An audience at this point primarily of film buffs or videophiles, who are typically willing to pay top dollar for a film on physical media for a film that they "should" own.
And that answer more or less confirms the difference between mine and the seemingly broad base of opinion here. In that it's apathy of those people who aren't all that into high quality audio and video quality. But I forget that this forum isn't a Blu-ray, or even a DVD forum, but a forum of Star Trek and syfy nerds who would rather stream a 2 GB SD pseudo HD version of their entertainment with lossy sound.
I don't think anyone is arguing Blu is immediately going anywhere as a niche product, but it has little future as a mainstream one. In the UK for example according to this month's empire DVD still outsells Blu 7 to 1.
Niche product, huh? DVD in the UK outsells BD 7:1, eh? Sounds like a personal problem to me. So do people in the UK not give a shit about quality? I don't think I've watched a DVD since I upgraded to BD in '09. Once you get used to BD, DVD looks like ass.
[/quote]If you mean "ultimately most people care more about an extra five quid than high definition" or "people like the convenience and low cost of Netflix etc. over the tiny boost in quality for blu ray" - then yes.[/quote]
Tiny boost? Lossless audio vs lossy...true full 25-30 Mbps 1080p video over whatever streaming can manage. Oh, about cost...what's the average cost of a new release movie title on BD in the UK? In the US a 3D BD is usually under $25...for 2D releases under $20. And sometime after release date, they drop to $15 or so. That said, I have no idea what a Quid is.
You talk like people are obliged to like Blu, they aren't and by and large they don't. As you have said yourself its called competition.
I'm not saying anyone is obligated to buy anything. But hat I am saying is that if you want DS9 remastered ala TNG and on BD, and the overall BD market isn't good, say in your region, then you only have apathetic people to blame for the lack of DS9 on BD.
Question though...how many people have HDTVs in the UK? Is it a widespread norm by now, or is it still a niche with a lot of people still using old SD CRTs? And if so, are they large screens greater than 42"?
I ask, because on the Blu-ray.com forum, excitement for 4K UHBD is growing. Why? Because quality counts and people care.
Yeah, you see the thing is, not everyone thinks that. Plus you already lost your argument before you even started so bonus internetz dude
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law
Well, I don't know about you, but I don't want the government anywhere near the media. Ever heard of the Free Press? Our First Amendment pretty much makes a government funded or ran news organization illegal. If a organization can't sustain itself thru advertising dollars then it doesn't need to be on the air. For example, Al Gore's liberal radio network "Air America" went bankrupt twice, then made it into Current TV, which then also failed, and then he had to eventually sell it to Qatar and it got swept up into what is now Al Jazeera - America. So Mr. Global Warming sold his network to a Big Oil producing country and made a lot of money off the sale.