Updated 50 minutes ago

11300 products + 4866 members

High-definition News

Nine reasons not to buy a Blu-ray player this weekend

Alternatives that will make you think twice

August 22nd 2008 | Tell us what you think [ 3 comments ]

blu-ray-disc

Do you really want to buy your favourite movies all over again?

ZoomZoom

<>

You'd be forgiven for thinking that if you don't bag yourself a Blu-ray player immediately, you don't deserve a place in civilised society. But before you succumb to the marketing pressure, we reckon there are a few alternatives you might want to consider.

1. DVD upscaling is great

After a fairly uninspiring start, at least at the budget end, DVD upscaling is finally finding its feet. If you have no idea what we're babbling about, upscaling is simply the ability to turn ordinary 576-line DVDs into 720- or 1080-line 'high definition' pictures better suited to today's flat TVs.

When done well, upscaling really can make a difference to your DVD picture quality. Sure, the results aren't up to a good 'true' HD picture, but it's a great way to bide your time until Blu-ray hits its stride.

2. You won't need to buy your favourite movies all over again

If you've amassed a sizeable DVD collection, the idea of replacing them with new Blu-ray versions is almost unbearable. Especially if it seems like yesterday that you were replacing your old videotapes...

3. Downloading is exploding

Chris Lewis, Vice President of Microsoft Interactive Entertainment for Europe, recently said: "Before very long we will look back wistfully at shiny discs as something that was somewhat a historic phenomenon in a way that we kind of think about vinyl or VCRs today."

The reason he said this is because of his company's confidence that sooner rather than later we'll be downloading films and telly shows from the internet. And with the speed of internet connections growing ever faster and hard drives getting ever bigger, he might just be right.

4. Satellite HD is on the up

Sky Digital currently offers an HD broadcasting service offering more than 20 HD channels taking in documentaries, live theatre performances, quality dramas and comedies, and movies galore.

There's arguably enough HD content from Sky now to spend the majority of your TV time enjoying HD rather than scowling at standard definition. And there are more HD channels on the way.

Sky is no longer the only HD broadcasting 'fruit', either. Freesat can now be enjoyed without any subscriptions, and this currently carries two HD channels: BBC HD and ITV HD.

5. You'll save money to spend on other things

In these hard times, money matters. So the cheapest decent Blu-ray player will cost around £160 while the cheapest decent upscaling DVD players can be as little as £30. Blu-ray discs also cost way more than DVDs – anywhere between £18-25 versus prices that top out at £15 and go as low as £5.

Let's not forget, either, that you can 'order' Sky Box Office HD movies for as little as £2 for a week's 'ownership', sign up for Sky HD for just £10 a month, or download HD movies from Xbox Live for under £4. All of which look cheap compared with shelling out £20 a time for a single Blu-ray film.

6. Rumours of HD DVD's death have been greatly exaggerated

OK, yes, it's true that no new HD DVD titles are being pressed. But you can still pick up HD DVD films for as little as £3.99 and not straight to video, Z-list rubbish either. A quick glance at play.com finds the likes of Atonement, Batman Begins, American Gangster, Blade Runner and the Harry Potter movies, so you can bag hours of quality HD movies on a disc for less than you'd spend on a portion of fish and chips.

As for the HD DVD players you need to play the HD DVD discs on? There are tons on eBay for usually well under £100.

 

Your comments (3) Click to add a new comment

damoxuk

August 24th 2008

3. Man what a crock Article. Downlaods are the future say Microsoft of course they do. thye lost the HD Disc war. Besides the size of Full HD downloads comparable to detail of Blu-Rays? Unlikely unless you wanna download 20gb films.

Besides you fail to mention what use are FASTER internet speeds, what use are bigger Hard Disks if ISP just have Bandwidth caps? It's like getting a Ferarri from an old Lada and finding out oh sorry you can only use £50 worth of petrol or it'll stop working or it'll slow to 10mph.

Alert a moderator

redrog

August 23rd 2008

2. Having replaced some of my "old" DVD's with Blue-Ray discs I can't agree with your comments at all.It's like watching a new version such is the clarity and detail.As for price,I have been getting Blue-Ray discs for £9.95 ( DVD.co ).Don't upscale,Blue-Ray it !!

Alert a moderator

uncleook

August 23rd 2008

1. This only needs to be a one entry list:

Reasons not to buy Blu-Ray:

1. You enjoy mediocrity.

Mark

Alert a moderator

Tell us what you think

You need to Log in or register to post comments

By submitting this form you agree to our Terms of Use and so are legally responsible for anything you submit. DO NOT submit anything which may violate the Terms of Use or another person's rights including copyrighted or offensive materials.

Download the Flash plugin