Bluray is a useless format
When the battle between HD DVD and Blu-ray was over and the dust has settled, it was bluray has stepped forward as the winner. But the question is if the format really is doomed to be a loser?
Bluray was supposed to replace the DVD, which many believe has outlived its usefulness because space is limited to 7.8 GB. There is too little to make room for a high-definition movies. Now afterwards, it has been shown that the average consumer is satisfied with the quality of the DVD, and are not interested in buying new gadgets to get a better picture and sound.
One of the main reasons why bluray is not passed through the price tags. As consumers have had no motivation to buy a player, output has not taken off and pricing has not changed. A Blu-ray players for home theater is a couple hundred dollars and the movies cost a lot more than DVD movies. Add to that the fact that the supply is extremely limited.
But it’s not just in the living room that Bluray would come through. Even in computers, it has been time to replace the DVD in a format that can hold more. Sure sold the computers with Blu-ray players, and there are external drives to buy. A Blu-ray disc can hold 25 GB or 50 GB (Dual Layer), which is much higher than DVD. But is it enough?
When do you actually burn a Blu-ray disc? For backup, it feels completely pointless, because it is clearly easier and cheaper to get an external hard drive and backup to it.Again, the price tags into the picture. Calcination Only Blu-ray discs, called BD-R, is expensive. At regular intervals, experts say that prices will drop as fast production speeds up, but it does apparently not.
If you look at PriceSpy can find price information on the BD-R discs in just over 30 dollars. These seem to be promotional prices at some stores, and they are not in stock. The correct prices are rather at least double that. Should you buy a BD-R disc today, it costs from $ 60 and up. The “cheapest” you get if you buy a spider with ten or more disks.
These prices are 25 GB versions. Do you want to burn to BD-R discs with a capacity of 50 GB, you pröjsa from over 200 SEK and up. When you burn this disc, you really keep my fingers crossed that they do not suffer from bränningsfel and may throw the disc …
The question is whether these plastic discs not had its day? I’m pretty confident about it. Today I can not see any room for Bluray, not for home cinema or in your computer.It is too expensive and – well – for the pointless.
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