Uh ? There's a 8-10$ Blu-ray bin at Wal-mart, new releases include a DVD copy and a digital copy sometimes and aren't that much more expensive than the DVDs I was buying before (22-30$ depending on the title).
Every new release comes on Blu-ray...
What more do you want ?
That is what I am saying, the prices for blu-ray have finally come down. I can get them for 5-10 dollars also. Blu ray has been out for some time and it did not pick up steam like DVD did. The format war probably didn't help.
But 4K blu-ray, meaning the consumer has to buy a new player and a new tv. Sorry don't see it taking off for a few more years. You know sort of like HD 3D.
What content supports 4K?
What content supports 4K?
I believe Sony has something in the works which is like a set-top box that downloads from Sony at a cost per movie basis for 4k content. Its only movies from Sony Studios though. I don't believe its a streaming device but just downloads the entire movie. I might be wrong on that on whether its streams or not.
Same for when DVD came out, the Sony unit I bought early on (and my first stand-alone DVD player, after using a Creative Labs DXR2 kit) cost me about 500$.
1080p TVs came out before Blu-ray was really mainstream or even out. We just didn't have any 1080p content.
The thing is, the electronics industry understand one thing. The "Chicken and Egg" problem. The thing is, Content will never get released if there's no way to play it back. If they hold back the devices that can play it back while waiting, they will wait forever basically and we'll get stuck forever.
So they release their devices with little if any content and content eventually comes. It makes for slower take-offs (being an early DVD adopter and an early Blu-ray adopter, I can tell you both took their sweet time) but at least it eventually gets here.
You won't see me disagree about 3D though. But that's just the name of the game when you try new gadgets with little content, you risk it not being adopted at all. 3D TV was a solution in need of a problem. The benefits of higher definition are indeniable though (the larger the TV, the more apparent it becomes, that, or if you sit closer to your TV).
DVD if I remember correctly was one of the fastest forms of media to be accepted and purchased.
DVD took its sweet time if you ask me. Took at least 3 years before the section at our local places grew beyond 1-2 racks of movies. My initial purchases were mostly made off Amazon back then (late 90s/early 00s). Of course, I remember DVD as a very early adopter, the war between "Digital Versatile Disc" and "Digital Video Disc".
I think the thing with people perceiving Blu-ray as slower to get adopted is that there were simply quite a few more early adopters of Blu-ray thanks to the PS3 (which launched about the same time as Blu-ray) vs most "early" adopters of DVDs came with the PS2 (which really helped push DVD out as a definitive format), a few years after DVD's actual introduction.
But really, both formats took off about at the same pace and Blu-ray was even said to be outpacing DVD sometime around 2009 before slowing down again and plateauing.
Ha that is funny, I remember that now too since you mentioned it.
Then you probably also remember DivX (not the codec, the first "Rental throw-away" format) ? That was a stupid industry move if you ask me, even more so than 3D TV.
You're think of Sony's UltraViolet :
http://www.uvvu.com/
It's not a 4K content service, in fact, its quality is much less than Blu-rays. New 4K blu-rays or 4K Blu-ray players that can upscale current 1080p releases will be the content for 4K this year and the actual native 4K discs will be probably rare and limited to a few big titles at first (like when DVD launched or when Blu-ray launched).
Early adopters will have little content, like always, it'll take a few years to become mainstream.
That's true of most things at CES though. Companies show off prototypes/cutting edge devices and it takes a few years for them to trickle into the marketplace and a few more years before they hit critical mass and flood into the mainstream. DVD, for example, hit the U.S. in '97 but didn't top VHS rentals until '03 and DVD is typically seen as the most successful, fastest adopted consumer tech ever.But 4K blu-ray, meaning the consumer has to buy a new player and a new tv. Sorry don't see it taking off for a few more years. You know sort of like HD 3D.
That's true of most things at CES though. Companies show off prototypes/cutting edge devices and it takes a few years for them to trickle into the marketplace and a few more years before they hit critical mass and flood into the mainstream. DVD, for example, hit the U.S. in '97 but didn't top VHS rentals until '03 and DVD is typically seen as the most successful, fastest adopted consumer tech ever.
I wonder how many billions of dollars Samsung will have to pay for these mega-sized TVs.... when another class action lawsuit hits them for defective TV capacitors or some other across-the-board flaw (high risk of defects for a 1st-gen product)
http://www.samsung.com/us/capacitorsettlement/
http://www.engadget.com/2012/02/23/samsung-may-cough-up-millions-over-kaput-tvs/
And we just got a Full HD 1080p 55" Samsung Smart TV.
Ah well...
And we just got a Full HD 1080p 55" Samsung Smart TV.
Ah well...