Road to perdition part 1 Yea I

Road to perdition part 1

Yea I suggested this on the Blu-Ray forums. Both companies commit to universal drives. SL 15GB discs go bye 25GB discs go bye bye. HD-9 discs comprise the ultra low end. Suitable for 90 bare bones programme. Movies are sub 15 DL50GB is your premium product. Lossless Audio is standard. Movies are routinely 35-40 dollars. Hardware supports HDD road to perdition part 1 for Managed Copy and DLNA for networking. Both platforms allow a generous tradeup to the new Universal Format. Royalties are paid to both groups. The SoC integration is going to allow this very soon. Why not investigate the possibility? Id pay for choice like this. I think audio/videophiles would to. Lossless audio and kickbutt AVC/VC-1 codecs. Where do I sign? Sony Blu-Ray equipped VAIO Desktop review. HVD certainly sounds appealing but not as a movie distribution format but more of an archiving solution. While neither HD DVD or Blu-Ray offer a 13x increase in space there wasnt a need to require such a space increase. Music has always been easier to compress than video. A more appropriate comparison would have been to compare VHS to DVD. I assure you VHS holds more than 700MB worth of data. The next problem is that were simply looking from the wrong point of view here. The goal is to have transperancy from the master to the distributed format. Humans tend to default to thinking linearly and assume that more data means higher quality but theres a limit to what we can perceive. Both Blu-Ray and HD DVD will come close to showing you what the master looks like. Im not sure HVD would translate into a better viewing experience unless were talking about a new codec Yeah but ultimately, archival storage and movie distribution coincide for one simple reason. People like to watch movies on their computers and they dont like to buy multiple drives to watch movies and store data. Thats why I think instead of big companies squabbling over relatively unimpressive formats, they should put their collective energy into providing a future-proof unified solution that meets all the needs of consumers. I think the big reason why companies are going for these kinds of formats is because they leave the market open for further upgrades. Imagine if we all got HVD. The video technology market would grind to a halt because you just dont need more than 1TB per disc. Although who knows, in 20 years time, kids might be laughin at the poor kid with the HVD drive because he cant watch road to perdition part 1 3D fully interactive smell-o-vision 20TB movie. HVD would be sweet if it could be presented in the tootsie-roll form factor used in Star Trek. That would be pleasantly portable. HVD would be sweet if it could be presented in the tootsie-roll form factor used in Star Trek. That would be pleasantly portable. I read they can make a 30GB road to perdition part 1 the size of a credit card. Not even that impressive really when they can get 8GB flash onto a fingerprint size card. I actually hope one day that flash will take over. I just dont like the principle behind the CD/DVD or HD. Internally moving parts are prone to failure at any time.

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