Sa pagitan ng langit filipino bold movie part 1

Sa pagitan ng langit filipino bold movie part 1

After purchasing an A20 about last Oct for around 379, my first thought was that I should have waited to get one at But I still felt I should support HD-DVD. After purchasing about 15 additional movies we get the word that Toshiba is pulling out. I have never felt that Bluray was a superior product, in fact I still think it is way over priced and still unfinished so in my view, it is not a choice for me. I have a very good upscaler in my A20, in fact a lot of movies look almost as good as the HD versions. Most of the DVD players that I have sa pagitan ng langit filipino bold movie part 1 in the past have been usable for at least 5 years so that will probably be the time I might look into Bluray but until then I will buy SD-DVDs. I will never be a buyer of new technology until it is accepted and proven in the future. UNIVERSAL MADE A STATMENT, THEY WILL NOW SUPPORT BLURAY FORMAT! I purchased a BluRay disk drive for a new PC last year and have been watching that format since then. I also observed when Block Buster and Disney endorsed the Blu-Ray format. I noticed that there were always more Movies in Blu-Ray available in whatever store I was shopping. Last December I purchased two Blu-Ray players to compliment my HDTVs and surround sound systems. All along, I have felt that the Blu-Ray technology was superior and that HD-DVD was just a quick injection trying to capitalize on that market. Seems like I was right and that this time the better product has won. Over time the price of all of the equipment and the movies will decline. I enjoy the enhanced video and audio provided by the Blu-Ray technology. I waited while the format wars went on, but once Warner moved, I decided to go ahead with a Blu-Ray player, which is being installed as part of a new A/V system this week. The whole format war was a major inhibitor on me spending money what a drag! I am happy now to be able to move forward with some confidence that this new player will not be obsolete for at least 2 or 3 years! Who still buys dvds? Do you people really buy this crap? It is free all over the internet! Why would ANYONE buy it when you can download it to your computer, hook the computer up to the television, and have the same effect? No wonder everyone in the country is going broke. You all are spending your money on junk you can get FOR FREE!!! eBay. Basically I got the player for free. I got and DVI input. The Toshiba upconverts regular DVDs to component inputs, which is what I need, while most of the upconverting DVD players require HDMI input. I am happy and I waiting for a big sale to buy the 2nd Toshiba HD DVD player to go with my 2nd TV. they have HDMI input. By that time I should be able to buy Blu Ray player for 50 at Wal-Mart. I cant help but wonder if Microsoft shot itself and its favorite format in the foot by not putting HD DVD drives INSIDE Xbox 360s. Sure, they minimized losses by hedging their bet, but they sent a bad signal to the market and more importantly, failed to embed their preferred format/coveted investment into a popular product. Sony did the opposite. They gambled, put Blu-ray in PS3, and while taking a huge hit on the frontside, the decision appears to have paid off with market share and guaranteed profits down the line. Also, does it strike anyone as a tad ironic that Sony won this format war sa pagitan ng langit filipino bold movie part 1 a more expensive, less sa pagitan ng langit filipino bold movie part 1 technology read: Betamax. Guess they learned their lesson: Win over the movie studios and the major retailers and you win the war. This unfinished stuff kills me. The point of a player is to PLAY a movie which is what 99 percent of people want. The stupid commentaries, who cares? pip? who cares! play the movie. These blogs are always skewed to tech snobs. The average person numbering in the millions wants to plop it in and watch. PERIOD! I think the greatest thing that comes from Toshibas announcement is that we as a movie culture can finally get back on the same page and collect movies again. This useless format war splintered the home entertainment enthusiast culture into pieces. Consumers who were once united under DVD were coerced to choose sides or were scared rightfully to take the next evolutionary step in home entertainment. And for those that did take this step, the debate in some corners seemed to reach a serious and troubling bloods v crips mentality on an internet level anyway. And in other corners the war was as comical Charlie Brown v Lucy. All of which in the end proved to be a waste of time and money from consumers, to media, to movie studios and hardware deveopers. Now many fences need to be mended and egos soothed before we get back to the real business of collecting, watching and enjoying movies at home. This was a sad two years wasted by a pointless and unnecessary civil war. Karl wrote and the region codes arent a big deal anyways unless you pirate movies, which degrades video quality anyway and makes hi def kind of pointless right? Actually no the big deal is if DVDs are not sold in your region, or if you travel a lot and want to watch them on your laptop. Pirated DVDs tend to be region 0 play everywhere, so region-coding makes them more attractive.

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