The purpose of a combo disc is to ensure you only have to buy one copy of the movie to play on all your players.
Here's an example: My Sister-in-law wants the latest Disney movie for my nieces. She has two choices: A Blu-ray disc to play on the (admittedly non-existent, but let's pretend she has one) Blu-ray player in the living room, or a DVD that'll play on the living room player (albeit in poorer quality), the kid's room DVD player/TV, and her SUV's entertainment system.
Which do you think she'd buy? Which would she buy if the Blu-ray disc was actually combo DVD/Blu-ray format?
For Blu-ray to succeed, it has to be more useful than DVD. Better does not just mean higher quality, it means there should be no downside to using it.
I continue to be surprised at the number of Blu-ray fans who don't "get it" and insist Blu-ray should be as limited as possible, nothing more than an incompatible high definition format.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
squiggleslash @ Aug 27th 2008 6:28PM
The purpose of a combo disc is to ensure you only have to buy one copy of the movie to play on all your players.
Here's an example: My Sister-in-law wants the latest Disney movie for my nieces. She has two choices: A Blu-ray disc to play on the (admittedly non-existent, but let's pretend she has one) Blu-ray player in the living room, or a DVD that'll play on the living room player (albeit in poorer quality), the kid's room DVD player/TV, and her SUV's entertainment system.
Which do you think she'd buy? Which would she buy if the Blu-ray disc was actually combo DVD/Blu-ray format?
For Blu-ray to succeed, it has to be more useful than DVD. Better does not just mean higher quality, it means there should be no downside to using it.
I continue to be surprised at the number of Blu-ray fans who don't "get it" and insist Blu-ray should be as limited as possible, nothing more than an incompatible high definition format.