BD and PS3 fans are always talking about the "future". I think it is because their present is not really good. BD doesn't have the features of less expensive HD DVD players, and PS3 is still in last place. Oh sure BD has plenty of "future" potential which really isn't a product. Imagine a store trying to sell "future potential", do you think they would be successful? The future potential seems to be based on the extra storage space for BD. Well if a disk is half full is it really a benefit for the extra space? BD is still a beta product. Two to three years from now BD maybe worth buying, but not today.regeya -"Although Blu had a number of technical advantages and seemed more "future proof" than HD DVD...
Although Blu had the support of Disney, it was really sort of evenly split studio-wise from what I saw... Although attach rates and software sales were better for Blu, sales were terrible for both. I figured whoever sold the first sub-$200 player would win. We know how that one turned out, and how wrong that ended up being. I would love to see hard numbers on sales of both formats..."
Both HD DVD and BD give the same video and audio quality for movies.
HD DVD has a complete feature set common to all HD DVD players.
The movies were very close to equal before Warner Brothers attempted to kill HD DVD.
Sales picked up significantly for HD DVD because of the lower price, and where there is a growing number of players the studios will follow.
I got the HD-A2 for $99 and it is a great value. BD is not price competitive.
There is no way for me to know that Warner Brothers would try to kill HD DVD with their move. It is one thing to decide to move your product to another platform, but it is very different to make your announcement just prior to what would have been a very successful CES show for Toshiba HD DVD. Instead people talk for a week about the death of HD DVD. Then the following weeks are filled with every rumor on the net to try and make it stick. Warner Brothers say the consumer made the choice, but I don't think so. Warner Brothers was the most profitable studio with its neutral stance. If the sales had played out with Warner Brothers still neutral then BD would probably lose to HD DVD by the end of 2008.
