Christmas vacation tylenol flipout

Christmas vacation tylenol flipout

The way I see it I was able to christmas vacation tylenol flipout well over a year of quality HD titles exclusive to HD-DVD including Transformers, the Bourne trilogy, and the extras on 300 that did not ship on the Blu-Ray version. I think Ill stick with my upconverting DVD player/recorder until a Blu-ray recorder comes along at a reasonable price. This of course assumes Id be allowed to record HD content of course. If that isnt possible, Ill probably just get an Apple TV or some equivalent and download my HD content. Blu-ray may have won the battle, but Im guessing downloadable content wins the war. We got a fairly inexpensive HD-DVD player from Toshiba, and I guess now we have a nice upconverting DVD player. I share your sentiments on the drawbacks of blu-ray. I christmas vacation tylenol flipout my parents into buying an HDDVD player when Wal-Mart had discounted them to 1 I dont regret them having one, as NPR mentioned this morning: People will be able to scoop up HDDVDs for nearly 10 per disc before theyre all gone forever. But, while it is worse in many ways, BRD is also better in several. It has significantly more storage space per disc, which will help as technology progresses to higher and higher definitions and file sizes. Most of HDDVDs touted features like interactive menus will be in BRDs newest specification. I think, in the long run, BRD was the right format. Its just going to be DRM-intensive and The next DVD player I buy will probably be a Blu-Ray player, but only if I can find one for 150 or less. I guess it depends on when my current DVD player 5 years old stops working. My LCD TV, purchased 18 months ago, is only 32 and does not have 1080p resolution. So I dont think Id see literally the benefits of Blu-Ray on my TV. But if a Blu-Ray player is affordable, Ill upgrade and slowly build a Blu-Ray collection. Very slowly only for movies and other videos that truly deserve it. My thoughts on how Toshiba could have won the war, was since they own the rights to DVD, stop allowing movie studios that do not support HD-DVD to use regular DVD format, cutting a huge chunk of profit from these studios forcing them to convert or suffer. It will be years before downloading HD content will be the norm. Our current broadband access and bandwidth is simply not conducive to a consumer-friendly experience. Blu-Ray can hold up to what, 60 gigs? For most people, they would rather not wait several hours to download a movie and then have to manage content on the HDD and decide what they want to keep, etc. Blu-Ray is the viable option for the next 10 years or so. Go get a PS3 now! The fact is that the consumer wins. One format with all movie studios in one camp providing quality HD viewing. Its not a surprise since as you say, the lower cost of HD-DVD never materialized in the price of discs. I just couldnt get myself to buy any HD movies at I do like the upscaling of the Toshiba vs. my other DVD players upscaling. Watching a christmas vacation tylenol flipout DVD on the Toshiba HD player looks great. So much so I could not justify the added expense for the disc. It is sad to see a superior product lose. I guess Sony knows how that feels too from the betamax days. I have a PS3 so this news is awesome for me. As for the War, its over.

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