Ready for another injection of Truth Serum? I know you are and I have something in dire need of the injection. Because of the recent news about Warner Bros. (and supposedly New Line Cinema) opting to support Blu-ray, I thought I’d write another dose of Truth Serum to let people know this war is teh suck. So for all of you rejoicing in the so-called “end of HD DVD”, allow me to shed some light on just how your checking account will suffer.

First let’s start with the defintion of the two. Blu-ray is a new high-definition video disc standard that offers up to six times the visual detail of traditional DVDs. HD DVD is a new high-definition video disc standard that offers up to six times the visual detail of traditional DVDs. Wait a second Deacon, that sounds the same. That’s because they are the same! Beyond the storage capacity (Blu-ray) and a few additional features (HD DVD), these formats are mirror images.
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January 8th, 2008 at 3:27 pm
See what I mean about the industry moving to digital distrubution. At CES today Comcast CEO announced that they have new technology that works with their exsiting infrastructure to allow users to have 160 mb speeds via Comcast’s broadband service. They are rolling out this year and hope to have it everywhere by 2009.
Thats amazing. The guy is even demoing it at CES today to download HD version of Spiderman 3 in 4 minutes.
Comcast talking about it.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/01/08/ces.comcast.ap/index.html
Technology behind it
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOCSIS
January 8th, 2008 at 3:28 pm
@GameSkills,
right on spot with that man.
January 8th, 2008 at 3:56 pm
if the Video Marketplace EVER managed a download of a movie in 4 minutes, i’d trash my Blockbuster card and Netflix free trial. man that’s crazy…4 minutes?
January 8th, 2008 at 4:19 pm
If size doesn’t matter, then why did Paramount not offer a Dolby TrueHD or uncompressed PCM on the Transformers HD DVD (instead, they provided a Dolby Digital-Plus 5.1 which is probably fine for most, but HD folks imho)? They did not because they choose to offer supplements over the best audio.
Also, HD DVD discs are not cheaper. Just go to any Best Buy and compare the prices of HD DVDs versus Blu-ray.
HD DVD pimping downloadable movie trailers and the ability to purchase movie tickets online is the stupidest idea ever. That is not a feature. I would rather jump on the computer and do that all by myself, not from my TV.
I agree prices for Blu-ray players need to come down. That will happen; its just a matter of time.
HD DVD does not have the studio support; I want Predator; I want Pixar; the list goes on. If HD DVD cannot offer these, then it is all their fault and consumers will choose Blu-ray.
January 8th, 2008 at 4:19 pm
Im still using good ol DVD’s
and probably will continue to do so for the next year or 2. HD-DVD’s and Blueray movies are too friggin expensive for me. A movie is a movie IMO, quality is just a bonus.
January 8th, 2008 at 4:22 pm
@Shamrock
Overly-compressed Marketplace movies (in HD) are not HD. Microsoft has simply compressed them too much. It is a scam. I mean honestly … 6.5 GB for a so-called HD movie versus 9 GB-ish for a regular DVD.
January 8th, 2008 at 4:50 pm
I’ve downloaded one HD movie off MP and I thought it looked very good (300). You guys need to understand that HD-Discs may never take off at all.
The jump in quality from VHS to DVD was amazing. Not to mention the convience of skip, chapter select, never having to rewind, etc..
This time it’s different. You have upconverting DVD players that look extremely good. Hell the 360 when setup with HDMI makes regular DVD’s (upscaled to 720p) look amazing on my 42′ HDTV.
I’m a tech guy and I can’t even justify buying Blue-Ray or HD-DVD, imagine what casual mainstream America is thinking.
January 8th, 2008 at 5:45 pm
Well my brother bought the hd-dvd player for the xbox 360 and it actually works great (besides the fact that i keeps on disappearing from my dashboard). The quality definetly is nicer but i can’t really see the difference between hd-dvd and blu-ray at the moment so not much point in buying a blu-ray player. But personally i don’t really care who wins the format wars because even if blu-ray wins it just justifies our family to go out and buy a ps3 =D
January 8th, 2008 at 6:45 pm
I’m not buying till they make a decision and someone wins out. I don’t want to invest in a player only to find its not available for future products. I also perfer my HD player of choice to be enternal and not apart of my gaming setup. The HD addon or a possible Blu-Ray addon for the Xbox 360 is not out of the question, but one better be the victor for sure, when that time comes.
January 8th, 2008 at 9:05 pm
By the time there is a clear-cut winner, and many have just finished replacing their DVD collections with Blu-Ray or HD-DVD collections, streaming digital media will be all the rage and broadly available. Don’t buy either!