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Originally posted by: Jin-X
Not to be an a-hole, but you couldn't be more wrong. Digital Cable is not as good as DVD, do you have it conected trough composite or maybe u need to check your eyes but you couldn't be more wrong. Are u trying to tell me that Batman Begins and Star Wars on HBO is as good as on DVD? That's crazy talk. And it's the same thing with HD. Programs through Sat/Cable are compressed a lot more due to bandwith limitations (not to mention the abomination that is formatting/cropping movies to make them fit your tv instead of watching them how they were filmed). Movies on disc are (usually) made in a way to maximize picture quality and sound quality by using all the space available for higher bitrates and less compression.
Are we talking HDDVD or regular DVD? If we mean regular, than no, I cannot tell the difference between their picture qualities.
But that's irrelevant. It doesn't matter if one guy with bad eyes can't tell because we're not talking about the current media infrastructure anyway.
I'm talking about what these networks will have in place in 5-7 years when HDTV is widespread enough that releasing a media format which will only benefit from an HDTV makes SENSE.
HDDVD and BluRay are, without question, putting the horse before the wagon. At some point in the future, you'll be able to download these movies and watch them in HD quality. It might be in 5 years, it might be 20, but one day people will look back and laugh about how utterly retarded it was to leave your house to go pick up a disc which contains something you could have downloaded over the internet in a matter of minutes.
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Originally posted by: Arbok why do digital movies stand a chance of killing off the traditional home market for movies, especially considering you have things like extras, chapters, different language tracks, etc to contend with?
Because they're the same thing.
I know many people who frequently download movies, mp3s, games, etc. off the internet, burn them to CD/DVD and they don't seem to suffer from some detached notion of consumerism because the disc they burn doesn't have an official label.
Downloading a DVD data image will keep all the menus intact when you burn it to another DVD.
Download it, burn it, label it, it's yours, and you didn't even have to leave your seat and spend gas money to go get it. People love the convenience of being able to get the music you want in a matter of minutes off the internet in the form of mp3s. When connections become fast enough that movies are feasible, it WILL happen.