The Future Belongs to Blu-ray

Mon Jan 7, 2008 4:56PM EST

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I'm not usually into calling elections early, but if you heard the buzz on the CES show floor, then you'd know the bell is tolling for HD DVD. The first death blow came the other day when Warner Brothers decided to bail on supporting both formats and declared its Blu-ray support. The scuttlebutt I hear is that Universal will be following suit shortly. Seems that the initial contracts many vendors signed with HD DVD are coming up for renewal, or not.

Here in Vegas, the HD DVD press conference was cancelled on very short notice. Toshiba issued a press release saying this was a setback but that it did not mean defeat.

Reuters covered the Toshiba statements at a press conference held on Sunday evening.

The happiest people on the show floor are probably the retailers because they finally have an inkling about which products to stock—both players and movies. The second happiest group are consumers, because not only do they know what to buy, but the prices have fallen to new lows because of the competitive arena.

If you've been sitting on the fence about Blu-ray and HD DVD, I think jumping is pretty safe now. On the other hand, if you're like me, you might just want to skip the whole thing and download your movies via the 'net. More on that later.

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  • 1 Posted by nolo_8 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    Thank goodness. Now we have 10 years of Blu-Ray until a new technology emerges, and we have to go through this all over again.

  • 2 Posted by ryanaronerb on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Blue Ray!, I have had a feeling from the release of the PS3. The only thing was is the PS3 fell short on everything else it initially promised making one of the biggest technological screw ups of 2006/7. Not that it was a bad system just extremely overrated and overpriced causing many people to just wait till they knew the price would drop and leaving those that did buy it feeling ripped off as the X-box 360 did the same almost for less. Blue Ray seems to me the more dominate of the 2 technologies with its feet secured in both the digital entertainment world and the data storage world. As with any new technology there are those that are not sure of what to do and others who know, regardless, just like CD are to Cassettes, there will be something new that will be hesitated at. Embrace change as it is inevitable and help move the economy forward to developing new products and not leave the technological water stagnant.

  • 3 Posted by sam52054 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    Don't look for Toshiba to go down without a fight, they'll probably force Universal to release the complete Star Trek Series (movies and all), Indiana Jones Series, and other stalwarts, exclusive to HD-DVD, and might discount the heck out of them to the $99 players that blu-ray can't do because their production lines can't be converted easily from DVD like HD-DVD can. Look for either Armageddon (not the movie) or a big payoff from Sony to abandon HD-DVD.

  • 4 Posted by janovak21 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:28PM EDT Report Abuse

    Holy cow, Blu-ray vs. DVD-HD, and the winner is Blu-ray! Who cares the only thing worth watching on TV is the NFL and that is live, save your money, quit wasting your time.

  • 5 Posted by julieverdieck on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    I guess I wasted $200 dollars for the HD DVD add on for the Xbox 360. I just wish Bill Gates would bribe every company into being exclusively HD DVD...He has enough money. LOL !

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