Posted: Thu Aug 23, 2007 4:06 pm
In the end, it won't really matter who drops what now. If Blu-Ray does eventually win out, Paramount will just have to revert back. Neither format will beat out DVD in terms of popularity for some time to come. Hell, it took DVD quite a while to supplant VHS; even as recently as a year or two ago, many people clung to their VCRs. Now, with DVD players going for as low as $15 and the benefits the format brings to picture quality on regular every-day TVs, it's a no-brainer.
But formats with players still in the $400-$900 price range, and requiring a new, expensive TV (which also usually precipitates upgrading your cable service, unless your eyes are poor enough not to be bothered by a 480i signal trying to fill a 40"+ screen that's incapable of altering its resolution) to take any advantage of? What's the point for 90% of the population?
Paramount does seem to be making a mistake, though. As much as I generally dislike Sony, Blu-Ray does seem to be the more popular HD format. And I have to agree that it's much more technically advanced than HD-DVD, which mostly seem to be DVDs with somewhat higher storage capacity. Although, under the home video standard, Blu-Ray isn't nearly as consumer-friendly as HD-DVD when you take into account the additional DRM, lack of certain audio/video standards as mandatory, etc. I'm looking forward to getting a Blu-Ray burner for my computer eventually, though. Paramount's move doesn't surprise, me though. They always did seem to take a long time to catch on to releasing half-decent DVDs, as well. And even now, they have a tendancy to overcharge. They certainly aren't my favourite studio.
But formats with players still in the $400-$900 price range, and requiring a new, expensive TV (which also usually precipitates upgrading your cable service, unless your eyes are poor enough not to be bothered by a 480i signal trying to fill a 40"+ screen that's incapable of altering its resolution) to take any advantage of? What's the point for 90% of the population?
Paramount does seem to be making a mistake, though. As much as I generally dislike Sony, Blu-Ray does seem to be the more popular HD format. And I have to agree that it's much more technically advanced than HD-DVD, which mostly seem to be DVDs with somewhat higher storage capacity. Although, under the home video standard, Blu-Ray isn't nearly as consumer-friendly as HD-DVD when you take into account the additional DRM, lack of certain audio/video standards as mandatory, etc. I'm looking forward to getting a Blu-Ray burner for my computer eventually, though. Paramount's move doesn't surprise, me though. They always did seem to take a long time to catch on to releasing half-decent DVDs, as well. And even now, they have a tendancy to overcharge. They certainly aren't my favourite studio.