In the long run, the first to get the players and movies in 1080p at prices about the same as current DVDs and players will win.
I've watched lots of 1080i HD and 480P DVD on a 65" projection set the past few years, and while HD is clearly better, I'd bet that few would be willing to pay much extra for the improvement in quality -- look how long its taken to get people to upgrade from horrible over the air NTSC broadcasts.
Image quality will always be the tie-breaker, but few will pay much of a premium for it. Recall how SVHS was pretty much a non-issue vs. VHS for consumers despite the much better quality of SVHS recordings.
--wally.
I've watched lots of 1080i HD and 480P DVD on a 65" projection set the past few years, and while HD is clearly better, I'd bet that few would be willing to pay much extra for the improvement in quality -- look how long its taken to get people to upgrade from horrible over the air NTSC broadcasts.
Image quality will always be the tie-breaker, but few will pay much of a premium for it. Recall how SVHS was pretty much a non-issue vs. VHS for consumers despite the much better quality of SVHS recordings.
--wally.
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