You're free to do what you want -- as long as you're not demanding/expecting your friends and family to watch that same picture with you -- but I think it's pretty telling when two Pulitzer Prize-winning writers each had to devote one of their articles to people who stretch out their 4:3 pictures.
You're free to do what you want -- as long as you're not demanding/expecting your friends and family to watch that same picture with you -- but I think it's pretty telling when two Pulitzer Prize-winning writers each had to devote one of their articles to people who stretch out their 4:3 pictures.
I find it especially hilarious when people who spend a couple grand on their set up, and rant extensively on how much better HD is than SD, and how DVDs look like crap go and stretch their 4:3s out to look like crap.
It looks like crap because the image has been distorted to fill larger than original dimensions. While I understand that you're worried about burn in, I find it hard to believe it doesn't look awful (I've seen it on my parents' TV and it looks awful)
and, also, I was under the impression that burn in is not a big issue on newer television sets.
I am not reading 13 pages of back and forth so I don't know if this was addressed but claiming that Blu-Ray is the next generation format is like saying Laser Disc is the next generation format.
It's extremely premature to make this claim and even though there are a lot of fanboy Blu-Ray fans willing to find any and every bit of proof to back up their purchase, it doesn't change the fact Blu-Ray can still end up as another dead-end in the format wars.
I am not reading 13 pages of back and forth so I don't know if this was addressed but claiming that Blu-Ray is the next generation format is like saying Laser Disc is the next generation format.
Look on the shelves. You see any *other* next generation format? No? Blu-Ray is it, right now. It might not be in the future, true, but you or I might win the lottery in the future - doesn't mean you should start hoping for *that*.
What happens if your harddrive crashes or has to be formatted? Oops, there go all those movies you paid for. Do you think the studios are just going to let you download them again for free?.
Question:Also, Laser Disc players were/are not backward-compatible with the previous format.
You previously owned DVDs play just fine (and can look better) on a Blu-Ray player.
As others have stated there are already more advanced formats in testing and can be out in only a few years, well before Blu-Ray has the chance to catch on mainstream like DVD has.
Just as Blu-Ray so far has been barely relevant. It's made an impact but a small one and by now we were told to expect a huge crater of an impact, what we've got instead is a small dent. If Blu-Ray can pull itself up to be the next format then we'll see it happen within a few years but I still find it a long ways from being a success at this stage.
If you want to buy blue-ray that's fine. But for me the movie or tv show alway's end the same way. So what does it matter if the picture is better or the sound is way superior. Unless your going blind or deaf. (it doesn't change the outcome of the movie.)I'm not going to waste my money not yet anyway.
Question:
Can region 3 DVD discs play on current (or future) region 1 Blu-ray disc players?
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