Paramount and Dreamworks Animation Each Declare Exclusive Su
-
film11
- Major Contributor

- Posts: 88
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 6:16 pm
Doug, have to disagree about better technology winning out. For example, Beta provided superior video than VHS, but VHS was cheaper. (Even now, most professional tape archives still use Beta). I find that it is more about promotion, branding, and price. For the majority of consumers, quality is secondary.
-
Richard
- SUPER VIP!
- Posts: 2578
- Joined: Wed Sep 08, 2004 1:28 pm
- Location: Atlanta, GA
- Contact:
3 months ago I would have said Blu-ray... Today it appears HD DVD is leading but this is only if entry level blu-ray players don't reach the $300. Can't help but expect that by Xmas both will have $300 entry level players and maybe a little less than that!
After 25 years I fully agree. Otherwise I agree with everything else Doug said.Doug, have to disagree about better technology winning out... For the majority of consumers, quality is secondary.
-
whatchel1
- Broadcast Engineer
- Posts: 35
- Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 8:54 pm
Beta is almost gone in pro tape archives now as well. Sony Hasn't supported Beta for about 2 years now. It is getting very hard to find parts to repair the machines ( no matter what company made it) now. As far as the reason VHS won out over beta for CE a lot of it had to do with features and Sony not allowing companies to produce the VCR's until too late.film11 wrote:Doug, have to disagree about better technology winning out. For example, Beta provided superior video than VHS, but VHS was cheaper. (Even now, most professional tape archives still use Beta). I find that it is more about promotion, branding, and price. For the majority of consumers, quality is secondary.