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HD-DVD and Blu-Ray Disappointing So Far 469

Dster76 writes "Reuters is reporting that the new format wars are showing signs of underwhelming performance, both technically and financially. In fact, according to the article, the new formats are just not selling. Reuters chalks it up to a current lack of interest. They indicate that as more movies and players become available this autumn, sales should improve. Just the same, the current picture is quite sour." From the article: "'Neither format is selling well or at the level I had expected. I had expected early adopters to step up and other retailers have had the same experience,' said Bjorn Dybdahl, president of San Antonio, Texas-based specialty store Bjorn's. 'High expectations were set. At every meeting with Sony, every demonstration was spectacular,' Dybdahl said. 'Then along comes the first Blu-ray player from Samsung and that's when my expectations were hurt. When we put the disc in, all the sales people looked around and said it doesn't look much better than a standard DVD,' he said."
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HD-DVD and Blu-Ray Disappointing So Far

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  • by yagu ( 721525 ) * <{yayagu} {at} {gmail.com}> on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:26PM (#16025675) Journal

    From the article, a quote: "Neither format is selling well or at the level I had expected. I had expected early adopters to step up and other retailers have had the same experience."

    I'm an early adopter, have been for a long time. I have always been willing, even eager to "step up" and pay the premium to get new (and great) technology early. Not so here. Another characteristic for early adopters is they tend to be more aggressive in research (those that aren't buying for status), certainly the case for me. The more I researched DVD both HD and Blu-Ray, the less interested I was. There was a certain promise of amazing high quality video, but NOT ONCE was I able to get anyone to give me a demo where I saw convincing evidence this was true.

    Add to that the war of the formats and the fact I have to replace movies I already own at outrageous new prices (yeah, early adopter), but each new format is providing a limited and only slightly overlapping selection... wtf? This was the same early problem with CDs. The difference here is, we already have a very high quality, convenient, inexpensive, long lasting option (regular DVDs), and there's nothing compelling in the new DVDs warranting the hassle, the expense, nor the "convenience" (which is less than existing DVDs).

    Then there's the specter of DRM and that it's not entirely obvious or clear to me or other early adopters what the final DRM landscape looks like. If we had to guess, it doesn't look hospitable (sp?).

    Here's another telling piece of evidence from the article, again a quote: "Often, it has something to do with source material. Sometimes the film itself is shot in a way that may emphasize a grainy look as opposed to a sharp picture," he said. This almost outright concedes the new "high resolution" exceeds what most media will be capable of providing... or, it's an excuse... neither gives me any warm fuzzies about my return on investment for new DVD formats.

    Early adopters like new technology when it's new and improved, and are willing to pay for it. In my opinion, someone(s) in some conference room took this thought and ran with it, not considering the early adopters might be a bit more discerning in their tastes. We're not your cash cow toadies.

    Maybe that's what's happened to their mysteriously AWOL early adopters... they're not early marks. Lesson learned (not).

  • What a shocker (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:27PM (#16025685)
    DVD was a huge step up from VHS tapes. HDDVD/BR offer nothing truly substantial to make people want to buy them plus most people don't have an HDTV to take advantage of the extra resolution.
  • The Mess (Score:4, Insightful)

    by in2mind ( 988476 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:33PM (#16025735) Homepage
    Neither format is selling well or at the level I had expected. I had expected early adopters to step up and other retailers have had the same experience

    Yea.Early adopter.They expect them to buy a player each - One to play HD-DVD;Another to play Blu-Ray; And then they will keep the user guessing as to which one will become the standard.

    They created the confusion.They are paying for it.Why should consumers too?

  • Too much confusion (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Russ Nelson ( 33911 ) <slashdot@russnelson.com> on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:34PM (#16025741) Homepage
    Consumers have a tendency to stay away from confusing markets. Nobody wants to buy something only to find out that they "got ripped off".
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:34PM (#16025742)
    I'm not sure what the problem is, but I dont belive its the source media's fault. I have a nice HD projector, and movies aired over my cable HD channels are spectacular. I would expect the same from these new formats, if not better because it shouldn't be compressed as much as a cable stream. If its crappy, welp, I won't be buying.
  • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) * on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:34PM (#16025749)
    If the PS3 fails to ignite blu-ray sales, Sony is going to have to back down and start licensing the blu-ray technology to manufacturers of hybrids (Samsung was originally contemplating [dlmag.com] such a player, but rumor is that Sony refused to licensed blu-ray in a hybrid player, which is already leading to some legal headaches [geekyblogs.com]).

    Sony are control freaks and absolutely obsessed with their own proprietary formats (no matter how many times this has burned them). But if they don't blink on this one, it could take BOTH formats down.

    -Eric

  • Quoted For Truth (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ip_freely_2000 ( 577249 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:34PM (#16025753)
    "When we put the disc in, all the sales people looked around and said it doesn't look much better than a standard DVD"

    The important part: "...doesn't look much better..."

    I would be the first to agree that HD does look better. But does it look better enough to toss my current DVD player and TV? Is it worth the headache of the format rivalry and all the DRM connectivity issues that I'm not sure a new set will be compatible with in two years?

    No.

    I'll continue to sit on the sidelines for a while longer.
  • by caldroun ( 52920 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:36PM (#16025772) Homepage Journal
    The formats just came out, and the players are still expensive. Did they think that we would all run out and buy our movies again? Much less a player for $1000. Pfft. While we are still getting announcements like "Sony releases 2 more movie titles for Blue-Ray" tells me that they shouldn't be concerned about underwhelming performance yet...it is still NEW! Give me a reason to replace my ubiquitous DVD players.
  • by RsG ( 809189 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:37PM (#16025775)
    We've seen the same sort of thing happen to computer technology as well.

    If you're a gamer when was the last time you upgraded your graphics card? It's probably the newest part of your system, right?

    Now, when was the last time you upgraded your sound card? Probably never. Yet I do recall a time when decent sound was a big deal - I can still remember firs playing Doom with the chirping onboard speakers as a kid, and later being blown away when we got a new computer that had an actual sound card installed.

    Technology peaks. It happens. And when it does, all the early adopters in the world aren't going to make a difference. We aren't easy marks; we have to think there's something for us in the bargin if we shell out for a better system or part.
  • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:38PM (#16025783)
    I too tend to adopt early. Bought my HDTV at the end of 2000. What did I get for my trouble? A really really sharp TV that doesn't interface with many HD components anymore, as that abomination known as HDMI came out afterwards. But, that aside, DVDs provide pretty darn sharp pictures on this TV, as does HD OTA content. Matter of fact, when watching either, it's hard to discern quality differences without pausing the picture. (Broadcast HD is by far better on stills) Considering that OTA HD is higher quality than what will be on either disc format, what's the point in buying an expensive new format, especially one that's hamstrung with all sorts of DRM requirements. (Speaking of, has there been a determination of whether these new boxes MUST be connected to phone/internet? I haven't bothered following it since then, but it seems that their inactivation policy requires some sort of connection to phone home, something else I'm against if I'm purchasing personal AV hardware)
  • by cptgrudge ( 177113 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:39PM (#16025795) Journal

    But if they don't blink on this one, it could take BOTH formats down.

    I don't see any problem. Keep your fingers crossed.

  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:40PM (#16025800) Journal
    Oh, sure we're an impulsive crowd, but most are educated and realize when we've been snookered before.

    Did nobody in either camp stop and look at how they had royally screwed every early adopter of HDTV? The promise of content that never occured. The delayed, and delayed, and delayed rollout of OTA. The jumble of formats that caused event the best CE to falter under the load of options. The incompatibilities between components. The ubiquitous component interface that every early adopter had on their display sets which are now utterly obsolete due to the need for "content protection" - a perfectly good $7000 50RP set which may be relegated to 480p at the whim of the broadcaster. The promise of 20Mb HD that got chopped into subchannels to rerun Andy Griffith and the Golden Girls in SD simultaneously, at the expense of HD. The iron fist approach to preventing transferring DVDs to Media Servers.

    No, the industry has drawn a line, and the early adopters are on the other side. We're the ones who are most adversely affected by the content protection and market jockying. Don't come to me with your hand out for your improved shovel right after you run over my dog. The industry has, through their anti-piracy efforts, significantly alienated a large portion of their first-run consumers. They've managed to eliminate the initial cash infusion that covers the R&D part of the CE process, and now they're stuck with trying to add enough volume to get every household to buy the product just to cover the engineering costs.

    The early adopters want to buy this stuff, but we want to play with our new toys, not see how womebody else want us to play with them. Give us back our control, and we'll open our wallets. 'Til then, go fuck yourselves.
  • by CaymanIslandCarpedie ( 868408 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:43PM (#16025836) Journal
    Important to remember these new HD formats were never about bringing something new and amazing to the consumers. Its simply that the DVD market is saturated and since everyone (who wants one at least) already has one these hardware guys are seeing thier sales drop-off. These new HD formats are just about trying to get people to buy more stuff. They need sales and if everyone already has thier product then nobody buys. So they had to relese a new product and try to convince consumers of why they needed to buy more stuff. They have failed pretty miserably to date on convincing people to give them more money.
  • by Megajim ( 885529 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:44PM (#16025841)
    This keeps being compared to the VHS-Beta conflict. We've already been through that and, as consumers, we learned from it. When CDs came out, there weren't competing formats. There were also no competing formats for DVDs (unless you consider DIVX [wikipedia.org] more than a blip). The VHS-Beta conflict was fueled by the fact that you could adequately use either format to record. Where's the fuel for HDDVD/BR? A smattering of random titles? I'm sorry, but it's not worth $500-1000 for me to see and HD version of "Serenity". If there were more titles available at launch ("Lord of the Rings"), then I would consider diving in. This is just like trying to decide which gaming platform I'm going to buy - they are all superior to my old system, so it comes down to the games. Given the current array of weak HD titles, why would anyone bother (unless you really love "Serenity" that much)?
  • by maynard ( 3337 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:45PM (#16025854) Journal
    "Both Blu-ray and HDVDVD support the same codecs Mpeg2, mpeg 4 (h.264) and VC1 (Windows Media). For some reason Blu-ray creation software didn't support the other codecs initially, but the player does."

    That's correct. However, the end result is the same. Films released on Blu-Ray format in mpeg2 look noticably worse than films released in mpeg4 or VC1 on HD-DVD. I was shocked at the difference in image quality between the two. So, perhaps blu-ray players do support modern codecs (avsforum has had a good deal of discussion on this matter at their blu-ray forum) - but the upshot is that blu-ray releases look terrible compared to HD-DVD. And Blu-Ray drives cost twice as much.

    What would *you* buy? (well, *I* would buy neither - and wait for the format war to finish).
  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:48PM (#16025881) Homepage Journal
    There is very little incentive for all but the most rabid consumer to adopt either HD-DVD or Blu-Ray formats before widescale HDTV adoption at a reasonable price, which won't happen until one year AFTER 2009. When the price of reasonable quality HDTV is below the $300 price point, you can expect consumers to start choosing - but the reality is that most movies they want to play - at a price they want to pay for - will be on DVD and work perfectly fine.

    People still anecdotaly remember being burned in the VHS versus Beta wars - I was on the winning side of that, bought one of the first very expensive VHS VCRs from RCA, but I worked shift and made more than I do even now.
  • by HTMLSpinnr ( 531389 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:50PM (#16025902) Homepage
    I'm in the camp that got burned too - my Toshiba 34" CRT HDTV Monitor I bought only a few years back is useless w/ newer technology as it lacks any sort of digital input. I'm not anti-DRM, but I'm not going to spend alot for an inferior performance.

    Before I sink any money into either format, I'd want to see a clear winner, and something that wouldn't require me to upgrade my TV every 2 years to keep up with.

    Until then, my older Panasonic RP-82 works just fine w/ regular (or SuperBit) DVDs. I already get full resolution HD from my cable company.
  • by Botia ( 855350 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @02:59PM (#16025960)
    I couldn't agree with you more. I'm an early adopted, especially with graphics stuff. I had a digital camera back when people didn't know what they were. I had a DVD player back when DVD's came in CD cases. I had been looking forward to the new DVD format but it has been so severly screwed up with DRM's, format wars, pricing, lack of contect, etc. that there's no way I'm going to buy one.

    Give me a format that I can copy it to my computer by dragging and dropping. Then let me play it on my XBox 360 over the network. Don't require HDMI with super encryption and a connection to the Internet to disable my player. Let me put it on every TV, DVR, and computer in my house. Let me copy it down to my IPod, my Pocket PC, my phone. Make it easy for me to watch it. That's what I'll buy.

    Higher resolution is a plus, but not a strong selling point without the basics. When you take away the basics, the picture quality really doesn't matter much if you aren't able to watch it.
  • Unsurprising (Score:3, Insightful)

    by LParks ( 927321 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:03PM (#16025985)
    The lack of sales of Blu-Ray and HD-DVD is unsurprising.

    What does surprise me is that it seems both sides are mostly selling these products on higher quality video, rather than capacity.

    I look at the early releases for these two and only see movies.

    I can't really tell the difference between DVD and Blu-Ray or HD-DVD in terms of video quality, but I can easily tell something quantifiable like having one piece of media for a whole season of a TV show vs. 4 or 5 DVDs. That convenience is why I like single DVD games over 5 CD games for my PC.
  • HD, bah (Score:3, Insightful)

    by alucinor ( 849600 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:06PM (#16026014) Journal
    HD makes no visible difference for me. I don't keep my glasses clean enough of spots for HD to matter. And I like big tapestries on my walls more than big screens. Watching DVDs on my 19" PC monitor is enough screen for me for the rest of my life.
  • by Pope ( 17780 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:07PM (#16026019)
    Sounds like you need to give the kids access to an HTPC rather than backing up their DVDs! Rip/compress to had drive, come up with an easy interface and a waterproof keyboard, and blammo, no more sticky discs.

    Of course, back when I was a kid, we didn't have VCRs, let alone purchased movies, so I really cannot symapthize ;) I learned very quickly not to use crayon on my books because I simply wasn't getting another one.
  • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:10PM (#16026037)

    The great thing about dvd was that you saw immediate benefits both from the medium and the content on your _standard_tv_. You didn't need the latest lcd/dlp/plasma display to appreciate what you were getting... Now we have only an incremental increase in the convenience of the medium (saves having multi-disk sets) which really doesn't mean much for most viewers and the improvements in quality only applies to a much smaller audience.

    When it comes to the new consoles, both MS and Sony have bet the bank on the television market being saturated with big HD sets that would justify an "investment" in a game console that would display in HD on them. In a few ways -- cost of game development, size of their potential market as you say here -- both companies appear to have lost track of the market, or to have projected it wrongly. Market penetration of huge HD screens just isn't there yet. Maybe it will be during the lifespan of these consoles, maybe not.

    Meanwhile a competitor that tries to jazz up the game experience on "your _standard_tv_" is out there, phrasing its admittedly not-cutting-edge technology in ways that DO mean something to most game players.

  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:17PM (#16026092) Homepage
    Records: Handel in Quad; John Rockwell; The New York Times February 19, 1973, p. 29

    'Music for Royal Fireworks' Sounded Better in an Early Stereo Version

    Whatever its ultimate artistic and technological merits may be, quadraphonic sound understandable has the classical-record business rubbing its collective hands together with glee. The classical repertory has its limits, after all, and the standard pieces have been recorded to death in stereo. Now, at long last, a new gimmick is at hand.

    Not only it is presumed that the American public will spend millions on equipment, but all the hoary old warhorses and hi-fi spectaculars can be done over again in four-channel sound....

    ---
    Truth in advertising... Rockwell acknowledges he was listening to the new release in "plain old stereo." A March 12, 1972 review by an audio reviewer, Don Heckman, listening in quad is, however, only slightly more encouraging:

    "Just what was there to hear on all this gleaming new electronic exotica? Ah, there's the rub. Until just a few months ago, quadraphonic disks were dominated by the sound effects of falling trees, puffing choo-choos and gurgling whirlpools... [now there are more and] in some cases the rewards can be quite spectacular... a room-filling, near-concert-hall effect.... Pop music programs like Joan Baez... [and] Barbra Streisand are straightforward presentations in which one is less aware of a four-dimensional effect than of a kind of opening up of the sound.... [In one track on a Vanguard demonstration disk] the organ sound is quite extraordinary.... Switched-On Bach will probably have its sales surge as listeners discover that it sounds even more fascinating when these weirdly-distorted and re-timbred snippets of Bach go whipping around four, rather than two speakers."

  • by PCM2 ( 4486 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:19PM (#16026106) Homepage
    Its simply that the DVD market is saturated and since everyone (who wants one at least) already has one these hardware guys are seeing thier sales drop-off.

    Well, true, but it's also a significant point that these are HD formats. The TV industry seems to be doing pretty well right now. Everybody I know has their eye on SOME kind of TV lately, be it plasma, LCD, or what-have-you. The government is actually fuelling this fire with the promise that, sooner or later, everybody will be forced to upgrade to a set that does HDTV. The problem is, of the people who are buying these sets, most of them aren't using them for HDTV. It's just not "there" for most markets and, you guessed it, the only format available for film buffs (the types of people who buy home theater equipment) is standard DVD.

    To me, it totally stands to reason that the consumer electronics manufacturers would be falling all over themselves to release an HD format for home movies. You do the math -- it sounds like there's a huge market brewing out there. I think the problems are simply threefold: One, that the manufacturers have really shot themselves in the foot with this ongoing and very public standards battle that has left everyone leery of the first-generation equipment; Two, the first-generation equipment is widely perceived as too expensive, with a Blu-Ray player costing ten times what an acceptable-quality DVD player costs; and Three, the studios haven't shown any kind of commitment to the new formats, releasing bullshit recent movies that nobody cares about and not investing in restoring the quality of the video sources so that they pop your eyes out the way they were promised to do. Until the movie and electronics industries correct two out of three of these problems, whatever market there is will lie fallow.

  • MiniDisc vs DCC (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Midnight Thunder ( 17205 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:27PM (#16026185) Homepage Journal
    Does anyone remember the format war between DCC [wikipedia.org] and MiniDisc [wikipedia.org]? While each did get their adopters neither really faired well in the overall market, since nobody saw real reasons to adopt them.

    When people talk about BluRay vs HD-DVD and compare it to VHS vs BetaMax, I am not so sure, since at least video tapes had a reasons to be taken up. I really believe it is like MiniDisc vs DCC, since few people really care. Drop the DRM and the region encoding and I will be willing to consider them.
  • Re: EVD standard (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:29PM (#16026196) Homepage
    I personally think China's EVD standard will become dominant -- not because consumer's will flock to it, though, but manufacturers. There is no copyright or other licensing to use it, and it's a freely published standard for high-def. No royalities, and it's codecs can even be implemented in Linux without legal issues.

    And, for that exact reason, it will never be allowed to be successful in North America.

    The content lobbyists will introduce a tarriff on foreign players. Then they'll say that even with the tarriff those players need to be outlawed since they probably encourage piracy by people. Afetr all, if it will play anything, then it will probably play pirated versions.

    It would simply be impossible for an unencumbered product, not championed by someone who is paying law-makers and lobbyists to be either distributed or become successful in the current climate.

    And, that makes me sad. Because (even though I'm not familiar with it) the product you describe may well be technologically superior -- or at least superior to standard TV stuff without the liminations of the newest stuff that Sony wants us to buy.

    Cheers
  • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:30PM (#16026201) Homepage
    You don't get it. There's a big difference between your soundcard and his HD-DVDs...

    The soundcard was a big improvement over the sound chip built into computers.


    Actually, you missed his point. His comparison of chirps to soundcards was analogous to vhs vs dvd. When he said earlier, "When was the last time you upgraded your soundcard?", he was making the point you missed.

    DVDs are 90% good enough for even the early adopters.
  • by Fefe ( 6964 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:31PM (#16026211) Homepage
    I'm not going to invest in technology where it's not clear that my investment is safe.

    And I am an early adopter, I just sunk 2000 Euros in a brand new graphics card, a 1920x1200 monitor, and a dual core CPU. So I can watch HD content. OK, and play some HD games :-)

    They expect me to pay $1000 for a player that they can shut down remotely? They have GOT to be kidding me. No way in hell.

    Oh, and they are targeting 40-50 Euros for a blank medium.

    No. Thanks, but no thanks. Go try to butt fuck someone else, content mafia. I'll wait till you go bankrupt and then we'll see reasonably priced HD content.

    I mean, they can't be THAT stupid, can they? What kind of value proposition is that? You can probably get HD content for $10 per month from the warez doods, without DRM, and without downscaling. This business model will be their downfall. And the people who say that if they fail, there will be no HD content, are wrong: every major cable TV provider has to offer HD channels these days. All the content will be there. So not even the pity argument counts.
  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:33PM (#16026219) Homepage

    One big problem with HDTV is now becoming apparent - the frame rate of movies is too low. 24FPS at 1080p with the screen in front of your face looks awful when the camera is panning.

    Sports, especially football, compress badly. Football is almost the worst case for motion compression - the camera is moving relative to the background, the players are all moving in different directions, their body parts are all in motion, there's lots of detail that's important to the viewer, and there's no central character that dominates the scene. Viewers are likely to rerun parts of the game in slow motion, which brings out all the compression artifacts. When you have a 50-inch screen in front of you, all those problems really stand out.

  • Re:To summarize... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dch24 ( 904899 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:36PM (#16026253) Journal
    Quick, name one player that uses ICT? Anyone? That's because the studios agreed to not use it

    You misspelled "disk." The player is required to support ICT as a part of the AACS spec. If the studios want to release a few unimportant disks with ICT turned off to sucker us in, they might find we will not buy in.

    but when the source is 24 fps

    Cable and broadcast HDTV already support 60fps. I would think you would understand, since you own a 1080p HDTV. If you already own a player, fine. I'm going to wait for one that can decode 1080p60. Your computer can already do that.
  • by garcia ( 6573 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:43PM (#16026292)
    These new HD formats are just about trying to get people to buy more stuff. They need sales and if everyone already has thier product then nobody buys. So they had to relese a new product and try to convince consumers of why they needed to buy more stuff. They have failed pretty miserably to date on convincing people to give them more money.

    I liken these two formats to LaserDiscs. They were out there, they were superior to tapes, but they were large, clunky, and no one really adopted them except those that were techno-freaks. HD-DVD/Blu-Ray is just another holdover technology until someone comes up with something that appeals more to the masses and comes at a time when people are finally ready to re-up their collections.
  • by RsG ( 809189 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:49PM (#16026339)
    are you implying that current DVD and SD displays are the "peak" of home theater technology?
    For the average user? Yes.

    You may very well be correct in your assessment that they aren't using HD to it's full potential yet. If so, there may very well be a market when and if they do. I won't make a prediction either way, as I do not feel qualified.

    But for the average user? They jumped wholesale to DVDs, and it wasn't just the picture quality that did it for them. VCRs are an inferior technology on so many levels - from the need to rewind or fast forward if there is a specific part of the movie you want to see, to the noticable degredation of the tape after only a few years of regular use. DVDs were better in every sense of the word, and early adopters flocked to them, with the average users following shortly thereafter. That isn't happening this time.

    Now, will it happen if true HD becomes available? I can't say. But even if that does happen, it will not be on par with the shift from VHS to DVD, if only because it's an improvement in the area of picture quality alone, and not overall usability.
  • by Maxo-Texas ( 864189 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @03:59PM (#16026406)
    LoL... "Looks like crap on a 55" screen." Spoken like a true videophile. DVD's look great on HD monitors at 720p. HD is *very* marginally better. To most people I know, the quality difference worth about $50 bucks.

    2) $500 is very expensive. A person making a great living pulls in about $4k after taxes. So there went 1/8 of your monthly income for a player (vs 3 hours). If you are making a managerial or doctor's salary then cool. I also don't drive around a dodge viper (only about 3x a normal car price in its day) or wear armani suits (about 7x a decent suit). And HD/blu ray are no where near better a DVD than a dodge viper/armani suit are than their counterparts.

    3)I paid about $1,200 for a phillips 57" HD monitor with tuner. It is a great monitor. When I can get a bluray or hd player for $99, then I'm there. I agree, average joe can get a crappy monitor for less. I agree videophile can get an EXCELLENT monitor for about $2800 (plus 600 service plan plus 340 taxes plus 120 delivery and setup or about $4000 total with misc cables and crap). I looked long and hard at the $2800 level which IS better (and DVD's look great on that format). I love the look and form-factor of 57" LCD screens. But I don't want to eat dog-food when I retire to have one. And I think they will drop by over $1000 in the next 12 months to a more reasonable $1,800 for the same quality.

    4) As the other person already pointed out- businesses make promises all the time that they do not keep- the capability IS there. They will use it before 2010 if they can get away with it.

    I agree with all your other points about why no one wants it.

    ---

    There is NO point in being a first adopter these days. Used to be, that gave you a BIG edge over everyone else. You might be 12 to 24 months ahead of them and be "cool" for a long time. These days- if something is going to be successful it is probably ubiquous within 6 months. Why keep paying a 10x premium? I purchased 80% of my dvd library for about $5 to $7.50. As a result, I have 99% of what my friend's have AND then I have a bunch of stuff they can't afford because they are all paying $20.00. (Why pay $80 per xfiles season when THIS week you can now pay $20 per season! ($180 total)).

    There is such a huge glut of entertainment now- I can't possibly watch or keep up with it. So I fell behind and noticed how much money it was saving me to be just 3-4 months off the leading edge. So then I pushed it to 6 months and the savings were even bigger. Now i push it to 6 months + next major holiday nad the savings are almost always 60% or more vs what my bleeding edge buds pay.

    It would be *different* if HD/BLU was NIGHT and DAY, hands down, fabulous, life changing, emotion wringing, bud attracting (hey let's all go over to Maxo's house- he has HD/BLU!) better. But it is not.

    It's a teensy bit better for normal people and MUCH more expensive AND heavily laden-- no CRIPPLED-- with DRM format which was stupid and gives us 50/50 odds of picking the format which will have the movies we want.

    There isn't just ONE reason to crush the sellers on this- we need to crush them so bad, their entire departments will be fired and they will have to leave their respective countries in shame.
  • by Kadin2048 ( 468275 ) <slashdot.kadin@xox y . net> on Friday September 01, 2006 @04:04PM (#16026443) Homepage Journal
    Agreed. I think it's a deeper problem than that, though. Filmmakers, from the local guys doing commercials to the big Hollywood releases, have become accustomed to the level of detail that a person can see in an NTSC broadcast, and basically aim for that as their output. (Well that, and 35mm theatrical film.) I'm not talking about just postproduction decisions, but actual artistic/compositional choices. You put the actor a certain distance away from the camera, because you want people to be able to see their expressions clearly in the desired output format. You use certain makeup/costume techniques, because you assume that people can't see it. Etc., etc.

    Even if you hand a director a HDTV camera and tell him to shoot the thing in HD, it may well end up that the ultimate product doesn't benefit from the additional resolution, or it could even be worse: you might start seeing visible makeup, or clogged pores, or set issues; because the director is 'thinking' in standard-def, the additional information might end up just being extraneous and confusing. The new output format requires a rethinking of the whole process.

    It's not until enough people have HDTVs that the people actually making the content will think in those terms when they're working, but people aren't going to get HDTVs until there's really well-designed content for them to watch.

    So you're correct that it's a chicken-and-egg situation, or rather a solution seeking a problem that people don't realize they have and/or don't care too much about. HD content can be pretty amazing when it's done right, but there's really not too much of that out there. The stuff I've seen in HD that's really impressive are mostly recordings of actual events (e.g. sports) where the more detail you have, the better it gets; but that more=better isn't always true with other content, unless that level of detail has been anticipated and planned for through the production process.
  • by dank zappingly ( 975064 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @04:14PM (#16026495)
    I agree completely. It is most certainly not the source media's fault. When HD formats are discussed, uninformed journalists often make the comment that the current picture can't get any better because there is not enough information in the source material or somesuch nonsense. Movies currently are, and always have been created to be shown on a gigantic movie screen. It is at a way higher resolution than even the highest HD displays. Some people might argue that HD is not that much better looking, and they might have an argument, especially on smaller screens, but that is a different argument entirely. Obviously in older movies there may be the issue of damaged film, but as far as I can tell all the movies released are relatively new. It seems pretty obvious that something is being lost between the source media and the end display. Whether it has to do with bad transfers, bad compression, bad players, or crummy televisions is up for debate, but it is most certainly not from the source media. There have also been reports that samsung messed something up with their initial player, which seems to me to be a little more plausible than the original film from a movie made in the last decade or so not being clear enough.
  • by Darth Maul ( 19860 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @04:17PM (#16026540)
    Excellent summary of my thoughts, too. I'm an early adopter. Bought a $1K DVD player when they first came out (still works, btw). But now my 34" CRT Sony HDTV (lacking HDMI input) will not play nicely with a new HD DVD / Blu-ray formats just because The Man is already assuming I'm an evil pirate? And I'm supposed to give them money for that "feature"?

    It is obvious that this new HD-DVD and Blu-Ray market is only to serve the media companies. They want two things 1) control over the content, and 2) consumers to buy all their movies all over again. Ok, so they're getting those two things with this new format. But what do we, the actual customers, get out of it? Nothing worth upgrading for.

    I'm usually first in line to buy new technology, but I'm completely skipping this round. Come back to me when I can download a movie for a few bucks, play it on my component-input HDTV, and keep the movie file around as long as I want to. Right now the pendulum is swinging way too far to the side of company greed, so I'll wait.
  • by PRMan ( 959735 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @04:21PM (#16026574)

    A lot of football is at 720p, which is 60(!) frames per second. When football is done at 720p with full frame rate (around 17Mbps), it looks terrific. Even CBS' 1080i broadcasts look outstanding, although they do suffer some artifacts and tearing during heavy motion (close up of the action at real speed). But, since the typical camera angle is far away, this rarely happens either.

    Tell me, have you actually WATCHED a football game in HD? Your post seems to say no (or that you have some offbrand cable company as your provider).

  • by webrunner ( 108849 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @05:15PM (#16026987) Homepage Journal
    Someone else has mentioned this but it bears mentioning again -
    The biggest jump in overall desirability between VHS and DVD and Tape to CDS wasn't the quality, it was the usability.

    DVDs and CDS (generally) don't need to be flipped, don't get all messed up with the tape, aren't wiped out by magnets, are sturdier, last longer, have instant seek instead of being a purely linear format, take up less space in multiples, and don't need to be rewinded.

    If it was just a higher quality but still on tape, it wouldn't have caught on as well as it did, I don't think. And what we have now is a higher quality but still on disc. Other than picture and sound quality there is no additional benefit, and this is why people just simply aren't caring about HD DVD and Blu-Ray.
  • by Eravnrekaree ( 467752 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @05:21PM (#16027035)
    I disagree with this. The difference is very noticeable between HD and regular TV. A much crisper or realistic picture. I do think there is a real reason to upgrade.

    I think at this point players are just too expensive. And they need to come out with a player that plays both DVDs and HD-DVDs, and which sells for $99. Then it wil take off. Once more movies are released for HD-DVD, we will begin seeing more sales. Also, this stupid format war also is slowing things down. Most people dont want to be stuck with a boat anchor so will wait until one format wins.

    I think another application for HD-DVD is computers. When will we see an affordable HD-DVD recordable drive? That will become a popular item.
  • by rmu2867 ( 999556 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @05:40PM (#16027130)
    Thanks to my local cable company I have seen lots of HD content and movies on my 50" HDTV (Pan. 500U). I tried an up-converter DVD player through HDMI and a regular prog. scan DVD player and got lousy results with each, lots of blur and bad pixel averaging. Oddly enough the original xbox had incredible playback. Now I have the xbox360 and it's even better. Closest to HD I've seen and in fact close enough that I could care less about getting the HD-DVD add-on that Microsoft has announced. Maybe it's the right "fit" for my TV because I've seen contrary comments to my results from other HDTV owners. But, I am glad to have no need to re-buy my favorite movies in HD or worry about which new format they are. When dual format HD players and HD discs come down to current regular DVD price levels, maybe I'll change my mind. For now I am lucky enough to be satisfied with what I have. Perhaps I am not alone based on this article.
  • Re:What a shocker (Score:2, Insightful)

    by oggiejnr ( 999258 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @06:04PM (#16027245)
    Widescreen can be done perfectly acceptably over SDTV on a widescreen SDTV. Most Freeview channels in the UK broadcast SDTV widescreen streams which work so there is no reason why you have to upgrade to HDTV just to get widescreen.
  • by RevMike ( 632002 ) <revMikeNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday September 01, 2006 @06:12PM (#16027283) Journal
    are you implying that current DVD and SD displays are the "peak" of home theater technology?

    For the average user? Yes.

    You may very well be correct in your assessment that they aren't using HD to it's full potential yet. If so, there may very well be a market when and if they do. I won't make a prediction either way, as I do not feel qualified.

    But for the average user? They jumped wholesale to DVDs, and it wasn't just the picture quality that did it for them. VCRs are an inferior technology on so many levels - from the need to rewind or fast forward if there is a specific part of the movie you want to see, to the noticable degredation of the tape after only a few years of regular use. DVDs were better in every sense of the word, and early adopters flocked to them, with the average users following shortly thereafter. That isn't happening this time.

    Now, will it happen if true HD becomes available? I can't say. But even if that does happen, it will not be on par with the shift from VHS to DVD, if only because it's an improvement in the area of picture quality alone, and not overall usability.

    This is "the lesson of the iPod" all over again.

    Digital music, in the formats and sample rates that the vast majority of people use, is far inferior to best recorded sources, and inferior to the basic and ubiquitous CD. Digital music is successful because it is convenient to carry around an entire record collection. The iPod is the most successful digital music player line because it is easy to use, especially coupled with iTunes and the iTunes store.

    Cable TV offered the convenience of more channels and not having to struggle with an antenna. Cell phones offered the convenience of making and receiving call anywhere. People buy laptops now because they can carry them around their house rather than sit at a desk.

    In the end HD and all its accoutrements won't be rapidly adopted because they don't offer any increase in convenience. If people cared about quality, we'd still have big movie theatres playing 75mm films, but people preferred more choices and more show times.

  • by AmberBlackCat ( 829689 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @06:45PM (#16027446)
    Their next step will probably be to make regular DVD's more crappy so you have to buy HD or Blu-Ray to get what you used to get from a DVD.
  • by Caiwyn ( 120510 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @06:53PM (#16027488)
    Parent post is one of the best comments I've ever seen on this issue, and something I've argued for a long time now. So many people forget that the convenience factor is so important in driving future technologies. This is the same reason why SACD and DVD-Audio haven't taken off; they do not surpass the convenience factor of the CD, and the improvements in quality aren't particularly noticeable. This comes as a surprise to some people, until you realize that the CD's strength was in the convenience of instant track search, durability, and the lack of needing to rewind.

    Same goes for Blu-Ray and HD-DVD. They might offer a better picture than DVD, but there will be a lot of people who can't tell (especially not without buying an expensive display to view it on). With zero improvement in convenience, people aren't going to be championing the format without a noticeable improvement in quality. And even then, there will be a lot of people who don't think the improvement is worth the cash.
  • by Foerstner ( 931398 ) on Friday September 01, 2006 @08:06PM (#16027813)
    The TV industry seems to be doing pretty well right now. Everybody I know has their eye on SOME kind of TV lately, be it plasma, LCD, or what-have-you.

    The Wikipedia article on HDTV says that by the end of this year, 10% of US TVs will be HDTVs.

    Ten percent. Real soon now.

    When VHS and DVD launched, everybody had an SDTV. But Blu-Ray and HD-DVD have nothing to appeal to 90% of potential (US) customers. And they have to split the potential market they do have between two incompatible formats.

    You do the math.

Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

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