Archive for February 5th, 2008

Welcome to the Unreasonable Stance, where our own Devin takes the minority opinion on a tech matter and defends it with convenient data, spun numbers, fanboyism, and insults until he proves, without a doubt, that those that disagree with him are filthy mouth-breathers. You’re probably thinking I’m crazy. Well, maybe I am. But that’s just because […]

hddvdwins
Welcome to the Unreasonable Stance, where our own Devin takes the minority opinion on a tech matter and defends it with convenient data, spun numbers, fanboyism, and insults until he proves, without a doubt, that those that disagree with him are filthy mouth-breathers.

You’re probably thinking I’m crazy. Well, maybe I’m. But that’s just because I’ve crazy love for HD DVD and have faith that it will end up on top of this little format scuffle. The “coup” by Blu-Ray has inspired some interesting, if misguided satire (Godwin alert), and convinced the easily swayed masses of critics that yes, it’s over. But it’s far from over — and this was only a glancing blow. HD DVD will bounce back for the knockout punch.

They’ve still got a war chest, and they’re still willing to throw down, as we saw during the Super Bowl. $30 mil? No problem. When you’ve got $150 HD DVD players selling like hotcakes, you can afford to drop that kind of cheese. Sure, the PS3 is now coming into its own and is the “best Blu-Ray player,” but is your father going to buy a $500 game console when all he wants to do is watch the Bourne Trilogy in HD? No, he’s going to go to Ideal Buy and pick up an HD DVD player and a ton of movies that are already out — as you know, HD DVD still has a tremendous selection despite some studios’ vacillating loyalties.

That’s a key point: an installed base. $150 is a birthday present, it’s practically an impulse purchase. And the studios aren’t going to ignore the millions who decide that they’d rather go HD DVD and put that other $300 towards, oh, I don’t know, movies.

So what else is at that price point? Well, the Apple Television for one thing. But streaming video is still a pipe dream. People like discs (call it “force of habit”) and they don’t like being told when and where they have the ability to watch their movies. Apple TV is great for what it is, but a current test of HD streaming video was worrying; people aren’t getting what they think they’re paying for just yet. It’ll get superior, sure, but people have money now, and HD DVD’s superior compression puts its image quality above Blu-Ray, to say nothing of shady streaming stuff.

At this point, the studio count doesn’t even matter. They all hauled butt to get the ideal movies they had released for either player or both, so 90% of the library is ready to go; the rest is new releases, and who wants those? And with an installed user base growing with every bill-and-a-half set-top box, distributors can’t afford to ignore the whole market segment. Anyway, Paramount is still hanging out, and I don’t know if you’ve heard of a tiny thing called Star Trek, but combined with Iron Man and Cloverfield, I think we’ve got a pretty solid season coming up.

So don’t lose hope, HD DVD lovers. We, with our cheap players, great image quality, and solid library, will overcome. The studios are a fickle lot but they’ll soon realize their mistake. Microsoft (and possibly Micrahoo!soft) has got our back, and if all else fails, we’ll always have Transformers.

Via [crunchgear]

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I should really check things out before jumping the gun like that. Looks like the iPod Touch just got a bump up to 32GB, but $500 is kind of a lot. It is flash memory, though. Damn it. It’s available now through the Apple Store, retail stores and resellers. Apple Store ShareThis

32gbipod.png
I should really check things out before jumping the gun like that. Looks like the iPod Touch just got a bump up to 32GB, but $500 is kind of a lot. It is flash memory, though. Damn it. It’s available now through the Apple Store, retail stores and resellers.

Apple Store

Via [crunchgear]

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In a current press release, Israeli telecommunications company Bezeq announced that it’s “launching the first ‘kosher’ telephone line in Israel under the name ‘Clean Line’. The new service blocks access to content deemed inappropriate for haredi (strictly observant) Jews.” Incoming and outgoing calls to numbers labeled as inappropriate by a council of rabbis will be […]

bezeq

In a recent press release, Israeli telecommunications company Bezeq announced that it’s “launching the first ‘kosher’ telephone line in Israel under the name ‘Clean Line’. The new service blocks access to content deemed inappropriate for haredi (strictly observant) Jews.”

Incoming and outgoing calls to numbers labeled as inappropriate by a council of rabbis will be blocked from the service.

According to Bloomberg, this new feature has likely been offered in order to compete with local cable and phone service providers, especially the inappropriately-named “Hot-Cable Systems Media.”

Bezeq to Offer ‘Clean’ Phone Line for Ultra-Orthodox Homes [Bloomberg] via The Raw Feed

Via [crunchgear]

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