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Author Topic: Did Blu-ray score a goal in its own net with BDplus?  (Read 95 times)

zest

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Did Blu-ray score a goal in its own net with BDplus?
« on: October 04, 2007, 12:42:00 AM »

Yes this IS a score in its own net for sure. Im for one would be realy pissed if my discs would not work in my bluray player and i had to wait for a firmware upgrade.
I do not understand this. Well Accualy i do. If Sony can show there clients that "Hey guys our protection is the best, chose us" then of coz more companies will favor BR over HD-DVD. The thing is that it WILL be cracked anyway and the movies will be spread.
Get this for ONCE: Lower the price on the discs, let ppl take control over there material a.k.a if i want to make a  backup copy of Donald Duck coz i know that my kids will scratz the disc after 10times in the player let me do that if i want!
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twistedsymphony

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Did Blu-ray score a goal in its own net with BDplus?
« Reply #1 on: October 04, 2007, 08:46:00 AM »

I agree with you, however the bean counters that make these decisions are so far removed from reality that it will be a very long time before we see DRM disappearing.

They see it more like a lock on your home to protect from buglers rather than the lock on your CD cabinet to protect you from yourself, that is it.

It would seem that DRM-Free music downloads are starting to take hold. A few record labels have realized that people like downloads for the convenience and that convenience  is lost when DRM is involved. The price of music downloads is low enough to act as a test bed too.

There are a few DRM free stores, Apple is starting to offer it and MS's Zune store will have DRM-free music as well. A few notable PC games have gone DRM free as well. If music goes whole hog-DRM free then maybe there is hope yet for movies... I wouldn't hold my breath on games though.
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throwingks

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Did Blu-ray score a goal in its own net with BDplus?
« Reply #2 on: October 04, 2007, 11:17:00 AM »

QUOTE(twistedsymphony @ Oct 4 2007, 11:22 AM) View Post
There are a few DRM free stores, Apple is starting to offer it and MS's Zune store will have DRM-free music as well. A few notable PC games have gone DRM free as well. If music goes whole hog-DRM free then maybe there is hope yet for movies... I wouldn't hold my breath on games though.
I know this is for an entirely different topic, but I don't think games should be DRM free, until they are 2 generations old. PS1 and N64 ROMs should be DRM free, and free to distribute. Maybe new games should be DRM free for single player, but not for multiplayer.

Musicians should make their money from their shows (Concerts, TV appearances, etc.), not their demo disks. And, movies should make their money from their shows, (Theater, TV, public viewings, etc.). If money is to be made at a memorabilia store for either, it should be from the added values (Art, books, posters, etc.) DRM is stupid, because it defeats the purpose of demoing their stuff. People cannot even put the song or movie they own in multiple formats. Why would an artist limit their ability to be seen and heard? Less publicity equals less ticket sales. *See Trent Reznor's and Radiohead's latest albums.

Games are not the demo, it is the content. If there were gaming theaters or game concerts, that would be different. Games are not there to relive the moment, they are supposed to be the moment.
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