Terraria server setup First of

Terraria server setup

First of all, this is a Blu ray player, Samsung. So make it glow blue! But even if you dont want it to be blue, red is the last hue you should have chosen as an alternative, since red was the signature color of HD-DVD, Blu-rays onetime rival. Instead, the company continues to plump for its silly XDE technology which is really just an upconverting DVD player. To repeat my earlier point: Toshiba released HD-DVD and supported it to the bitter end because it obviously believed that there was a significant future for high definition content on a physical storage medium. So regardless of whether YOU think online HD video will soon surpass disc-based video, Toshiba did not believe that. So this refusal to endorse Blu-ray isnt some kind of principled belief that online HD video is the future. What it is is a stubborn and petulant refusal to lose gracefully. The Adamo and the Vaio Pocket arent really aiming at the same market the ultra-thin Adamo seems to be Dells answer to Apples slender MacBook Air and the Vaio Pocket is a netbook a la Eee PC but together they mark the latest proof that laptops are where the action is in the computer biz these days. The base version of the Adamo looks to cost about 1500, with additional options such as a Blu-ray you know, Steve Jobs famous bag of hurt. So far there are no pics of the device, but an official unveil is expected at CES. The Vaio Pocket is much less mysterious, thanks a variety of leaks from Sony. The extra-wide device will sport an 8-inch screen with 1600×768 resolution and come with the ever-popular Intel Atom processor. Price looks to be about 1000, which is pricey for a netbook. So Sony appears to be cornering/creating the premium netbook niche. So expect CES to be very laptop-centric when the show kicks off on Thursday. Overall, Blu-ray has accounted for about 13 percent or 7 million copies of the 5 million copies of the movie sold so far, reports High-Def Digest: Widely expected to one of the formats all-time time sellers, Batmans high-def bow was sure to be impressive, and indeed its 7 million worldwide opening salvo handily trumped the previous record-holder for first week sales, Paramounts Iron Man which is now reported to have approached 500, 000 units in its opening frame. According to studio estimates, The Dark Knights Blu-ray sales accounted for almost 13 percent of the 5 million combined Blu-ray and DVD sales for the title thus far. Domestically, The Dark Knight sold over 1 million Blu-ray units in its first week, including the blockbuster 600, 000 first-day sales of the title reported earlier this week. Warner expects sales to continue strongly throughout the holiday season, with final 2008 sales for The Dark Knight expected to top over 2 million worldwide. The real question, though, is whether The Dark Knight has any coattails. In other words, did people who previously did not own Blu-ray players buy them because of this movie and, if so, will they buy any other Blu-ray movies? Or will this be their only Blu-ray movie purchase, and now theyll just go back to watching DVDs on their new Blu-ray players? If the movie industry really wants Blu-ray to supplant DVD, then I think Andrew is right: Blu-ray movies have to be as cheap as DVD movies. The price of the players themselves is less important, since thats a one-time expense. But most people, especially in the current economy, probably arent going to build a Blu-ray library if each movie costs 10 to 20 more than the same movie on DVD. The entry More than 1 million Blu-ray copies of The Dark Knight sold in the first weekis tagged: Blu-ray, The Dark Knight If this indeed is the make or break period for Blu-ray, then these initial sales results have to be encouraging for fans of the high definition format. Researchers found that consumers bought 147, 000 standalone Blu-ray players the week of Thanksgiving, up 300 percent from the same period in 2007, while Blu-ray movie sales quadrupled from that same period. Full release is after the break. And among HD television owners, Blu-ray players are the number one most-wanted Christmas gift. On the movie side, The Dark Knight apparently sold 600, 000 copies on Blu-ray on its release day on Tuesday, beating the previous record of 260, 000 set by Iron Man several weeks ago. And the Los Angeles Times reports that the new Batman movie sold almost three million discs overall on release day, meaning that Blu-ray accounted for about 25 percent to 30 percent of all copies sold. Its encouraging, Ron Sanders, president of Warner Home Video, told the Times. The Blu-ray sales of Dark Knight were exceptionally strong and much higher than our projections. Theres a lot of talk about nesting during recessions, of people ditching expensive outings and vacations and opting to entertain themselves at home. There are signs that this impulse will benefit the video game industry, and now it looks like it could help the Blu-ray movie industry, as well. What are your purchase plans for the latest Batman extravaganza? Andrew D.

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