Hmm? Isn't everyone glad this is over? What burns is that they start at $399. HD-DVD started at $149. It's a shame that the price is so high. The war with HD-DVD over, but lets see consumers adopt the format at these prices.
Yes, that's it. Show the world why so many HD DVD supporters dislike the arrogance of many BD fanboys! I suppose that dancing around an HD DVD player taking turns whacking it with a sledgehammer chanting "Blu-ray! Blu-Ray!" is on your agenda for tonight?
How pathetic that so many people like you, TT, nFinity, H4ldol, etc. have taken so seriously the encoding method of a f**king 12cm piece of plastic. Get over it.
What's worse is that they have no idea what they're talking about when they spew out random jabs like "higher bit rates on Blu-ray." They automatically assume more is better/superior. A skilled compressionist can do an excellent job with the medium average bit rates offered on HD DVD. As codecs improve (likely 50% over the course of its use), bit rates will become wholly irrelevant as they did on DVD. The MPEG-2 encoders now are so efficient that it's remarkable how good DVD picture quality can get on modern releases.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
andyj @ Feb 21st 2008 12:46AM
That's gotta burn all of the HD DVD chaps good, awesome!
Boostjunkie @ Feb 21st 2008 8:28AM
Hmm? Isn't everyone glad this is over? What burns is that they start at $399. HD-DVD started at $149. It's a shame that the price is so high. The war with HD-DVD over, but lets see consumers adopt the format at these prices.
John B @ Feb 21st 2008 8:31AM
Yes, that's it. Show the world why so many HD DVD supporters dislike the arrogance of many BD fanboys! I suppose that dancing around an HD DVD player taking turns whacking it with a sledgehammer chanting "Blu-ray! Blu-Ray!" is on your agenda for tonight?
How pathetic that so many people like you, TT, nFinity, H4ldol, etc. have taken so seriously the encoding method of a f**king 12cm piece of plastic. Get over it.
Charles @ Feb 21st 2008 9:39PM
What's worse is that they have no idea what they're talking about when they spew out random jabs like "higher bit rates on Blu-ray." They automatically assume more is better/superior. A skilled compressionist can do an excellent job with the medium average bit rates offered on HD DVD. As codecs improve (likely 50% over the course of its use), bit rates will become wholly irrelevant as they did on DVD. The MPEG-2 encoders now are so efficient that it's remarkable how good DVD picture quality can get on modern releases.