People have as much right to complain as you do the right to complain about their complaining.
My gripe isn't with not having HD compatibility--I personally couldn't care less. I don't have an HDTV, and I won't for quite some time. However, I agree with whoever it was that said that Nintendo is making this decision based on the market now, and not on what it could be in the future. HDtv might not be popular now, but it will be soon--it's the future of entertainment, and there's no denying that.
Right now, Nintendo is making they're console look not too pretty. So far, the only reasons worth buying it are:
--Access to all of Nintendo's past games.
--Some mysterious "revolutionary" secret that might be a gimmick and, if Nintendo's past is to be considered, could very well be a gimmick.
However, reasons making it not worth buying:
--System with the gauranteed worst third party support of the three right out of the box.
--System rumored to be vastly underpowered.
--No HD support.
--Rumored to be the last console released.
Not looking too good for Nintendo. It's not about matching the competition in the "who's d!ck is bigger" contest. It's about matching the competition in features that developers might find useful, and the consumer might find appealing. Nintendo didn't have to release a hard drive if it has SD cards--it's still providing a way to save files on your console. It didn't have to go the route of blu-ray or HD-DVD, dual layered DVDs are still more than enough, and it won't be the only one (Xbox) doing so. It will, however, be the only console not supporting HD, and for no apparent reason. This sets Nintendo apart from the competition, yes--but not in a good way.