Monday, September 8th 2008
Blu-ray has 5 Years Left says Samsung
After having won the battle for supremacy over HD DVD, Blu-ray is on its way to become the standard consumer video format. It is not just a format, it's an industry in itself which begins from HD content creation production houses to recording companies to the consumers who again, invest in necessary equipment such as high-definition displays, Blu-ray disc players, etc. An important name in this industry, Samsung, which makes high definition televisions and players has noted that the format has five years left to remain a premium content format.
In an interview to Pocket-lint, the director of consumer electronics at Samsung UK, Andy Griffins said "I think it [Blu-ray] has 5 years left, I certainly wouldn't give it 10". Griffins believes that 2008 is the year of the Blu-ray, where consumers embrace the format by purchasing necessary appliances. He added that Samsung is heavily back-ordered in regard to appliances at the moment.
Source:
Pocket-lint
In an interview to Pocket-lint, the director of consumer electronics at Samsung UK, Andy Griffins said "I think it [Blu-ray] has 5 years left, I certainly wouldn't give it 10". Griffins believes that 2008 is the year of the Blu-ray, where consumers embrace the format by purchasing necessary appliances. He added that Samsung is heavily back-ordered in regard to appliances at the moment.
54 Comments on Blu-ray has 5 Years Left says Samsung
As for the 20GB downloads, yes, they are full quality, but they are in no way practical from the perspective of an HD download service, which is what was being referred to earlier. Not the pirated stuff. lol.
I'm on my pirate ship 24/7. :)
And this Samsung guy is nuts. A storage medium is required and people aren't going to be buying new tech. again and new media again with the same old movies. It just isn't going to happen. Look how hard it is to switch to BR. Such a close transition is unlikely I think.
Imagine porn on that! :):):)
The off-the shelf prices for Blew-Ray are prohibitive in my mind, not to mention finding rentals. Vanilla DVD will live on for a long while.
in the future possibly a few years time it will be more viable as an option to download or stream movies from the internet
If you download a show with dolby digital or DTS (AC3) audio, then its not altered in any way - you get 100% the sound quality of a regular movie.
Depending on where you get the file, you could get a 700MB, 4.3GB, 10GB or 25GB BR rip off the net - trust me, the 25GB is exactly the same as a legit disk only without the content protection.
Hell, i can hardly see a difference between the 25GB and the 4.3GB rips, however that may be because the max res i can use is 1680x1050
If you d/l the largest sized ones and the original includes DTS-HD, it should be available.
Keep using your LDTV.
Picture playing your favorite video game at 1280x800 on your 46" 1080p tv, pretty shitty looking. Then picture that game playing in native 1080p.
My speakers only decode DTS at their best. I hate disks... you cant trust people with them. most loaners come back ruined, or they just decay over time. at least with HDD images you can keep a (legal) backup. lol if you're stretching or up-mixing, may god have mercy on your eyes.
And 25GB isn't always the full disc minus protection, that depends strictly on the movie, and how it was encoded. But even if the movie was compressed to get 25GB, that's when you probably wouldn't be able to notice a difference.