I'm not a true DVD professional like most on this list. I'm a small time
guy
transferring film and memories to DVD.
My humble opinion is that in 5 years or less, the internet will dominate
the
market and the need for physical media will be gone.
No more discs or players.
Record stores today have rare and impossible to find albums which are sure
to be collector items (nostalgia, artwork i.e. Zep, Dead). A But DVD and BD
are all too new. A To be blunt, coasters.
Movies, artwork and music. A All will be digital.
The question is how will you store it? A Cloud Storage?
Then how do you take advantage of the new "hyperspace realm"? A We can
shoot,
and edit, but then what?
The mass market will have to be re-evaluated as far as pricing goes. A No
more physical duplication and mass production as we know it.
Would love to hear rebuttals on this.
But try not to be too wordy.
Best regards,
Stanislav
Stanislav
Kosev
Insight Vision.Biz Ltd 'We Keep Our Promises'
> Short videos on my iPhone now and again. Usually because a friend or
ReplyDelete> colleague suggests it.
>
> I watch TV programs streaming from NetFlix or elsewhere on my wife's 13"
> laptop.
>
> Most of the time now I watch streaming SD or HD films from NetFlix and
> iTunes
> on my 30" computer monitor. Sometimes I watch DVDs there as well.
>
> We have a BluRay player in our living room, but I have not watched a BluRay
> disk on it yet, only DVDs.
>
> James
Still chumming the waters I see . . . .
DeleteWhat's the point here Mike? You just keep
Rephrasing the insults in new forms of a
Question. All technologies have a lifespan.
And why are you asking about 3D TV on here?
Why not find a nice list that pertains to
your train of thought instead of always
asking or telling us why Optical Discs
will fail or are inferior to online
deliveries.