- Joined
- Sep 7, 2011
- Messages
- 598 (0.12/day)
- Location
- Pacific Rim
Processor | Ryzen 3600 |
---|---|
Motherboard | B450 |
Cooling | Scythe Ashura |
Memory | Team Dark Z 3200 8GB x2 |
Video Card(s) | MSI 390 |
Storage | WD 2TB + WD Green 640GB |
Display(s) | Samsung 40JU6600 @ 200% scaling |
Case | Coolermaster CM 690 II |
Audio Device(s) | Fiio E10K, Graham Slee Solo II SRG, Sennheiser HD6XX, AKG K7XX, ATH WS1100is |
Power Supply | Corsair HX650 |
Mouse | Rival 700 |
Keyboard | Corsair K70, Razer Tarantula |
In the emerging countries like Indonesia, the optical disc usage is still pretty high. The internet speed is the main culprit here.erocker said:The interview sounds like desperation from Mr. Wong. Optical media is dying rather quickly with PC users. Everything is going the way of digital/the "cloud"/etc. Online distribution of media has exploded. I can't think of one thing in the market that tells me Optical Disc usage will rise. The rise in price just reflects the dwindling demand and the need to keep profits/bottom line where they want it.
I took me days and nights to download a 10GB game from Steam for example, whereas I can go to the mall/shop, buy physical disc of the game, and go home. All in an hour. Btw it's even easier to buy pirated one here. The pirated games sellers are literally everywhere, both in physical and online shop at mere $0.4 per DVD!!
Also, not everyone has unlimited internet bandwith quote, so downloading big files from internet can deeply wound your pocket.
It's hard to justify throwing the optical disc altogether when it's still provide content faster and cheaper than digital (streaming/downloading) over here.