StoOgE said:Because if I were going to get a BRD player, I would get the PS3 for 100 bucks more than a standalone player. (Or get the 20GB PS3)
Ignatz Mouse said:A cheap Blu-Ray player makes for a 3-4 pagre thread in the gaming area, due to the notion that it will force the PS3 down in price or that the PS3 will tank upon its release, and barely gets mentioned here!
jjasper said:The one thing that I wonder is if after time period for the instant rebate (June 16) will Toshiba keep the price at $399.99 (only 100 dollars less) or will they make the $299.99 permanent?
DarkJediKnight said:![]()
The new Sony player passes True HD and DTS HD (not sure about MA) over HDMI. I'm seriously considering that player and leave my PS3 for gaming duties only.
I have been anxiously awaiting this announcement for *months*. Thank **** it happened so quickly!DarkJediKnight said:holyshitYESpurplerainblu-ray.jpg
StoOgE said:Anyone in Texas, Conns (electronic store) is selling the Toshiba HD-A2 for 200 dollars in store with 5 free movies. There will be 100 dollar players on Black Friday.
Crayon Shinchan said:All I know is that both players use the same laser pickup and they user similar chipsets. The requirements to decode one is not much more taxing then the other. They both have similar (if not identical) functionalities.
The only reason then one would be significantly cheaper than the other is because one company is taking losses (not unlike the PS3) in order to get their product out on the market cheaper than it should be; in the hopes that this will help them out in the long term.
For Toshiba; cheaper players can come about if they're willing to let chinese manufacture and sell them directly. For the blu-ray manufacturers, the savings may not be as direct; they may simply be sourcing cheaping components from chinese manufacturer while attempting to retain some level of profit after assembly and branding.
Given the level of investment by Bluray Association, there's simply no way that if Toshiba's strategy does make a big difference, that they wouldn't compete to match it. They have a massive advantage in terms of studio support... It's unfortunate that they're not been as aggressively competitive as Toshiba, but at the same time they don't need to be (yet).
But in a protracted price war; it'll only give Universal more justification to cling on longer as masters of the HD-DVD domain. When they're done there, they'll simply jump ship over to Bluray and be celebrated as the company that put an end to the HD format war (even though they're the assholes that are prolonging it).
In the end, it'll come down to whether you want to see player prices come down first, or a single format with all HD media on it first; because no matter how Toshiba/Universal plays the game, the cards are stacked against them... and there isn't going to be some fairy tale ending for them.
For me; as someone that already owns a PS3/bluray player, I'm much more interested in seeing a united format before mass market player prices. Because regardless of the prices, movie companies will still be releasing their movies (especially after the BDJava+ layer gets sorted out).
ChrisJames said:If I were Universal, I would say **** it and only release the movie on the HD DVD / DVD combo disc format as a trojan horse strategy...
XMonkey said:I hope you aren't being serious. They would never do this.
Knocked up was ****ing hilarious. Its seriously one of the funniest movies i have seen in a long time.ChrisJames said:DarkJedi, you have a good point when it comes to software selling movie players, but HD DVD does have a legitimate comedy blockbuster in Knocked Up (made it's budget back this weekend - $29 million). Obviously Knocked Up isn't going to be an HD movie that will blow your socks off PQ-wise, but still it's going to be a hit for Universal. If I were Universal, I would say **** it and only release the movie on the HD DVD / DVD combo disc format as a trojan horse strategy...
captive said:Knocked up was ****ing hilarious. Its seriously one of the funniest movies i have seen in a long time.
But sadly one movie makes not a successfull format, especially if they go with a relatively "normal" Theater -> to home video timeline, its going to be coming out against the likes of Pirates 3, Spidy 3, DieHard4, The Simpsons etc.
Oh yea, another movie i cant wait for, when does it come out? Bourne rocks.ChrisJames said:Bourne Ultimatum is a pretty big one too, but yeah Blu-Ray is definitely the king of big blockbuster releases...
StoOgE said:doesnt the PS3 encode these as PCM anyway? Whats the point in sending it to the reciever to do the exact same thing?
ChrisJames said:Shitty news that Blood Diamond doesn't look as good as it could have. Hopefully the HD DVD transfer is better, but I doubt it.
Bebpo said:Got Paprika Blu-ray and gave it a run. Picture looks pretty good. I've \
The French region-free Blu-ray should be the exact same w/English subtitles for those who don't want to wait until the US Blu-ray.
Though if they sub the audio commentary on the US Blu-ray it'd be pretty cool.
Onix said:It's Warner ... there is no way they are doing a different encode ... this is the same transfer you'll see on HD-DVD.
It's ridiculous though. It's a BD50 disk. There was plenty of room for higher bitrates.
Lowest common denominator indeed![]()
Onix said:Lowest common denominator indeed![]()
ChrisJames said:I was totally serious, but what I forgot to add is that they should make the price $20 max (maybe even $16-18) and have an ad for HD DVD (describing the advantages of the format vs. DVD and highlighting the cheap players that are available and their upconverting capabilities) that plays when you start up the DVD side. I know Universal would never do that, I'm just saying what I would do if I were making the decisions at Universal.
StoOgE said:Do you really think this is a case of BRD getting "lowest common denominator" HDDVD quality stuff? Obviously its just a bad encode... as there are plenty of VC1 encodes from Warner that have looked great. This one is about half (or less) of what HDDVD normally gets for bitrate. Who knows what they were thinking.
Im betting the reason this didnt go day and date was the poor quality... maybe they thought of redoing it?
Argyle said:I'd say this is really likely to be HD DVD lowest common denominator, the HD DVD version has a streaming IME subpicture and lossless audio, and has to pack that all into 30mbit/sec of video bandwidth and 30GB of total space.
jjasper said:
StoOgE said:and so do King Kong, the Matrix, Children of Men, Batman Begins and a whole ton of other movies that look on par with the best that BRD has to offer. Are these movies examples of "lowest common denominator" as well, or are you just making stuff up as you go along?
From that review, this movie has a bitstream that is much lower than typical HDDVD releases and a PQ that is significantly worse than HDDVD releases.
This movie is lower than HDDVD standards.. for HDDVD to be the limitng factor here, this movie would have to push HDDVD to the limits, and the encode doesnt even come close to that.
The bitsream is 8.9 on this film.. a THIRD of HDDVDs available bitrate. But go ahead and blame HDDVD for this, it seems to make the BRD crew happy, even though its evident this is just a terrible encode.
StoOgE said:and so do King Kong, the Matrix, Children of Men, Batman Begins and a whole ton of other movies that look on par with the best that BRD has to offer. Are these movies examples of "lowest common denominator" as well, or are you just making stuff up as you go along?
From that review, this movie has a bitstream that is much lower than typical HDDVD releases and a PQ that is significantly worse than HDDVD releases.
This movie is lower than HDDVD standards.. for HDDVD to be the limitng factor here, this movie would have to push HDDVD to the limits, and the encode doesnt even come close to that.
The bitsream is 8.9 on this film.. a THIRD of HDDVDs available bitrate. But go ahead and blame HDDVD for this, it seems to make the BRD crew happy, even though its evident this is just a terrible encode.
I'd agree, but I doubt that movies use the whole 30GBs on HD-DVD disc.Bebpo said:I just wish they went the dvd route and all extras were on the 2nd disc. Have the best quality version of a film on disc 1 and then a lower bitrate version with IME on disc 2 + extras.
DarkJediKnight said:Perhaps the movie IS pushing HD DVD to the limits. There is no way to know how much bandwidth is consumed by the True HD track, IME, and the web enabled features for the HD DVD version.
All of those features are on several Tier 0/Tier 1 releases outside of the web features.. unless you are proposing that web based content is going to eat up a third of the available bandwidth. This is total and complete FUD and you know it.
"OH snap, this movie looks horrid, it must be HDDVDs fault".. I guess it was the HDDVD version of the fifth element that caused that to look bad too? Sometimes a bad transfer is just that.
This movie would look better if it pushed BRD's limits. It would also look better if it pushed HDDVDs.
Argyle said:(I am told the documentary is about 8GB).
jjasper said:
Matrix said:Anyone get Hellboy?
Hows the transfer?
ManaByte said:Going to BB at lunch to see if it's the Director's Cut or not.
No Directors Cut = No Buy
StoOgE said:DarkJediKnight said:Perhaps the movie IS pushing HD DVD to the limits. There is no way to know how much bandwidth is consumed by the True HD track, IME, and the web enabled features for the HD DVD version.
All of those features are on several Tier 0/Tier 1 releases outside of the web features.. unless you are proposing that web based content is going to eat up a third of the available bandwidth. This is total and complete FUD and you know it.
"OH snap, this movie looks horrid, it must be HDDVDs fault".. I guess it was the HDDVD version of the fifth element that caused that to look bad too? Sometimes a bad transfer is just that.
This movie would look better if it pushed BRD's limits. It would also look better if it pushed HDDVDs.
There was nothing wrong with 5th Element's transfer. The master was shit with dirt and scratches and it was from a 1080i print. 5th Element is also 10 years old so print degradation can be a factor. Blood Diamond is only a few months old.
mrklaw said:even copying the HD30 version should have been fine. 8Mb/s is DVD bitrate for 8GB, not 30GB.
Matrix said:It's the Directors cut,someone posted the case on the AVS forums.