:rofl:If you're wondering about players, Blu-Ray is the way to go. HDDVD is dying right now, and one of these two things will happen:
1. Blu-Ray will beat out HDDVD. Your Blu-Ray player still works.
2. A new format of disc being developed will be able to be read by either lens. Your Blu-Ray player still works.
Tsk, Tsk Milo. You forgot the 3rd option. A dual format machine that reads either discs.
At this point, waiting for a dual format machine is probably the best move. And, if you don't have an HD TV, they are both a waste of your money right now.
(I personally don't see either lasting all that long unless dual players under $200 are on shelves by next christmas.)
It's going to take a miracle to produce a dual-format player at that price within a year. Two to three years is more reasonable, and even that's an optimistic scenario. HD DVD is absolutely hemorrhaging market share. Sponsoring companies will not allow sales to suffer for the amount of time it will take to get an affordable dual format player on the market. They are not going to drop from the price of a high-end LCD to a high-end upconvert in a year.Tsk, Tsk Milo. You forgot the 3rd option. A dual format machine that reads either discs.
At this point, waiting for a dual format machine is probably the best move. And, if you don't have an HD TV, they are both a waste of your money right now.
(I personally don't see either lasting all that long unless dual players under $200 are on shelves by next christmas.)
The data doesn't support that claim... what it DOES support is an argument that it is still too early to tell, and the market is too small right now, being very sensitive to things like price cuts and movie releases.It's going to take a miracle to produce a dual-format player at that price within a year. Two to three years is more reasonable, and even that's an optimistic scenario. HD DVD is absolutely hemorrhaging market share. Sponsoring companies will not allow sales to suffer for the amount of time it will take to get an affordable dual format player on the market. They are not going to drop from the price of a high-end LCD to a high-end upconvert in a year.
Guys, a Blu-Ray player is going to play most new releases, and eventually all stretching into the future, wether Blu-Ray or TotalHD prevails. But HDDVD simply won't last.
Wemus and the rest of you, I know that the most affordable option is of huge importance to the consumer.
But like I've said, this is going to be won by the movie studios (unless WB's TotalHD wins out). Sony is going to hold on to this thing like a rabid dog like they usually do, which means the movie studios they own will never see the light of day on an HD DVD disc. All those MGM, Columbia and Sony movies. And consider Disney, Buena Vista, Touchstone, ABC and Miramax to be in there as well as media that will never be released on HD DVD.
We have better capacity platters right now in use. We also have more advanced techniques right around the corner (ex. HVD with ~4 terebytes to a disc).
Unfortuantely, BluRay and HD-DVD came out at a time where there is virtually no consumer interest in them. Add to the fact it's 2 different formats, expensive, etc. and it's nothing but a big hill in front of both.
In less than 5 years, there will be much better alternatives to these discs. Technology is moving to quick to stop for some stupid format war.
Dual disc players will hold over consumers until the next, longer term solution comes out. Both of these will be a drop in the bucket looking 10-15 years from now.
blu-ray will/is going to be the next step in home entertainment. Like from VHS to DVD, it was expensive and no one was sure it was going to last. See: Disk, Laser. In a year or so it's going to crush HDDVD and will be the standard for all movies in three years. I know there is more tech on the way, but will they really push for more then 1080p res? Storage is a whole nother issue, I am just talking about the movie aspect