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High-Def Format Wars - Battle of the Freebies

An anonymous reader writes "It's come to this: eager to introduce the masses to the virtues of the next-gen DVD formats, the studios and manufacturers backing HD DVD and Blu-ray have begun giving discs away. It all started last month when Microsoft pacted with Universal to give away copies of 'King Kong' on HD DVD to consumers buying the XBox 360 HD DVD add on. Sony followed that up by offering a free 'Talladega Nights' Blu-ray with the first 500,000 PlayStation 3 units sold in the U.S.. Now today, HD DVD backer Toshiba has announced that it will give away *three* free HD DVD discs with every player sold for four months beginning on November 1st. With all these freebies, more people will likely have received free HD DVD/Blu-ray discs by the end of 2006 than will have actually paid for them."

17 of 212 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Talladega Nights for the win by interiot · · Score: 3, Funny

    HD-DVD Jon will save us... maybe it will take a ten line perl program this time.

  2. Free Movies by Ucklak · · Score: 4, Informative

    I remember when I paid $199 for my Toshiba DVD player way back when, there was a free movie signup as well.
    Lost in Space, Stargate, and Six Days Seven Nights were included.

    --
    if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
  3. Jee-zus! by rk · · Score: 4, Funny

    First the rootkit, then the PS3, and now giving away "Talladega Nights"... why does Sony hate us so?

  4. Shovelware by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reminds me of the time I bought a Pentium computer in the mid 1990s that came with a foot-high stack of CD-ROMs. It was a nice attempt at an intro to the possibilities of the new format, but there were only so many different versions of "Virtual Rock Gardening," "Compton's Interactive Encephalopathy," "Mavis Beacon Teachs Self-Neutering," and "The Adventures of Poorly-Rendered Cutscene Man" I could really get any use out of.

  5. Bring on the Freebies by steve-o-yeah · · Score: 3, Funny

    With all these free discs floating around, I'm reminded of the AOL days. AOL supplied a generation of bored youngsters with hours of microwaving, shattering and throwing AOL media. Someday kids will remember the "good old days" when Billy knocked out Timmy's tooth with a Blu-ray and when mom made them scrub out the microwave to get all the HD goo off the sides.

    --
    I hate the term 'Sig'.
  6. Re:Talladega Nights for the win by Stripe7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I doubt if it makes too much of a difference to their bottom lines, they can either give those movies away or let them sit on store shelves unsold.

  7. Thinking ahead by Control+Group · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sony followed that up by offering a free 'Talladega Nights' Blu-ray with the first 500,000 PlayStation 3 units sold in the U.S..

    Given their production rates, I expect that promotion to last through 2007... ...and here I thought corporations only focused on the short-term.

    --

    Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
  8. That's great ... by Hobart · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...but I'm more likely to be swayed by the first company to offer me a break on a display that can even view this high-def content ...

    As far as I can tell in a cursory glance over the net, the cheapest "TV-sized" display that will do 1080P with HDMI is the Westinghouse for $1100 shipped, and the cheapest panel is $800 for some 24" display ...

    That means I'm spending around $1500 for this "experience" they're peddling, all told. Sell me the display for $400 and we can talk. :-)

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  9. Re:Oh the silliness of consumer marketing. by Mikya · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Simple reasoning would tell us that you're an idiot. Just because the technology is similiar does not mean the units should have the same price. Further more I do remember when DVD players were 500 dollars a pop. It was nearly ten years ago when the technology was new. It's only now that they're 25 dollars. I wouldn't be suprised if in 2015 we're buying HD or BluRay drives for $50.

  10. How high-def do we need? by multipartmixed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I still watch TV on 27" JVC TV I purchased in 1995. I think it looks great. The picture was awesome the day I bought it, and the picture is still great today.

    I watch TV on Bell ExpressVu (Canadian Dish Network), rent the odd DVD, and watch the occasional torrent movie or TV show I missed.

    You know what? I think it looks great. Of course, I sit six or eight feet back from the TV.

    I am really missing anything? The new TVs in the stores look fine, but every time I visit a friend who has an enormous screen, I can't help but think "Man, those guys look all blocky and stretched" when Hockey Night in Canada is on.

    I mean, WTF?

    --

    Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
    1. Re:How high-def do we need? by Control+Group · · Score: 3, Informative

      I can't help but think "Man, those guys look all blocky and stretched" when Hockey Night in Canada is on.

      That's the magic of HD. SD sports on a big screen (like my 50") are blocky and stretched. Sports in HD on a 50" screen, though, make me wonder how I ever watched sports in SD. The aspect ratio alone, which allows you to see more of the field at once, is worth the price of admission.

      For me, at least, the leap from SD to HD when watching sports is literally equivalent to the leap from VHS in EP to progressive scan DVD. It's just plain better.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
  11. Re:Oh the silliness of consumer marketing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Simple reasoning? I guess this is the excuss you give when you have no facts to back what you say. When DVD players cost $500 there build cost was still much higher than $25-50 prices come down when volumes go up, also when the chinese start making knock off units which dont have to recover the R&D costs. Consumers all want new technology at build cost and then complain about outsourcing to india and that it broke after 3 movies. Forget your reasoning and learn some facts.

  12. Re:Talladega Nights for the win by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm just wondering why they think Talladega Nights is a good showpiece for Blu-Ray technology. King Kong makes sense as the visuals are a big part of the movie. But a comedy? I'm not getting the logic.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  13. Re:Talladega Nights for the win by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Funny

    Maybe that last Star Trek movie that Shatner directed... what was that one again? The Undiscovered Country? Yeah... that'll sell some DVD players!

    Blasphemy!! How dare you confuse such a thing!!

    Shatner did NOT direct The Undiscovered Country (ST VI), which was a great movie. He directed The Final Frontier (ST V), which was so horrifically bad that many ST fans consider it to not have happened.

  14. Re:Just like your first HIGH!!!!! by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    DVD works for me. Besides. Hollywierd will maybe put out 1 movie a year worth buying anyways. Everything else worth buying has been out for years.

    Strangely enough, it seems that most of my TV/DVD-watching time is now spent watching TV show discs, instead of movies: Battlestar Galactica, Lost, Firefly, 4400, etc. There's a lot of great stuff coming out on TV while the latest movies aren't that great. We may even get to the point where TV shows just get released straight-to-DVD since TV execs are so incredibly stupid that they sometimes cancel the best shows (Firefly) in their first season.

  15. Re:Big plasma and lcd screens are crap by dogbowl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you play an 8-track on the nicest stereo system in the world, its still going to sound like "shite"

    --

    These pretzels are making me thirsty.
  16. Re:Talladega Nights for the win by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Funny
    It takes 10 lines of VB just to declare that you are using VB!!

    Couldn't you just bang on your helmet and lick the window?

    --
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