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Cynic821 said:sorry brandon, but i do not trust you. no offense.
Cynic821 said:sorry brandon, but i do not trust you. no offense.
Cynic821 said:Based on your prior opinions of things, and the way they are presented ,I have decided that trusting your opinion will not neccesarily agree with how i would think about the same thing.
Example: you think david caruso is one of the worst actors you have ever seen.
I think he is a damn good actor, working bad dailouge in the scripts.
Cynic821 said:Based on your prior opinions of things, and the way they are presented ,I have decided that trusting your opinion will not neccesarily agree with how i would think about the same thing.
Example: you think david caruso is one of the worst actors you have ever seen.
I think he is a damn good actor, working bad dailouge in the scripts.
Cynic821 said:You speak in too many extremes for me to take your points , which are valid, seriously though. 1080p to 480i is easily decernable to even the least informed consumer
oneinfiniteloop said:I don't understand which part of my reply was that extreme. I have sat and watched things with my girlfriend on a BluRay DVD player on a 1080p TV and she couldn't tell that much of a difference between a normal DVD playing on the same TV, and she is indicative of the general consumer.
Your optimism in the consumer isn't properly placed, in my opinion. You give them too much credit. If the consumer did care so much, then HD in broadcast and on disc would be taking off at a much more rapid pace. It's merely not innovative enough to spur the bulk of the populous to give up their hard earned cashed for overpriced hardware. True innovations/improvements/jumps in technology will generally do this, see the iPod, laptop, flat screen TV's, cell phones, etc.
I don't even understand what is the point of putting all this effort into something that the majority of people couldn't care less about. If it's not benefitting society as a whole that where is the purpose. A higher resolution movie has no benefit on any major scale so why waste resources on the format that carries it? I would like to hear your response, or anyone elses, to this.
Ramjet1979 said:HD discs on the other hand don't offer an added level of "convenience" to the average consumer. Only cost.
We're still having this same argument, because here it is six years later, HDTVs are $600 now, and they're STILL not the norm. We're at about 15% market penetration in the US. Maybe 3 years from now HDTV will be commonplace, but the odds are still almost 7 to 1 against someone having an HDTV in their house.AllAroundFilmLV said:True, but the same argument was being about HDTV's 6 years ago when they were 10,000 dollars a pop.
More like about 10-15, if the adoption rate of HDTV is any indication.In 2-3 years, HD-DVD's will be the norm
Ramjet1979 said:Point being, the everyday buyer is only going to shell out the extra dollars for something that add's a good deal of convenience to them. Often times even at the sacrifice of quality. The music world is a good example.