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Blu-ray Hits Key Milestone Faster than Standard-Def

An anonymous reader writes "Slashdot has already reported on the go-go sales for the 'Casino Royale' Blu-ray on Amazon, but now comes news that the same Blu-ray disc is the first high-def disc to ship 100,000 units within the United States. It took standard-def DVD eleven months to reach that retail milestone (in 1998 with 'Air Force One'), but with 'Royale,' the nine-month old Blu-ray format now has done it two months faster."

10 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Great.... by FunkyELF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...I'll get a blu-ray player when I can easily rip the movies and do what I want with them including making standard def dvd backups, or transcode it for my video iPod.

    Right now I can do a lot with standard def DVDs fairly easily. I'll need that functionality before I buy into any HD format. To me that functionality is worth a lot more than the extra resolution.

  2. 9 Years Later by moore.dustin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Technology adoption has grown dramatically since that time. This is similar to the Vista outselling XP story. The truth is, since XP came out the PC market grew by a huge percentage, thus making the Vista sales claim bunk.

  3. Population growth stupidity by douglips · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This reminds me of all the whiners saying that in the 2000 US presidential election that Al Gore got more votes "than any president in history except Ronald Reagan".

    My response was that Ralph Nader got more votes than Abraham Lincoln.

  4. Depends on your definition of "Key" by Itchyeyes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If by key you mean some random arbitrary metric of the success of the format, then I suppose the title is accurate. If you mean a milestone with actual meaning, then I think the title is a little misleading.

  5. It's easy to ship when you're giving them away.. by WarwickRyan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... with each PS3 sold.

    All this says is that a number of PS3 owners have registered online for their 'free' disk.

    It's like Nintendo claiming to have won the console wars because of the 1-1 sales of Wii Sports..

  6. Accidental? by sexyrexy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Given that some disappointingly high percentage of people don't even know what the hell Blu-Ray or HD-DVD are, much less the difference or that they don't work in normal DVD players, how many of these orders were actually intended to be SD-DVD purchases?

    --

    Rex is 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  7. So what? I'm still not buying HD.... by ip_freely_2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ..until they get the Blu-Ray v. HD DVD settled. Or I can buy a player that supports both formats for about $200.

    Wake me up when that happens.

  8. Re:PS3 owners? by skitzophile · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I currently use a PS3 strictly for a BD player and it works quite well. I have the BD remote control that Sony sells and it functions like a normal play would. It even boots up faster than the standalone players. However, the true videophile would say that because the source of the movie is 24fps and the PS3 outputs 60fps that you're not getting the best picture available. I'm not so sure if I'm able to tell the difference myself. Here's an article from that explains a little bit more.

  9. Shiped but not Sold? by DeadboltX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This article states that Sony was GIVING AWAY 500,000 copies of Casino Royale on Blueray to the first 500,000 people to register their PS3 after the European launch of the PS3, which was on March 23rd.

    So how many people actually "bought" the movie?

  10. Re:IMO, don't rely on a Playstation to play movies by shaitand · · Score: 3, Insightful

    'Furthermore since it's online, any time Sony finds a bug, they can sneak the fix in with the next firmware update.'

    So what you are saying is that the moment someone finds out how to get around the anti-customer protections that prevent you from using the player to play backups Sony can slip in a 'fix' without your permission?

    Thanks but no thanks. I have a rather extensive movie collection and I take care of them. Discs are just too fragile, especially children's movies. I have a backup of each of my hundreds of discs and I have needed those backups numerous times. I also have a number of movies that I digitized from VHS and encoded to DVD. I'll pass on any player that I can't safely hack on without having to worry about repercussions from an anti-consumer vendor. Especially one like Sony that doesn't merely cater to the vile music and movie industries but is actually a part of both.