Wow. Thanks for that post, JDS. So much for the idea that super-upscaling would somehow rival true HD quality. Today we all see that the emperor has no clothes, and Toshiba's moves can now only charitably be described as the corporate equivalent of "eccentric." They're obviously just trying to stuff the high definition genie back in the bottle to continue their DVD patent income by rolling out a little razzle dazzle B.S. and a quick "Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!"
I mean, after losing all that money in the format war, they won't even take advantage of selling Blu-ray to early adopters at today's higher profit margins? It's just sad, really, to witness the undoing of a company like this.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Mr. E @ Jun 17th 2008 6:20PM
Wow. Thanks for that post, JDS. So much for the idea that super-upscaling would somehow rival true HD quality. Today we all see that the emperor has no clothes, and Toshiba's moves can now only charitably be described as the corporate equivalent of "eccentric." They're obviously just trying to stuff the high definition genie back in the bottle to continue their DVD patent income by rolling out a little razzle dazzle B.S. and a quick "Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!"
I mean, after losing all that money in the format war, they won't even take advantage of selling Blu-ray to early adopters at today's higher profit margins? It's just sad, really, to witness the undoing of a company like this.