSkies
    Also, PS3, whether it is dominating xBox or not, is definitely drawing more people towards Blu-ray.
    This is part of the reason too. Though the biggest reason IMO is the studio support. Fewer people will support a crippled format and I don't doubt for one minute that customers who are adopting this early were smart enough to do their homework...well the ones that have bought BluRay at least...

    When you think about it...it's amazing that BluRay is winning a war of a mostly homogeneous product despite a terrible early price disadvantage on both the hardware and the software.

  5. #5
    Suspended PeruvianSkies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3,373

    Don't underestimate the power of the Disney...

    Quote Originally Posted by kexodusc
    This is a major reason why most major operating systems come stock with blue window borders/backgrounds etc. Doesn't hold true when it comes to cars, for some reason.


    This is part of the reason too. Though the biggest reason IMO is the studio support. Fewer people will support a crippled format and I don't doubt for one minute that customers who are adopting this early were smart enough to do their homework...well the ones that have bougth BluRay at least...

    When you think about it...it's amazing that BluRay is winning a war of a mostly homogeneous product despite a terrible early price disadvantage on both the hardware and the software.
    Disney titles are ALWAYS strong sellers and the fact that Disney went with Blu-ray and although they only have a few titles out at the moment, they are going to be a strong factor later on in the war, especially once they start releasing their vault!

  6. #6
    nightflier
    Guest

    Somewhere I remember Robert DeNiro saying...

    Quote Originally Posted by kexodusc
    This is a major reason why most major operating systems come stock with blue window borders/backgrounds etc. Doesn't hold true when it comes to cars, for some reason.
    ...that geniuses will choose green cars and I haven't seen many of those on the road lately. Maybe it's just me, but I've always associated blue with a follow-the-leader lemming-type crowd. Blue may be "pretty" but it's not really a thinking man's color, I think. Then again, maybe that's why marketers and advertising firms are pushing blue? It's the mainstream that does most of the buying & consuming (I guess geniuses know better).

    Even with a/v equipment, I tend to see blue digital displays at Sharper Image, BB, K-mart, and Costco, but the higher end stuff has green or red displays (Think CJ, Arcam, Krell, etc). I'm sure there will be exceptions. PS Audio seems to like blue, but then again they are also making a big push into the mainstream with cheaper China produced goods sold through Crutchfield (another blue-camp stalwart).

    Anyhow, back to the Blu-Ray / HD-DVD debate:

    - What is NetFlix' take on this? (What do you know, they are in the red camp). If they were to go the other way, it would definitely add fuel to this fire.

    - Will Blockbuster (blue camp) be selling all their HD-DVD stock at bargain prices?

    - Was Toshiba (red camp) stock affected by the Blockbuster announcement?

    - Any preliminary Walmart HD-DVD sales figures (blue company with red product - this may not work)?

    Just my own observation in my own neck of the woods, but it certainly seems like the store shelves are about 75% Blu-ray, now. I'm still waiting for regular DVD prices to drop, but somehow that kind of effect is not yet trickling down.

  7. #7
    Loving This kexodusc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications
    Posts
    9,025
    [QUOTE=nightflier]...that geniuses will choose green cars and I haven't seen many of those on the road lately. Maybe it's just me, but I've always associated blue with a follow-the-leader lemming-type crowd. Blue may be "pretty" but it's not really a thinking man's color, I think. [QUOTE]
    WTF? Based on what? Besides, Al Gore invented the internet and discovered Global Warming, and he likes Blue way more than Red.

    Then again, maybe that's why marketers and advertising firms are pushing blue? It's the mainstream that does most of the buying & consuming (I guess geniuses know better).

    Even with a/v equipment, I tend to see blue digital displays at Sharper Image, BB, K-mart, and Costco, but the higher end stuff has green or red displays (Think CJ, Arcam, Krell, etc). I'm sure there will be exceptions. PS Audio seems to like blue, but then again they are also making a big push into the mainstream with cheaper China produced goods sold through Crutchfield (another blue-camp stalwart).
    I like Purple.

    - What is NetFlix' take on this? (What do you know, they are in the red camp). If they were to go the other way, it would definitely add fuel to this fire.
    Dunno, but the #1 product in one industry supporting the #1 product in another kinda makes what the #2 players do irrelevant.
    - Will Blockbuster (blue camp) be selling all their HD-DVD stock at bargain prices?
    At 13% of their stores or so...

    - Was Toshiba (red camp) stock affected by the Blockbuster announcement?
    No, it actually went up. But keep in mind the royalties to be gained off BluRay or HD-DVD licensing are insignificant next to the revenue stream and profits to be earned from selling the hardware itself. DVD showed us that. An overwhelming victory for HD-DVD would probably have about as much impact on Toshiba's stock. Either that or the market is interpreting this as a sign Toshiba will focus on something more favorable to shareholders?

    - Any preliminary Walmart HD-DVD sales figures (blue company with red product - this may not work)?
    I'm sure Wooch or someone will chime in with that stuff. I haven't seen BluRay or HD-DVD at the Wal-Mart's I've been in.
    Just my own observation in my own neck of the woods, but it certainly seems like the store shelves are about 75% Blu-ray, now. I'm still waiting for regular DVD prices to drop, but somehow that kind of effect is not yet trickling down.
    It's about 50/50 in the few I checked out, though it wasn't that long ago HD-DVD was up roughly 75/25 or so. I suspect as BluRay releases more new release movies, shelving might reflect that. I'm sure a 50% price cut in the player will help year 2 sales as well.

    Man, I just looked at some old threads we had way back. A lot of us really thought HD-DVD was going to win because of the price advantage and being first to market (me included). Isn't looking so good right now.

  8. #8
    Oldest join date recoveryone's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,435
    The real impact my still lay with Wal-mart/Sam's Club/Costco, If they solely sale Blu-Ray then you really can call it a knock out on Toshiba HD. Blockbuster can tilt the scales, but they are not the world leader they once were, when they killed off most of the mom and pop video stores.
    HT
    Pioneer Elite SC lx502
    Pioneer Elite N50
    Pioneer Cassette CTM66R
    Pioneer Elite BDP 85FD

    Vizio P series 2160p
    Panamax 5300 EX

  9. #9
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    6,883
    I think Blockbuster to some degree is just following the market trends. They've already done the HD test marketing, and found that Blu-ray rentals accumulate about the same market share that they get with sales (roughly a 2-to-1 split). Blockbuster has never been a trend setter. They took their time before fully supporting the DVD format, it took a long time before they supported widescreen as well, and as far as I know, their stores never supported Betamax or Laserdisc. Obviously, they now see enough of an installed user base to expand on their support for the new HD formats, but going forward with only one format is very much in line with how they do business.

    As kex said, at this point it's very much about the studio support. I read that so far this year, standalone HD-DVD players are outselling the Blu-ray players by ~60% to 40%. And with the PS3 sales nosediving in a hurry, it's not necessarily the hardware that has helped maintain Blu-ray's market advantage.

    Even on the title selection, the number of titles that Blu-ray has in release is not that much greater than HD-DVD. But, what Blu-ray has is a huge advantage in getting the most recent big box office draws released on the same date as (or very close to) the DVD release, and that comes down to studio support. With Blockbuster so dependent on new releases for their revenue, going with Blu-ray was the more logical choice.

    I would also see if there's anything else going on between the lines, like any revenue sharing deals that they might have struck with the studios, particularly those that are exclusive to Blu-ray. During the 90s, Blockbuster squeezed most of the mom & pop video stores out of business partly by entering into revenue sharing arrangements with the studios, where Blockbuster would obtain as many copies of certain new releases as their stores wanted in return for a percentage of the rental revenue. More recently, they've been promoting selected new releases that can only be rented at Blockbuster for a certain time. Would not surprise me at all if the Blu-ray studios dangled a few carrots to help convince Blockbuster to support the format exclusively (or if Blockbuster provided their own carrots to convince the Blu-ray studios to give them certain exclusivity or revenue sharing in return for going Blu-ray only).
    Wooch's Home Theater 2.0 (Pics)
    Panasonic VIERA TH-C50FD18 50" 1080p
    Paradigm Reference Studio 40, CC, and 20 v.2
    Adire Audio Rava (EQ: Behringer Feedback Destroyer DSP1124)
    Yamaha RX-A1030
    Dual CS5000 (Ortofon OM30 Super)
    Sony UBP-X800
    Sony Playstation 3 (MediaLink OS X Server)
    Sony ES SCD-C2000ES
    JVC HR-S3912U
    Directv HR44 and WVB
    Logitech Harmony 700
    iPhone 5s/iPad 3
    Linksys WES610



    The Neverending DVD/BD Collection

    Subwoofer Setup and Parametric EQ Results *Dead Link*

  10. #10
    Suspended PeruvianSkies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3,373

    Personally...

    I prefer Blu-ray and that is without having a ton of experience with both. I like saying "Blu-ray" and it sounds like Sting-ray, which is also cool, except when it killed Steve Irwin. I hate saying H-Dee-Dee-Vee-Dee and for some people this doesn't really mean much, they just think it's still a DVD. In fact, to confuse matters more there was a time, and still some titles do this, where on the packaging specs it will say 'remastered in High-Definition' on regular DVD's, which confuse some people into thinking that it is now an HD title. I recall Columbia/TriStar doing this quite a bit.

  11. #11
    Suspended
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Out there
    Posts
    6,777
    "Revenue sharing" to me sounds like that when this all shakes out, us consumers are once again in for a reaming, so to speak.

    I just joined Blockbusters Total Access deal; don't know how long they've been offering Blu-ray titles (blue's my favorite color, for those who care), but they total 270 if I'm looking at the 27 pages right. That's a lot IMO.

  12. #12
    nightflier
    Guest
    Another factor that seems to be overlooked is that most consumers don't know what the advantages of hi-def are. Better picture quality is all that most people I talk to in the store can think of. Interestingly, better sound isn't all that important to 90% of the consumers out there, and so it really comes down to what people are getting for the extra expense. I'm not saying it's worthless, I'm just saying that most people who don't own a hi-def player have no idea what the format will offer. Likewise, people who do own them aren't bowled over and shouting the virtues of hi def from their rooftops (don't know why, but it's scaring people away from taking a side in the format war).

    If I was a studio pushing a hi def format, I'd work something into the contract with Blockbuster to advertise the virtues of the new format. I think that would go a whole lot further than just offering the disks and asking people to buy into something new they hardly understand. Maybe giving Blockbuster a slew of players and screens showing pre-edited demos of all the features during scenes of the latest block buster flick? If that's too expensive to implement, how about large color displays showing the differences and new features in easy to understand charts? Remember those life-size Luke Skywalker cutouts that we used to take pictures with at the entrances of video rental stores? Now picture The Fantastic 4 holding up TV screens showing off the many benefits of the new format.

    On that note, I think that Toshiba is doing a better job of marketing its format in places like BB, CC, Walmart, etc. I don't know why, but it just seems like Toshiba is trying a bit harder and this may be why the individual player sales are higher. Maybe it's just SoCal, but I see more Toshiba HD-DVD ads than Sony Blu-ray ones. That said, both companies could do more and to me it seems like it's a half-hearted effort all around, almost as if the companies themselves are not entirely behind their respective formats. Maybe they expect the virtues of the formats to carry the sales figures, but personally, I think they are under-estimating what average consumers know about them.

    Just out of curiosity, are there any TV ads about either format yet? That would be the place I'd focus on, especially on HD channels. Consider this ad during the season finale of Lost: "Like seeing this in your cable company's HD format? Wait until you see it in Blu-ray - Get all the performance out of your new TV with the best it can do: Sony the best picture, period." (interchange HD-DVD/Toshiba, if you want).

  13. #13
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    6,883
    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    - What is NetFlix' take on this? (What do you know, they are in the red camp). If they were to go the other way, it would definitely add fuel to this fire.
    Actually, Netflix is neutral, as they already stock Blu-ray titles. Blockbuster's website also carries both HD formats, and will continue to do so.

    http://www.netflix.com/Genre?sgid=24...r=LhcGenre2444

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Will Blockbuster (blue camp) be selling all their HD-DVD stock at bargain prices?
    Nope. The posted article says that the 250 stores that were used to test market both formats will continue to stock HD-DVD titles, as will Blockbuster's website. All that Blockbuster's announcement means is that the 1,450 new stores (this represents about 1/4 of their stores) slated to carry HD discs will only support Blu-ray.

    Fast forward to this time next year, and if HD-DVD's market share erodes further, then you might see those particular Blockbuster stores (and several other outlets) clearing out their HD-DVD inventory. This is no different than when video stores began selling off their Betamax inventory in the mid-80s. (Around that time, VHS had 3-to-1 market share advantage over Beta)

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Any preliminary Walmart HD-DVD sales figures (blue company with red product - this may not work)?
    That info's probably more tightly guarded than the CIA. WalMart does not participate in any of the retail sales tracking services like Nielson Videoscan, and neither does Target. Most of the other major retailers do participate, and bits and pieces of that information's widely available.

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Just my own observation in my own neck of the woods, but it certainly seems like the store shelves are about 75% Blu-ray, now. I'm still waiting for regular DVD prices to drop, but somehow that kind of effect is not yet trickling down.
    Doubtful that regular DVD prices will push back any further than they already have, unless the format gets supplanted and stores discontinue carrying DVDs altogether. It's pretty much a stable mature market where the new releases command the higher price points, and older titles and/or older editions get marked down (stores like BB and Fry's have weekly sale prices as low as $5). If you're willing to wait a few months before buying a new DVD release, the prices do go down.

    Since you're down in the OC, you might want to check out DVD Planet's retail store over in Huntington Beach sometime. Biggest selection you'll find anywhere, competitive prices, and a lot of interesting items make it onto their clearance shelf.

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    On that note, I think that Toshiba is doing a better job of marketing its format in places like BB, CC, Walmart, etc. I don't know why, but it just seems like Toshiba is trying a bit harder and this may be why the individual player sales are higher. Maybe it's just SoCal, but I see more Toshiba HD-DVD ads than Sony Blu-ray ones. That said, both companies could do more and to me it seems like it's a half-hearted effort all around, almost as if the companies themselves are not entirely behind their respective formats. Maybe they expect the virtues of the formats to carry the sales figures, but personally, I think they are under-estimating what average consumers know about them.
    Actually, I think Toshiba finally wised up and started playing hardball. Until the past couple of months, Toshiba had been getting out maneuvered at every step. Best Buy and all those other retailers will gladly provide the prime floor space and display areas to any company willing to pony up. Toshiba's the lone player actively peddling HD-DVD, while Blu-ray has multiple manufacturers in its corner. The sheer quantity of Blu-ray player models on the market assures that Blu-ray will occupy a certain amount of shelf space. Toshiba has to be more aggressive to maintain visibility, and it seems that they've been going in that direction. Universal has been helping with an aggressive HD-DVD release schedule. In the end though, I don't think it will be enough to keep the format afloat. Blu-ray continues to command the most in-demand titles, and I don't think that will be lost on those consumers ready to buy in the next few months.
    Last edited by Woochifer; 06-19-2007 at 10:57 AM.
    Wooch's Home Theater 2.0 (Pics)
    Panasonic VIERA TH-C50FD18 50" 1080p
    Paradigm Reference Studio 40, CC, and 20 v.2
    Adire Audio Rava (EQ: Behringer Feedback Destroyer DSP1124)
    Yamaha RX-A1030
    Dual CS5000 (Ortofon OM30 Super)
    Sony UBP-X800
    Sony Playstation 3 (MediaLink OS X Server)
    Sony ES SCD-C2000ES
    JVC HR-S3912U
    Directv HR44 and WVB
    Logitech Harmony 700
    iPhone 5s/iPad 3
    Linksys WES610



    The Neverending DVD/BD Collection

    Subwoofer Setup and Parametric EQ Results *Dead Link*

  14. #14
    Suspended
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    10,176
    It's interesting that the cheaper player isn't winning. Does this say that the HD disc war will not be decided by "Average Joe"? Is Blu ray's movie selection that much better that some one would pay almost 4 times the price for the player? Maybe people just think Blu ray is the way to go because of sheer volume of support. Also, Toshiba has gained some respect with their DLP's but I believe they still have a entry level rep where companies like Panasonic and Sony carry more weight in the quality department. Although Sony is slipping there.

    Some one mentioned sound quality, is either HD disc format going to give me any better sound over DVD with out upgrading my gear?

    I haven't rented anything from Blockbuster in well over a year. I quit when they started doing those gimmick promotions with all the small print. I bought into one of those when they first started, the guy did not fully explain everything, once I got out of that I never went back. I just pick up a movie or two from Hollywood when I get time to watch. I really enjoyed Blockbuster actually, their employees seemed to be energetic and helpful, the selection was great. I don't kknow why they felt they had to start running deceptive promotions. I really digressed.... strike this last statement from the record.

    Bayliff, wack his P P

  15. #15
    Suspended PeruvianSkies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3,373
    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Another factor that seems to be overlooked is that most consumers don't know what the advantages of hi-def are. Better picture quality is all that most people I talk to in the store can think of. Interestingly, better sound isn't all that important to 90% of the consumers out there, and so it really comes down to what people are getting for the extra expense. I'm not saying it's worthless, I'm just saying that most people who don't own a hi-def player have no idea what the format will offer. Likewise, people who do own them aren't bowled over and shouting the virtues of hi def from their rooftops (don't know why, but it's scaring people away from taking a side in the format war).

    If I was a studio pushing a hi def format, I'd work something into the contract with Blockbuster to advertise the virtues of the new format. I think that would go a whole lot further than just offering the disks and asking people to buy into something new they hardly understand. Maybe giving Blockbuster a slew of players and screens showing pre-edited demos of all the features during scenes of the latest block buster flick? If that's too expensive to implement, how about large color displays showing the differences and new features in easy to understand charts? Remember those life-size Luke Skywalker cutouts that we used to take pictures with at the entrances of video rental stores? Now picture The Fantastic 4 holding up TV screens showing off the many benefits of the new format.

    On that note, I think that Toshiba is doing a better job of marketing its format in places like BB, CC, Walmart, etc. I don't know why, but it just seems like Toshiba is trying a bit harder and this may be why the individual player sales are higher. Maybe it's just SoCal, but I see more Toshiba HD-DVD ads than Sony Blu-ray ones. That said, both companies could do more and to me it seems like it's a half-hearted effort all around, almost as if the companies themselves are not entirely behind their respective formats. Maybe they expect the virtues of the formats to carry the sales figures, but personally, I think they are under-estimating what average consumers know about them.

    Just out of curiosity, are there any TV ads about either format yet? That would be the place I'd focus on, especially on HD channels. Consider this ad during the season finale of Lost: "Like seeing this in your cable company's HD format? Wait until you see it in Blu-ray - Get all the performance out of your new TV with the best it can do: Sony the best picture, period." (interchange HD-DVD/Toshiba, if you want).
    Thank you for bringing up a very interesting angle on things. I am often amazed at how people are mainly interested in the picture size, resolution, etc, but couldn't care less about the sound quality delivered. It's astonishing to me that people in general desire for a pristine picture with crappy sound. It makes no sense, as Larry the Cable Guy would say...it's like whiping before pooping.

  16. #16
    Loving This kexodusc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications
    Posts
    9,025
    Quote Originally Posted by PeruvianSkies
    Thank you for bringing up a very interesting angle on things. I am often amazed at how people are mainly interested in the picture size, resolution, etc, but couldn't care less about the sound quality delivered. It's astonishing to me that people in general desire for a pristine picture with crappy sound. It makes no sense, as Larry the Cable Guy would say...it's like whiping before pooping.
    I'm not surprised that the sound quality isn't a major selling point. Quite honestly, the difference between Dolby Digital 5.1 and Lossless DVD-A or whatever isn't nearly as big as most of us here (present party included) would make it out to be. We have a way of, err...exaggerating the little things in the world of audio.

    Considering the visual sense is primary on the vast majority of the population, such a noticeable improvement (especially on larger screens) in the video quality area is a natural to be the biggest selling feature.

    Just for giggles - I wonder, if I walked into a room and heard a 5.1 sound track, I doubt I could tell right away if it was Dolby Digital, DTS, or something hi-rez without doing an A/B and spending a bit of time. I'd probably be an above average guesser, and I'm smart enough to focus on a few limitations of Dolby, DTS, etc, but there's some good sounding mixes out there that'd make it pretty tough. (hey, I might try this experiment soon).

    I'm pretty sure on a 42" screen or larger I could spot HD pretty fast.

  17. #17
    Oldest join date recoveryone's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,435
    ditto Kex, and remember many are still just getting into surround sound. When it comes to running wires along baseboards, ceiling creses, in wall installations..etc many are just not up for it, and the wife/kids factor plays a role also. So if you can't hide/blend in the wires then you may lose the battle of having a 5.1 setup. Or go for the wireless (subpar at best) option.

    For me its always been about the sound. That was why I used to like going to the theater (when I was a Kid) was for the sound experience. The feeling of being sucked into the movie. I can handle watching a average movie and enjoy it very much if the sound mix is done real good. And only watch a good film once if the sound mix is poorly done. When SW EP1 came out I flock to see it like everyone else. The story line was so so acting the same, but what caught me was the sound mix on the pod race. I could not wait to get my own copy and play that part over and over again and that was VHS in DPL and it only got better when it was release on DVD.

    I tell people all the time, the sound is what really makes the movie, and not always the big explosion, but the small little things: a dog barking off camera and making you turn your head to see, or water dripping from behind and you thinking you may have a leak in your house.
    HT
    Pioneer Elite SC lx502
    Pioneer Elite N50
    Pioneer Cassette CTM66R
    Pioneer Elite BDP 85FD

    Vizio P series 2160p
    Panamax 5300 EX

  18. #18
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    6,883
    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Peabody
    It's interesting that the cheaper player isn't winning. Does this say that the HD disc war will not be decided by "Average Joe"?
    The "average Joe" won't decide the format war between Blu-ray and HD-DVD. Rather, they will have the final say over whether either of those HD formats eventually supplants the DVD. IMO, that's the real format war (if it ever gets that far).

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Peabody
    Is Blu ray's movie selection that much better that some one would pay almost 4 times the price for the player? Maybe people just think Blu ray is the way to go because of sheer volume of support.
    It's not really the number of titles -- Blu-ray has only a slight advantage over HD-DVD in the # of titles in release -- so much as which titles are in release that IMO will help Blu-ray maintain its advantage. If you look at the top 20 grossing movies from 2006, 19 of them are out or coming out on Blu-ray, while only 12 of them are coming out on HD-DVD. Blu-ray doesn't have that many more titles available, but it has more of the titles that consumers want. The market is driven by new releases, and the only thing stopping Blu-ray from winning the format war outright is Universal's exclusive HD-DVD support. (And among the major studios, Universal had the weakest box office performance last year, which further erodes the potential customer base for HD-DVD) The instant that Universal goes neutral (i.e., starts releasing titles in both formats), it's over.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Peabody
    Some one mentioned sound quality, is either HD disc format going to give me any better sound over DVD with out upgrading my gear?
    On Blu-ray, you can potentially get upgraded sound quality because most of the titles so far have been using the higher bitrate 640k version of Dolby Digital (which doesn't have the aggressive high frequency channel joining that's used in the lower bitrate 448k and 384k tracks found on DVDs). All DD decoders are capable of decoding the 640k bitstream, but certain receiver models (including at least one recent Denon model) have had trouble reading the signal. In addition, the uncompressed PCM soundtracks can get output through the multichannel analog outputs.

    With HD-DVD, I believe that all of the standalone players include built-in audio decoders that can decode the Dolby Digital Plus (basically the same audio resolution as the 640k DD signal, but adds support for discrete 6.1 and 7.1 output), and the lossless Dolby TrueHD tracks (same resolution as uncompressed PCM) and pass them through the multichannel analog outputs.

    On both formats, the DTS-HD tracks will get downsampled to the 1.5k "core" DTS bitstream if a DTS-HD decoder isn't present. Not as high a resolution as lossless PCM, Dolby TrueHD, or DTS-HD, but certainly a higher resolution than the 754k half-bitrate DTS tracks typically used on DVDs.

    Quote Originally Posted by kexodusc
    I'm not surprised that the sound quality isn't a major selling point. Quite honestly, the difference between Dolby Digital 5.1 and Lossless DVD-A or whatever isn't nearly as big as most of us here (present party included) would make it out to be. We have a way of, err...exaggerating the little things in the world of audio.

    Considering the visual sense is primary on the vast majority of the population, such a noticeable improvement (especially on larger screens) in the video quality area is a natural to be the biggest selling feature.

    Just for giggles - I wonder, if I walked into a room and heard a 5.1 sound track, I doubt I could tell right away if it was Dolby Digital, DTS, or something hi-rez without doing an A/B and spending a bit of time. I'd probably be an above average guesser, and I'm smart enough to focus on a few limitations of Dolby, DTS, etc, but there's some good sounding mixes out there that'd make it pretty tough. (hey, I might try this experiment soon).

    I'm pretty sure on a 42" screen or larger I could spot HD pretty fast.
    Blu-ray has definitely been pushing the uncompressed PCM angle, though they haven't been telling the public that a lot of these PCM soundtracks are still downsampled from higher resolution masters (e.g., all of Sony's releases are 16-bit, while Fox has been going with 24-bit soundtracks; and so far none of the Blu-ray PCM tracks have used the 96 kHz sampling rate).

    You're right in that the perceived sound quality improvements due to resolution can get quite exaggerated. I think that DD is easier to differentiate because of how the channel joining affects the surround imaging, but that's not going to be as easy to pick out in a dealer demo room that might have a lot of background noise, no calibration, and improperly aligned speakers.

    OTOH, going from 480p to 1080p on the video side is very easy to pick out, and easy to demonstrate even in a warehouse-like environment like Best Buy or Costco. Anybody passing by with a shopping cart can see how good a movie looks in HD. Demonstrating the merits of higher audio resolution takes a lot more effort, and is not readily discernable through casual listening in a less-than-optimal room.

    Quote Originally Posted by recoveryone
    I tell people all the time, the sound is what really makes the movie, and not always the big explosion, but the small little things: a dog barking off camera and making you turn your head to see, or water dripping from behind and you thinking you may have a leak in your house.
    You're so right about that. Those subtleties that you cite are often underappreciated, but they add so much to the immersive effect that a movie can provide. Master and Commander is very frequently cited as a reference quality soundtrack, and while the explosions in the battle scenes are great demonstration pieces, to me the best aspect of that soundtrack is with how it conveys a sense of space. When the scene takes place under the deck, the sound conveys the tightness of that space, and on above deck, you can sense the spaciousness. Very impressive all the way around.
    Last edited by Woochifer; 06-20-2007 at 01:45 PM.
    Wooch's Home Theater 2.0 (Pics)
    Panasonic VIERA TH-C50FD18 50" 1080p
    Paradigm Reference Studio 40, CC, and 20 v.2
    Adire Audio Rava (EQ: Behringer Feedback Destroyer DSP1124)
    Yamaha RX-A1030
    Dual CS5000 (Ortofon OM30 Super)
    Sony UBP-X800
    Sony Playstation 3 (MediaLink OS X Server)
    Sony ES SCD-C2000ES
    JVC HR-S3912U
    Directv HR44 and WVB
    Logitech Harmony 700
    iPhone 5s/iPad 3
    Linksys WES610



    The Neverending DVD/BD Collection

    Subwoofer Setup and Parametric EQ Results *Dead Link*

  19. #19
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    tuscaloosa
    Posts
    5,528
    Blu-ray caters to collectors, hddvd caters to renters, simple as that.
    And PSP3 is actually canabalizing player sales in blu-ray, most will buy a psp just
    because they are cheaper than a player( but the new 600 player will change this)
    I hope blu wins, because its the more advanced format, and if we must have a hd disc, lets go with the more advanced.
    AND heres another thing, with all of this great sound how about some concert discs?
    Or music video collections?
    Or decent classics that arent computer generated "blockbusters"
    Anyway great toshiba lost, I hate em, everything I had tosh either broke, malfunctioned
    or underperformed or was poorly designed
    LG 42", integra 6.9, B&W 602s2, CC6 center, dm305rears, b&w
    sub asw2500
    Panny DVDA player
    sharp Aquos BLU player
    pronto remote, technics antique direct drive TT
    Samsung SACD/DVDA player
    emotiva upa-2 two channel amp

  20. #20
    nightflier
    Guest

    This is news to me

    Blu-ray caters to collectors, hddvd caters to renters, simple as that.[/QUOTE]

    How do you figure that?

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    I hope blu wins, because its the more advanced format, and if we must have a hd disc, lets go with the more advanced.
    Well, not if they continue to downsample the sound (according to Wooch). I've also read that HD-DVD has an edge on sound quality.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    ...AND heres another thing, with all of this great sound how about some concert discs? Or music video collections?
    I think here again, HD-DVD has greater potential because of the Universal alliance and their desperation to compete. Sony has a good catalog too, but I think (and this is just speculation) that they will also be late to the party with music and concert disks.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Anyway great toshiba lost, I hate em, everything I had tosh either broke, malfunctioned or underperformed or was poorly designed
    Whoa, there. I've had the opposite experience. I think this is ultimately a matter of product lines and models (probably affected by a specific part supplier), rather than systemic in a company.

    I think the best resolution is not a defeat of one side or the other, but rather some kind of truce. Consumers would fare much better if the formats worked things out. What if Universal or Microsoft refused to throw in the towel and doggedly refused to offer Blu-Ray solutions, for example? This would ultimately hurt the consumers more than anyone else.

  21. #21
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    halifax,nova scotia,canada
    Posts
    1,083
    I don't think there can be a truce.I think that at somepoint Universal will decide to start putting out films in both formats and then it will be over.If all films are available in one format then there is no need for the other format.

    bill
    Speakers-Jm Labs
    Disc player-Sim Audio Moon Calypso
    Pre-amp-Sim Audio P-5.3 SE
    dac= sim audio moon 300d

    Amp-Sim Audio Moon I-3
    Display-Toshiba CRT
    Wires and Cables-Kimber,Straight Wire, ixos, Gutwire and shunyata research
    Sacd-Cambridge Audio
    Bluray--Sony and Cambridge Audio
    Remote-- Harmony 1100

    Power-- Monster

  22. #22
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    6,883
    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Blu-ray caters to collectors, hddvd caters to renters, simple as that.
    Not at all true. Blu-ray's releases comprise more recent box office hits, and those tend to have much greater appeal to renters than the library releases that typify more of HD-DVD's output. If HD-DVD "caters to renters," then why would Blockbuster support a format that "caters to collectors"? And why would the 70% market share for Blockbuster's Blu-ray rentals be nearly identical to the 67% market share that Blu-ray sales have claimed so far this year?

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Well, not if they continue to downsample the sound (according to Wooch). I've also read that HD-DVD has an edge on sound quality.
    Can't really generalize since the choice in the lossless sound format is a title-by-title choice (if the title even includes a lossless track in the first place). Can't compare the Warner titles because a lot of their early Blu-ray titles did not include lossless tracks, while the HD-DVD equivalents did.

    The Blu-ray titles from Fox and Disney thus far have primarily used a 48/24 PCM resolution, which is identical to the resolution used with most HD-DVD lossless tracks (using either TrueHD or DTS-HD). Only those few HD-DVD titles that use Dolby TrueHD at 96/24 resolution can claim higher resolution. So far, Sony has stuck with 48/16 resolution. Thus far, more Blu-ray titles have gone with uncompressed PCM because the format's larger disc capacity allows for it and most Blu-ray players don't yet decode TrueHD or DTS-HD.

    The latest firmware updates though with most Blu-ray players now allow for a TrueHD or DTS-HD signal to get transcoded to PCM, which theoretically at least, maintains the full resolution of the original signal. The only reason really to go with TrueHD or DTS-HD is to save on disc space and/or accommodate a higher resolution than the disc space would otherwise allow with an uncompressed PCM track.

    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    I think here again, HD-DVD has greater potential because of the Universal alliance and their desperation to compete. Sony has a good catalog too, but I think (and this is just speculation) that they will also be late to the party with music and concert disks.
    Strange as it may seem, Universal's music division is actually a member of the Blu-ray Association. I haven't checked on whether they have actually released any titles, but this seems like a rather bizarre corporate disconnect within Universal. I saw the Universal Music Group logo pop up while watching a Blu-ray demo reel, and I had to double-check this because it otherwise made no sense when I saw it.

    http://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=51
    Wooch's Home Theater 2.0 (Pics)
    Panasonic VIERA TH-C50FD18 50" 1080p
    Paradigm Reference Studio 40, CC, and 20 v.2
    Adire Audio Rava (EQ: Behringer Feedback Destroyer DSP1124)
    Yamaha RX-A1030
    Dual CS5000 (Ortofon OM30 Super)
    Sony UBP-X800
    Sony Playstation 3 (MediaLink OS X Server)
    Sony ES SCD-C2000ES
    JVC HR-S3912U
    Directv HR44 and WVB
    Logitech Harmony 700
    iPhone 5s/iPad 3
    Linksys WES610



    The Neverending DVD/BD Collection

    Subwoofer Setup and Parametric EQ Results *Dead Link*

  23. #23
    Tyler Acoustics Fan drseid's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Fairfax, VA
    Posts
    823
    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Blu-ray caters to collectors, hddvd caters to renters, simple as that.
    And PSP3 is actually canabalizing player sales in blu-ray, most will buy a psp just
    because they are cheaper than a player( but the new 600 player will change this)
    I hope blu wins, because its the more advanced format, and if we must have a hd disc, lets go with the more advanced.
    Oh, I don't know about this at all....

    HD DVD has *a lot* more of the older classic movies that should appeal to collectors like myself. Casablanca, for one... I have found so far Blu-ray has focused on many of the present day action oriented films that are of very little interest to me and many other collectors (not to imply that collectors all collect as I do). I do think that while to me, at least, the quality of the Blu-ray releases is nowhere *near* as good as HD DVD, Wooch's point about new releases driving rentals, etc. is well taken and would indeed explain Blockbuster's recent move to major Blu-ray support. You could say that HD DVD is appealing to collectors, but Blu-ray is looking at the new release blockbuster rental market, and that is where a lot of the money is to be made.

    I prefer the HD DVD strategy as a classic film collector, but I think the Blu-ray new release "blockbusters" strategy is working pretty well.

    ---Dave
    Integra DHC-40.2 Pre/Pro
    Coda 2 X 200 Watt Amp
    Rotel RB-985 5 X 100 Watt Amp
    2 Tyler Acoustics 2 Piece Linbrook Signature System
    1 Tyler Linbrook Signature Center Channel
    3 Tyler Taylo Reference Monitors
    1 ACI Titan II Sub
    Toshiba HD-A1 HD DVD
    Panasonic BDT-210 + 350 Blu-ray
    Consonance Droplet CDP-5.0
    Sony 55NX-810 1080p 3D-LED HDTV

    Office:
    Opera Audio Consonance CD-120
    Jolida 1301A 2 X 30 Watt Int. Amp (Sovtek Tubes)
    Opera Audio Consonance Eric-1 Speakers

  24. #24
    Loving This kexodusc's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Department of Heuristics and Research on Material Applications
    Posts
    9,025
    As long as companies want to make money, they'll sell classic movies. Think it's just a matter of time until you find a lot of your favorite old films on BluRay, and probably more on HD-DVD if they stick around long enough.

  25. #25
    Suspended
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA
    Posts
    10,176
    Let me say I am not a huge classic movie collector but I am the type of person who actually paid more money for the B&W version of the Cristmas Carol, opposed to the cheaper colorized version. This is on VHS. On the other hand, I don't see why anyone would rush to buy old movies on a HD format. If my VHS version of the Cristmas Carol breaks or gets noisy, I may replace it some day but I have to wonder how much better B&W could look in HD. I don't even want to buy DVD's that aren't 5.1 although I do have some because I didn't have the movie or it was a great price. I know I'm a minority but I just refuse to duplicate movies when a new format comes out. I really didn't buy many movies until DVD came along. Actually, if I buy movies at all it has to have an entertainment value that will allow me to be able to watch again in the future. This tends to be the action/Sci-Fi type for me. I guess that puts me in the BR camp.

    I believe if Blockbuster starts renting HD movies it will give the HD players a surge. I remember when DVD first came out, first you had one row, then several shelves in the row, then DVD and same title VHS side by side, then VHS disappearing. Movie rentals in my opinion is the hurdle and after getting over that, they're off! If my local Blockbuster starts renting BR discs I really feel me being drawn by the s300. If I view movies I want to purchase I will probably just start a list and wait to buy on one of the HD formats.

    What would keep things whirling as Blockbuster decided to do BR and Hollywood or some other large chain decided to do HD-DVD. What if HD-DVD campt discounted HD movies to the rental chain, maybe as an exclusive, to make it worth their while to jump in.

Page 1 of 6 1 2 3 ... LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •