For a listen or two, until the needle starts to gouge them apart.Yes. When I am old, I very likely wont be able to listen to my Audio CDs. But my Vinyls from the 80s will still work like a charm.
Blu-ray licensing forbids SD-only releases.
Really? I didn't know that. Can you give a link to any further info on this? (Google fu turned up nothing.)
Blu-ray licensing forbids SD-only releases.
Really? I didn't know that. Can you give a link to any further info on this? (Google fu turned up nothing.)
Naw, I don't think so. It certainly has nothing to do licensing. It would be part of the technical specifications, not licensing per-say.
480i is an allowed resolution, according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc#Video
Many BD releases port over the previous DVD bonus content and it's stored as 480i just as it was on DVD.
Of course for marketing, a company would never release a main feature as 480i, even if all they did was upscale it before hand, it would still be stored as 1080p to simply make a marketing buzz word.
Dvds are part of the problem, they actually will likely not outlast many of their owners, estimates vary from 20 to 60 years.Wouldn't a small nuclear exchange need to take out every DVD on the planet?!
Its about preservation for 100 or 1000 years. Bit of an issue for digital media.
Yes. When I am old, I very likely wont be able to listen to my Audio CDs. But my Vinyls from the 80s will still work like a charm.
I don't believe there are technological issues preventing Disney from outputting Toy Story to film so that it can rest alongside Citizen Kane.Exactly. The same applies to film, currently Citizen Kane will outlast Toy Story.
I don't believe there are technological issues preventing Disney from outputting Toy Story to film so that it can rest alongside Citizen Kane.Exactly. The same applies to film, currently Citizen Kane will outlast Toy Story.
But being on film is no guarantee of longevity, and there are a distressing number of films you and I will never have the opportunity to see because they've been lost to posterity.
Exactly.Really? I didn't know that. Can you give a link to any further info on this? (Google fu turned up nothing.)
Naw, I don't think so. It certainly has nothing to do licensing. It would be part of the technical specifications, not licensing per-say.
480i is an allowed resolution, according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blu-ray_Disc#Video
Many BD releases port over the previous DVD bonus content and it's stored as 480i just as it was on DVD.
Of course for marketing, a company would never release a main feature as 480i, even if all they did was upscale it before hand, it would still be stored as 1080p to simply make a marketing buzz word.
I think the point that was being made is that BD releases cannot be SD-only. That's not to say that they can't include any SD content, but that a BD release must contain some HD content.
This is what makes it a licensing issue, rather than technical. BD, at its core, is just a storage medium just like a CD, DVD or even magnetic tape. So, BD is capable of storing pretty much any digital content you'd like, but to license BD for a home video release it must contain HD content.
There have been some problems. Not universal - the discs in question were poorly manufactured - but if the substrate breaks down, the same world happen to other discs: http://cdrot.com/info/why-are-cd-rotting-how-it-happens/I know hard drives fail. There are moving parts, etc. But has anyone had a CD or DVD die specifically because of age? Scratches, yes. Corrupted, yes. But life span? Is it that they will certainly die at some point, or they are not guaranteed past a certain amount of time? Because the former is certainly different than the latter. CDs have been around for a long time now so some of them should be scooting past their shelf lives at this point, no?
Rewritable DVDs are a different technology from pressed (mass-manufactured) DVDs, though. DVD±RW are less reliable than DVD±R, which are MUCH less reliable than DVD-ROMs (and even within the technologies, there are variances depending on manufacturers and so on).I don't know...I was recently trying to create a Win 7 install disc using rewritable DVDs I purchased a few years back (less than a decade, anyhow) and every single one of them failed to verify. Some I'd used before for other things, some I likely hadn't used, but when I tried burning to a new disc I had no problems.
What do you think film, LPs, and audio/video tapes are made of?Well, the material of CDs and DVDs just rotts slowly. The plastic gets dry and fragile...
If it comes to long term accessablity, analog media is still the way to go.
What do you think film, LPs, and audio/video tapes are made of?
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Where can I find some 200 year old vinyl?Well, LP's are made of Vinyl and can last a thousand years if cared for properly.
I'll let ya know sometime around 2132: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LP_recordWhere can I find some 200 year old vinyl?Well, LP's are made of Vinyl and can last a thousand years if cared for properly.
I think the VOY fans are probably following along in this thread.I find it funny how there seems to be next to zero interest on VOY getting on Bluray release. There is not much of any demand from even Trek fans!![]()
Nothing lasts forever. If we want proven longevity, we have to transcribe film scripts onto cuneiform clay tablets.But being on film is no guarantee of longevity, and there are a distressing number of films you and I will never have the opportunity to see because they've been lost to posterity.
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What do you think film, LPs, and audio/video tapes are made of?
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Well, LP's are made of Vinyl and can last a thousand years if cared for properly.
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