Transformers and More @ The Seibertron Store














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Toshiba HD-A2 is 1080i. 1080p players are well over $300. Its cool maybe HD-DVDs are great. I just don't want a mere player. Interactive games and ethernet ports don't impress me as much as the bare-boned visual quality of 300 on BluRay. Especially when I can pop in Heavenly Swords afterwards.
Metal wrote:Rodimust wrote:Toshiba HD-A2 is 1080i. 1080p players are well over $300. Its cool maybe HD-DVDs are great. I just don't want a mere player. Interactive games and ethernet ports don't impress me as much as the bare-boned visual quality of 300 on BluRay. Especially when I can pop in Heavenly Swords afterwards.
That's all well and good, but you're making an accusation that somehow the BD version of 300 was superior in picture quality to the HD DVD version which is false. Both versions used the same exact video encode, and look exactly the same. The differences are that the HD DVD version has about 12 hours worth of next-gen special features including the blue-screen PiP and downloadable content among other things.
Yes, the HD-A2 is a 1080i player, but %90 of all HDTVs are only 1080i capable displays. 1080p displays have not reached big popularity because they have been much more expensive to buy until recently. There's nothing wrong with offering a cheaper HD DVD, or BD player for that matter that matches your display. Purchasing a 1080p player for a 1080i set is foolish and unnecessary.
Rodimist wrote:Metal wrote:Rodimust wrote:Toshiba HD-A2 is 1080i. 1080p players are well over $300. Its cool maybe HD-DVDs are great. I just don't want a mere player. Interactive games and ethernet ports don't impress me as much as the bare-boned visual quality of 300 on BluRay. Especially when I can pop in Heavenly Swords afterwards.
That's all well and good, but you're making an accusation that somehow the BD version of 300 was superior in picture quality to the HD DVD version which is false. Both versions used the same exact video encode, and look exactly the same. The differences are that the HD DVD version has about 12 hours worth of next-gen special features including the blue-screen PiP and downloadable content among other things.
Yes, the HD-A2 is a 1080i player, but %90 of all HDTVs are only 1080i capable displays. 1080p displays have not reached big popularity because they have been much more expensive to buy until recently. There's nothing wrong with offering a cheaper HD DVD, or BD player for that matter that matches your display. Purchasing a 1080p player for a 1080i set is foolish and unnecessary.
First of all. A bluRay disc holds more which means they can have more features. The production companies like WB's chose not to put these features on. The ethernet is not a problem for a PS3. This whole PiP garbage that you are ranting about is foolish and unnecessary. If I went to see transformers in IMAX and they had a PiP showing the green screen action on a smaller screen, I'd be pissed. Why would you waste your time looking at that? I'm sorry you felt I was insinuating 300 is better picture quality on bluRay. I was just stating that there is nothing wrong with the bluRay version. These HD extras are a little excessive. The important ones will always be on both.
Secondly, 65% of 300's sales were (you guessed it) bluRay. Obviously I'm not the only person not impressed with the 12 hours you boast of.
When it comes to transformers, 1080p IS necessary. I'm not looking for green screens or downloadable content (I have a computer for that). I want the visual affects to be the best they can be. I can't help, but be disappointed that the HD version can only be experienced through one kind of player. I was looking forward to finally being able to purchase a system that can play Transformers AND give me satisfaction elsewhere as a gamer. A Toshiba player is not going to serve me any use. When was the last time you ever wanted anything made by Toshiba?
Transformers and Iron Man were the only movies I was looking forward to owning an HD version of. I just don't think an 1080i X-box 360 with a clunky add on (both with dvd slots making it a waste of space) is an option for the money.
That dosen't mean HD-DVDs will keep the same specs throughout their entire lifespan. Hell ,look at DVD's. They didn't start off burning/scanning info on multiple layers. but they do now, & nearly doubles the space on them. Perhaps something similar could be done later to boost the amount of data that can be stored on it.Obi-Wan Kenobi wrote:This is all about the mighty $$$. Paramount doesn't want to give money to Sony who's one of their biggest competitors in the entertainment industry. This blows though, as it would look so sweet in blu-ray, plus the fact that blu-ray discs can store way more information, look at all the added goodies they could have put on there.
sniper_samurai wrote:
You do know the reason that the HD-DVD version has these extras and the Blu-Ray version doesn't is because Blu-Ray is currently unable to do them(though that capability is coming).
As for seeing 300 green screen PiP feature, its actually quite funny because of how bad the film is without the effects(the finished film itself is awesome).
You wont get satisfaction as a gamer with the PS3(at least not yet), as for the 360 it is also capable of outputting a 1080p signal through a VGA cable or HDMI(elite and new units only).
You do realise that the only difference between 1080i and 1080p is that with 1080p the full screen is refreshed every cycle where as with 1080i every second line is refreshed every cycle, they both have the same resolution of 1920x1080. The difference between the two is barely distinguishable unless there is something moving very fast on screen(gets slightly fuzzy) or you have a crap tv(video tearing).
And for insinuating that Toshiba is a crap company you do know that the HDD in the iPod is a Toshiba drive, I don't see many people who don't have or want an iPod(personally I don't like it but the mp3 player I have also has a Toshiba drive). If you buy a Samsung dvd player its a Toshiba drive(shared resources for DVD), Toshiba make the worlds smallest HDD(5x24x32mm) and they make pretty good laptops and laptop hdds.
Moonbase2 wrote:
Yep, porn killed Betamax.But the question is....do we REALLY want high definition porn? I mean, really?
Altertron wrote:oh i'm sure you're buy it on dvd the minute it hits shelves across the nation Ravage XK.
D-340 wrote:Moonbase2 wrote:
Yep, porn killed Betamax.But the question is....do we REALLY want high definition porn? I mean, really?
Why wouldn't we?![]()
On topic, meh. I've seen no difference between HD and BluRay. I will get an HD drive for my 360 eventually, but I refuse to own a PS3 til it's dirt cheap. So it looks like HD TFs for me when the time comes.
On a side note: UMD and the PSP did real well in the begining, then issues came, and now UMD and the PSP aren't doing much of anything. I love my PSP, but anything good coming to it and UMD is few and far between. It seems BluRay may go the same route. Until I see more positive things for BluRay and the PS3, I won't be supporting the hardware or it's format.
BIGBOTSYSTEM wrote:WILL IT BE RELEASED ON REGULAR DVD IF IT DOES NOT I WILL SUCK FOR PEOPLE WHO DON'T HAVE HD-DVD.
Microsoft has paid DreamWorks and Paramount so much money that they've decided to join Universal in the HD-DVD exclusive camp. No kidding.
Rashomon wrote:Actually from the word I have gotten from my bosses emails at work it is quite possible that October may see the price of HD discs taking a big price drop as well as the players. I have been trying to find articles to verify, but it may be news that is being sent through on a store level for the moment.
Nemesis Cyberplex wrote:YOU know, I was just thinking about something:Microsoft has paid DreamWorks and Paramount so much money that they've decided to join Universal in the HD-DVD exclusive camp. No kidding.
This actually makes a lot of sense, especially if you look at it from the game industry perspective. If Sony, Microsoft's biggest rival in the gaming industry, ends up with the exclusive next-gen format after HD-DVD goes under, it wouldn't suprise me if Sony ended up making Microsoft have to pay such a huge sum for use of their blu-ray tech for their consoles & games that it puts MS's gaming industry almost totally out of the picture. I mean, think about it...having to pay your rival for the means to surpass them??.....it's no wonder MS is trying to keep the HD-DVD afloat by any means necessary.
Altertron wrote:is transformers directed by bay if so it should also be on blu-ray according the sources. movies that are directed by bay or spielberg will be on blu-ray and hd.
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