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"Blu-ray Disc" vs. "HD DVD": Neither Is Winning

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  • #46
    Yes.

    And if you lose your hard disk, you can download them again.

    C'mon.

    The iPod from APPLE has changed the way people listen to music.

    Sure, physical record stores still sell CDs.

    But fewer people are buying CDs for a couple of reasons.

    1. They cost too much;
    2. Albums often feature only one or two really good songs from an artist and the rest aren't so good.
    3. CDs aren't as portable as iPods and other players.

    Hence the amazing success of the iPod and music downloading.

    Quality?

    APPLE doesn't use .MP3 compression.

    APPLE uses QuickTime media architecture and MPEG-4 and the quality is terrific.

    Your favorite company, Mark, seems to be SONY.

    Well, I like much of the SONY stuff that I've bought, including three MiniDisc recorders, which utilize Sony's ATRAC compression.

    It sounds great.

    SONY even offers music downloads in the ATRAC format through the CONNECT music store, but that store appears to be in the process of closing down by next March due to the fact the CONNECT service is moving to the open Windows Media platform.

    But downloading is here to stay.

    It has radically changed the music business.

    It will do the same for the movie business.

    Jerry Jones


    Originally posted by Hulk View Post
    Can you back them up?
    Last edited by Jerry Jones; 23 October 2007, 18:39.

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    • #47
      Mark,

      Here's the link to Sony's CONNECT music download store:



      Jerry Jones

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      • #48
        By the way, in addition to my three Sony MiniDisc player/recorders, I also have one iPod "Shuffle."



        This tiny device is smaller than a book of matches.

        When I do my seven mile jog, I wear the Shuffle and listen to tons of songs.

        It holds 240 at a time.

        And you can create playlists at home on your computer and then sync them up with the Shuffle.

        It's an amazing device.

        Smaller than a book of matches.

        Perfect for exercising.

        And it sounds great.

        Jerry Jones

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        • #49
          You can authorize/deauthorize the devices in software.

          So you would not have to buy new downloads from the iTunes store.

          Broadband is almost everywhere now.

          Anybody who can afford to go out and buy standard definition DVDs -- let alone high definition DVDs -- can afford broadband access.

          Jerry Jones


          Originally posted by Tjalfe View Post
          for this to work, broadband access needs to be available everywhere. This would be years away, if it happens at all. Till such time, movies will exist on disks.

          Also, I believe the itunes store will only let you play your files on up to 6 devices, so down the road, 6 computers later, or a couple of computers / ipod/apple tv, and you will have to buy the movies again. That is, unless they come out with DRM free movies too.

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          • #50
            By the way, I've purchased/downloaded -- as a test -- the Star Trek original series episode called "Where No Man Has Gone Before" guest starring Gary Lockwood and Sally Kellerman.

            This is a classic Star Trek episode.

            It looks great on my laptop screen.

            When I get my APPLE TV, I'll be able to stream it to my regular TV screen and I'm confident it will look as good as a DVD.

            It only cost $1.99 to buy the episode.

            Jerry Jones

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            • #51
              There's a world of difference between 3 Mb for an item of pop music and 30 Gb for an HD film. The theoretical fastest I can download anything is 1024 kbit/s, in practice, oon a good dat, 800 kbit/s = 100 kb/s, so a 30 Gb film would take 83 hours =3½ days to download. What would the chances be of doing that glitch-free? And I'm one of the lucky ones with broadband. You forget that over 85% of the internet world is still on DUN, often with speeds as low as 14.4 kbit/s, if it isn't 9.6 kbit/s. Less than 2% of the world's households have a cable connection and most of those are coaxial, limited to ~10 Mbit/s, not optical fibre.

              The film companies will simply NOT cater for such a tiny segment of the market as their principal outlet when they can hit much larger quantities with physical disks.

              Then, whatever the outcome, it must be something that uneducated and often illiterate people, even blondes, can handle. Take S. Africa, for example, which is the most developed sub-saharan country. Its basic literacy rate is officially 82%, but it has a 94% rate of households with access to TV, but only 47% with phones and 8% with an Internet connection, yet its per capita GDP is relatively high. Even here, which is considered a developed country with 109% phone connection, only 22% have an Internet connection. Even in your USA, the median download speed for the 50 states and the District of Columbia was 1.9 megabits per second. which is only 2 x what I have (i.e., 1¾ days to download a HD film). According to surveys, somewhere between 30 to 40 percent of Americans still connect to the Internet with a dial-up connection. Only one-quarter of middle-income families earning between $30,000 and $50,000 a year subscribe to broadband.

              You are wrong, Jerry, I'm sure. Get real!
              Brian (the devil incarnate)

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              • #52
                expect another 10 successive posts from jerry with the counter argument
                We have enough youth - What we need is a fountain of smart!


                i7-920, 6GB DDR3-1600, HD4870X2, Dell 27" LCD

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by paulw View Post
                  Just wondering how long before studios start making crap picture quality copies of DVDs hoping that people will driven to the hidef formats..
                  They already are...

                  i watch all the DVDs I rent on my PC. don't have a TV, and I have a sweet 4.0 system set up (should really get round to plugging in the last center speaker...).

                  I have noticed that nearly ALL of the last 6 months of DVDs have been R5's, i.e. 4.7Gb and less. A mere single layer of data.
                  The DVd pops to dual layer, since there are some 400Mb or so of trailers and adverts etc...

                  The DVDs that I have purchased, seem to be full dual layer DVDs, going to 8Gb.

                  the only exceptions lately have been V for Vendetta and Superman Returns, which were both over 7Gb (Just, with trailers). They are pretty long films, i'll give you that.

                  I'm just surprised that the Rental DVDs are so small, why not use the 4Gb of space to make a High Quality stream ? So I would go and buy it ?
                  Or so i could compare to a HD source and see the crapness of it, even when upscaled.

                  Spiderman 3 is out this week, and i hope it'll be a full DVD...

                  edit : Jerry, could you leave off the APPLE for a while, please ?
                  Last edited by Evildead666; 22 October 2007, 10:45.
                  PC-1 Fractal Design Arc Mini R2, 3800X, Asus B450M-PRO mATX, 2x8GB B-die@3800C16, AMD Vega64, Seasonic 850W Gold, Black Ice Nemesis/Laing DDC/EKWB 240 Loop (VRM>CPU>GPU), Noctua Fans.
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                  • #54
                    MOST RECENT UNITED STATES BROADBAND ADOPTION STATISTICS:

                    47% of adults have high-speed internet connections at home as of early March 2007, up five percentage points from a year earlier.

                    Among individuals who use the internet at home, 70% have a broadband
                    connection while 23% use dialup.

                    SOURCE: http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/217/report_display.asp

                    In addition, Pew compiled a report in PDF format here:



                    What's interesting in the preceding report is the rate at which broadband adoption is growing; it's really amazing.

                    Brian, I downloaded a standard definition Star Trek episode via the APPLE iTunes store and I have a relatively slow broadband connection and it didn't take long at all... not even close to the "1.75 days" time you stated for an HD film.

                    I haven't yet downloaded an HD film, but I'll look for one and do a test and I'll time it.

                    The reason I suspect your HD movie download time estimate is inaccurate is due to the fact the APPLE TV specifications clearly state that the APPLE high definition movies will be scaled down to two resolutions:

                    H.264 and protected H.264 (from iTunes Store): Up to 5 Mbps, Progressive Main Profile (CAVLC) with AAC-LC audio up to 160 Kbps (maximum resolution: 1280 by 720 pixels at 24 fps, 960 by 540 pixels at 30 fps) in .m4v, .mp4, and .mov file formats
                    So -- again -- I suspect your calculations are in error for these types of HD files.

                    True, APPLE download customers won't be getting 1080p, they'll be getting 720p, but for many of us that is plenty good enough.

                    Susan Wu writes yet another opinion piece about how video downloads will be the future and that both high definition DVD formats have failed.


                    The movie companies seem to be doing a decent job of not making *all* of the same mistakes the record companies made during the MP3 boom, so I believe this future will materialize before either high def DVD standard can declare victory.
                    She also hits the nail on the head here:

                    High definition DVDs will do well with the videophile niche and certainly won’t disappear but they also don’t really have a chance to become mass market for years and years and years when there is no difference between the price of current standard upscaling DVDs (less than $100) and HD-DVD and Blu-ray players.
                    I agree with Susan.

                    I suspect the difference between Mark's point of view and my point of view is that Mark is a "videophile" while I am not. I am perfectly satisfied with HD 720p.

                    Jerry Jones

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                    • #55
                      I think you're forgetting one very important thing here: not everyone that downloads music is PAYING FOR IT. It is only so popular because it is either a) dirt cheap, or b) free!!

                      It's hard for CD$ to compete with free music.
                      Q9450 + TRUE, G.Skill 2x2GB DDR2, GTX 560, ASUS X48, 1TB WD Black, Windows 7 64-bit, LG M2762D-PM 27" + 17" LG 1752TX, Corsair HX620, Antec P182, Logitech G5 (Blue)
                      Laptop: MSI Wind - Black

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                      • #56
                        True, but as bandwidth increases you can imagine how great it will be for those of us who do video as a profession/hobby.

                        We'll be able to share very easily as folks on each end of a Web connection will be able to see production techniques and scrutinize lighting and so forth and the download times will be greatly reduced as the bandwidth expands and gets cheaper.

                        I think universities will be required to focus on presentation to a greater degree than they do at the current time.

                        The reason is that educational content will be more compelling if more attention can be devoted to cleaner text/graphics and higher quality images.

                        I work directly in IPTV at a local university.

                        We transmit video/audio live from one city to another.

                        So it is part of my job to anticipate the technological changes that are coming.

                        Jerry Jones
                        Last edited by Jerry Jones; 22 October 2007, 14:10.

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                        • #57
                          When I do my 5 mile runs (at sub 6min/mile pace) I use a good old AM/FM radio. I get bored with my music collection, even though it consists of thousands of songs. I'd rather be able to move though my 5 presets and find something.

                          To my ears ALL Audio compression degrades sound staging, imaging, dynamic range, and focus to some extent and is only useful for computer listening or other portable devices. Compressed music begins to be listenable at 192kbps in my opinion and even then only on fairly low resolution systems. I'll take PCM for my serious listening. But that is another discussion and a very subjective one. That's how I hear it.

                          Jerry, I hope this wonderous streaming infrastructure gets here sooner rather than later but right now for me I'm going with an optical disc player and a high def TV. I'll rent my movies from Netflix until the format is dead then I'll move on to whatever replaces it.

                          And now let's discuss your beloved Apple TV.

                          1. Unbelievably it only supports a 5Mbps bit rate for 1280x768 resolution at 24fps for H.264 video!

                          2. More unbelievable is that it only supports 960x540 resolution at 30fps!

                          3. Truly astounding is the fact that it only plays Apple's version of the H.264 video codec which means you can forget about playing back ANYTHING not acquired from the i-Tunes store UNLESS you go though a lengthy transcode process. And remember don't go above the wimpy resolution, fps, and bitrate figures I've posted above! What a joke.

                          4. A 702MB Xvid file takes 55 minutes to transcode on a 3.0GHz Mac Pro system! Wow the overpriced Mac Pro really don't do so well with the Apple transcoding application. Seems like a lot of money for such a slow system. As I've said before I can build faster hardware for 1/4 the price. Anyway that also another discussion.

                          5. It would be nice if the Apple TV had a volume control don't you think. For thinking of everything they sure missed that one.


                          As is usual with Apple if you stay locked up and confined in their little world the Apple TV seems tolerable, if just. Just make sure you like the i-Tunes virus, buy and play only Apple i-Tunes content, don't want 1080p or 720p at 30fps, and don't need to change the volume.

                          No thanks.
                          Last edited by Hulk; 22 October 2007, 18:03.
                          - Mark

                          Core 2 Duo E6400 o/c 3.2GHz - Asus P5B Deluxe - 2048MB Corsair Twinx 6400C4 - ATI AIW X1900 - Seagate 7200.10 SATA 320GB primary - Western Digital SE16 SATA 320GB secondary - Samsung SATA Lightscribe DVD/CDRW- Midiland 4100 Speakers - Presonus Firepod - Dell FP2001 20" LCD - Windows XP Home

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                          • #58
                            Actually Hulk you have summed up a good reason why I didn't get an Apple TV and include the adition bit that TV and movie content is not available outside the US.

                            A better media player is a TVix http://www.tvix.co.kr/eng/
                            paulw

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                            • #59
                              Originally posted by Hulk View Post
                              2. More unbelievable is that it only supports 960x540 resolution at 30fps!
                              Mark, surely you can't be serious with this complaint.

                              Are you not aware that most consumer high definition camcorders employ imagers that don't come anywhere close to acquisition with a true 1920 x 1080 HD pixel matrix?

                              Surely you know that even some professional-level high definition camcorders acquire with a 960 x 540 pixel matrix as the following article about the Panasonic AG-HVX200 from BROADCAST ENGINEERING magazine documents:



                              Surely you also know that many high definition TVs scale down the high definition broadcast signals that they receive to be 960 x 540.

                              You know this.

                              Again, you seem to fit into the category of videophile and not the average consumer, which will be plenty happy with 960 x 540 resolution files.

                              I submit you are not representative of the average consumer.

                              Your comment about encoding times actually made me giggle.

                              The APPLE video editing software includes easy-to-use export presets for APPLE TV and the render times are no different for those output options than would otherwise be the case if you were rendering a timeline full of intermediate codec source files from *any* PC non-linear video editor to *any* HD output such as AVCHD or HD MPEG-2!



                              Jerry Jones
                              Last edited by Jerry Jones; 22 October 2007, 19:08.

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                              • #60
                                Originally posted by Hulk View Post
                                4. A 702MB Xvid file takes 55 minutes to transcode on a 3.0GHz Mac Pro system! Wow the overpriced Mac Pro really don't do so well with the Apple transcoding application. Seems like a lot of money for such a slow system. As I've said before I can build faster hardware for 1/4 the price. Anyway that also another discussion.

                                5. It would be nice if the Apple TV had a volume control don't you think. For thinking of everything they sure missed that one.
                                Well, this is just funny nonsense.



                                Jerry Jones

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