Blue Ray Versus HD DVD Players
I am sure that you are aware that Regular DVD players and Regular DVDs are no longer going to be made sold in stores. My family just bought a new HD DVD player for Christmas this last year. My dad told me, "Kevin, you can have the old DVD player for your room." The clarity of picture is a lot clearer on the HD DVD player than on the one in my room.
But now WalMart plans to discontinue these new HD DVD players already? Wow!
Just a year ago the plan was to have the regular DVD players were to be replaced with the new High Definition (HD) DVDs and HD DVD players that produce a clearer view. In fact, it was just as recently as April of 2007 that WalMart was excited to announce that they were ordering massive amounts of the new HD DVD players and offering them at prices lower than everywhere else. In one news article that I found with a quick search, the title was read as "Wal-Mart Names HD DVD the Winner" http://news.digitaltrends.com/talkback184.html
That was just last year!
Now, WalMart plans to totally discontinue all sales of the HD DVD by June 2008! So what happened? Walmart believes that the new Blu-ray DVDs and Blu-ray DVD players are going to be more popular than HD and will soon be what consumers want. In the news just on Feb 15th, I was reading a title that read... "Wal-Mart to officially discontinue HD DVD sales by June" http://www.engadget.com/2008/02/15/wal-mart-to-officially-discontinue-hd-dvd-sales-by-june/
Blu-ray technology is through an organization called "Blu-ray Disc Association" (BDA). They are an organization comprised of 9 leading electronic companies: Sony, Matsushita, Sharp, Samsung, Pioneer, Thomson, Philips, LG Electronics, and Hitachi. Their board members include other companies as well though, such as representatives from:
- Twentieth Century Fox
- Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group / Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
- Warner Home Video Inc.
- Sun Microsystems
- Apple Inc.
- Dell Inc.
- Hewlett-Packard Company
Informationweek news stated that "Wal-Mart's announcement was the latest major blow dealt to the Toshiba-backed HD DVD, which this month also lost the support of consumer electronics retailer Best Buy (NYSE: BBY) and online movie renter Netflix. Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, which accounts for 20% of DVD sales in the U.S., said last month it would ship all of its high-definition titles in Sony-backed Blu-ray by year's end."
How does Blu-ray technology work? I do not know exactly, but if you go to their site http://www.blu-raydisc.com/, you can see in their example that it is noticeably more clear of a picture than regular DVD. But HD is also a more clearn picture than regular DVD so who knows which one will be the standard in a few years? The Blu-ray technology uses a special blue-violet laser for reading and writing on the DVD disk, which uses a shorter wavelength (405 nm versus 650 on a regular DVD), thereby allowing way more data to be held on a a Blu-ray Disc than on the standard DVD.
My advice? Keep your current DVD player for now.













