More Reasons Why Discs Are A Dying Breed
from the you-stored-things-on-plastic-discs? dept
For quite some time now, we've mostly ignored the whole "next generation" DVD battle, because the longer it stretches out, the more pointless it seems. If the two warring sides had come to an agreement early on, and actually focused on providing value rather than looking for fancy new copy protection schemes, it might have had a chance. Instead, by not coming up with a single standard, not focusing on getting products to market and not actually adding much that consumers will value, they've allowed the market to move on. Slate is the latest publication (in an increasingly long line) to notice that both formats are effectively dead on arrival. The nice thing about the Slate article is it lists out four big reasons why: (1) the internet (2) cable-on-demand (3) pricey hardware upgrades needed and (4) the rise of the hard drive. Any one of these by itself might not be enough, but combine them all with the limitations and compatibility issues and you have a recipe for disaster. What's surprising is that it seems like plenty of companies haven't come to terms with this yet, and still believe these next generation DVDs are going to be a big business.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Sorry I don't buy it yet
Until there is true high speed internet across this country, not the half-assed implementations of FIOS, it will take too much of people's time to be valuable. Granted my desktop sets idle for days at a time, but I will not wait for movies to download. I downloaded an episode of smallville, it took almost 14 hours with torrents, no way I am doing it again.
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streaming services can help
Of course I stopped using vongo as the selection stunk, and movielink same with movielink. Then I realized I didn't care that much about movies anyway. I ended up just getting a media center and having it record stuff I want. (family guy, simpsons, etc)
Still not perfect, but I managed to get all the Hero's episodes aired to date in under two days, and have it record every new one the second it is aired. I can then watch when I am ready. After two days I was able to watch them back to back.
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wtf?
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Re: wtf?
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Re:
Those are re-encoded xvid versions that are down sampled almost invariably to 480p or slightly less. They're also stereo, most primetime HD is 5.1 AC3.
An hour of well encoded 720p, mpeg-2, direct from Terrestrial HD video is about 5.5gb. 4.5 if you cut out ads.
Most 480p xvid encoded files are well under a gig, usually around 150-500, obviously depending on quality. And it is a huge quality difference, at least on and HD display.
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Like everything else, it'll be a gradual death
But, like blogging and other social media, it'll be slow for the technology and applications to be adopted enmasse.
I'd say give it eight to 10 years.
Mike
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cable ISP = approx 4 megabit
8 bits in a byte
1024kbytes is a megabyte, 1024kbits=a megabit
1024kbits x 4 = 4096,
divide by 8 to convert it into kilobytes = 512
take off about 10% for overhead, = roughly 460kb/sec max speed
an average movie (compressed) =1 gigabyte range (1024 megabytes)(also as 1024kbyte x 1024megabytes) = 1048576,
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two cents worth
And I still don't own or use an ipod.
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Long live...
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Re: Long live...
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cable ~ 4 mbit (1024kbits in an mbit)
1024kbits x 4 = 4096,
/8 to convert into kilobytes = 512
-10% overhead, = roughly 460kb/sec max
average movie (compressed) = 1 gigabyte range (1024kbyte x 1024megabytes) = 1048576
/460 = 2279.5 seconds
less than 40 minutes
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DVD
ipods in your car is nice but the stereo I just installed in my car has a usb so can load music, podcasts etc on a flash drive (intelligent stick) and am ready to go...I look at the CD drive on the car stereo now and wonder what the heck it is for. Oh yeah...let me rush out and buy a ten disc changer for my car...NOT....CDs and DVDs were a big let down and the faster we evolve away from them the better.
I loved the comment saying TEN YEARS....TEN years are you kidding....lets see WWW is graphically only about 13 years old...
In ten years I hope it is ALL flash memory....less moving parts is MO' BETTER!!!!
Jim
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I just dont get it
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Re: I just dont get it
... and commenting on the "age / how long should it take" debate, CDs are already 20+ years old, the Internet has been around for more than 13 years (let's not get into the "birth of the internet as we know it now" in the mid 90s - that's not the point - the technology is much older...). And DVDs, although seen as still "fairly new" technology by a lot of people - people seem to have forgotten that while the whole betamax vs. vhs format war of the early 80s was going on, there were also laser discs, and a couple different formats/versions of discs and players, in the early 80s - so, yeah... all this stuff is old already.
Real new ideas haven't come around for a while - the major thing effecting basically everything in the tech industry is "how much smaller can we make it" - from speeding up processors by reducing size, fitting more gates on a chip, etc, to refining lasers so that we can burn and read a finer, clearer marking, so we can fit more stuff on the same size.
So, yeah...
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OnDemand
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Hi Speed not available
Torrents are, for the most part, painful. I have to schedule them at night.
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Assuming you know you want to watch a movie the day before you are actually going to watch it, it can download while you sleep. Otherwise, this totally sucks.
However, none of this matters. You guys harp about the DRM of the new media (justifiably), but you ignore the fact any downloadable form that the movie industries agree to is going to be DRMed enough that people would rather have BD or HD-DVD. That way any simpleton can easily take their movie to any room of their house, or to someone else's house and pop it in and play it.
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For the ones not understanding...
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RE: jim's post
heh.. where do i start?
A: dvd average lifespand If you treat it correctly is estimated at 30-50 years. you're average hard disk? 3.1
B: backup. When you r HD failes, is it backed up? to tape? it's in your router right? do you have a separate backup machine?
C: X factor. for movie buffs, people who really love good cinema, buying a dvd is not simply "having the ability to watch the movie" its more than that, it's owning the materials that may come with the disc and the extra features included, commentaries, featurettes, even other full-length features.
no, the dvd, or hddvd, or bluefuckultrabetterthanyourdvd will always have a place
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The real problem with all of it
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iFlix
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Next Gen DVD's... I hope they stay around
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General rant (soon to be demoted)
But, this isn't avaiable yet outside major metropoli, ie the most of the country.
Downloads are good, but how many have a PC with 1080i or 720p capability? Also, my good PC is not near my TV.
Don't get me wrong - I rolled the desk to my HD TV to connect and watch "The IT Crowd" from the BBC. It was beautiful. Just ranks about 2 out of 10 on a convenience scale.
I enjoyed Comcast with on-demand HD. It even made Lawrence of Arabia look good. But I moved. Now I'm stuck with SuddenLink that can't deliver a the bandwidth for broadcast HD.
These technologies are good, and may one day replace discs, but the replacements are not ready for the masses yet.
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But as others have pointed out, once I can download a high quality movie quickly and watch it on my TV - bye bye discs...
The main problem is the US is FAR behind the rest of the world in terms of broadband. In most of Asia 100Mbps for under $30/mo is not uncommon in your home - here it's just a dream.
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Blu-ray's capacity isn't needed yet, except for console games and the 1% of people with huge HD TVs.
DVD and CD tech is still good enough for 99% of portable storage needs.
Who's demanding more capacity? The industry itself is, but not consumers.
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FIOS half assed?
Roadrunner cable: $44.99 for 5MBdown 768KBup
Verizon DSL: $39.99 5MB (I was getting 3 when lucky)down 512/768up
FIOS (coming soon to my area of tampa) 15MBdown, 3MB up for $44.99 (or 34.99 for the roadrunner speeds)
That doesnt sound like FIOS is half assed to me. Same speed for $120 less per year, or 3x for same price.
But I have to agree that downloading torrent files is certainly not the best way to ascertain your speed, or compare to direct download sites.
With torrent files using Azureus, even with tons of seeders, I'm getting at best 1MB, but I have downloaded files from websites with Leechget at 3-4MB
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Re: FIOS half assed?
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Lot of Players
As soon as a movie comes off the theater it shows up on DSS then as DVD's at the store something you can watch over and over when ever and where ever!
Now one Holly Wood studio was owned by Sony and I’m sure Sony technologies (cameras computers ext) are used in several of those studios along with TV networks which they are involved with a million shows and TV and picture making programs. Then if you rent from Blockbuster or netflix you could be getting a blue ray from them.
So there are a lot of people out there welling to pay huge amounts of money for DISC. Not to mention the video games......with Sony coming out with its new system and all those games going to blue ray there is billions in the making.
Also BLUE RAY R/RW R/RAM players in computers and blue ray HARD DRIVE. More mega bucks going to Sony.
I would just rather have a little Scan Disk of my favorite movies, music videos something portable and easy to store around the TV set. Right now I have like a million DVD's and CD-ROMs around here and it's an eyesore and hard to keep track of them.
I might purchase a Sony dvd recordable hard drive blueray disc player and be able to dump the shows I recorded which could be almost 23 hours worth on to one record-able rewritable blue ray disc and watch it on my play station while recording other shows.
I wouldn't mind more time on ONE DISC because I don't like having to erase them a lot and taking out one that has some really good shows. I usually buy a 4.7 gb and so far FUJI has a nice DVD-R.
I really like the DVD-RAM 9.4 GB rewritable two sided it holds like 16 hours on ONE DISC it's a lot more easier to play around with instead of 30 different disc of football games favorite tv shows and so on and so on.
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HDTV torrent
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Computer as video
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