| playnext3 said: i never played the wii but im plaining to buying one for my sister |
Buy Battalion Wars 2 for yourself so I can trounce you online.

| playnext3 said: i never played the wii but im plaining to buying one for my sister |
Buy Battalion Wars 2 for yourself so I can trounce you online.

| ahcheng said: Dream some more Sony.......... anyway PS3 is doomed |
Ahaha, I love Fanboys. Man, brighten my day I swear. They still think PS3 is doing horrible, which in fact it is doing wonderful even at the current price.
Anyways, to OP:
Yeah, I don't see Sony getting any money anytime soon from the PS3. Honestly, they really don't need too, they have a lot of hot products that they sell.
Everyone has played a Wii o.o well almost.
No price cut kind of saddens me, but oh well. MS is doing a good job with their Price Cutting I must say.
I agree that most people won't be downloading movies until it's the next hot thing.
There is definitely more to list that I want, but that's my main focus there.
blazinhead89 said:
Downloads are Compressed, blu-ray is Un-compressed, |
A hundred minute of uncompressed 16 million colors 1080p video at 30fps takes almost a terabyte, and that is WITHOUT any audio so I seriously doubt that blu-ray with its meager 50gb for a double layer disc is uncompressed.
The difference is blu-ray is compressed, downloadable HD movies are compressed more and thus more likely to have artifacts (assuming the same codec is used).
"I do not suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it"
| playnext3 said: i never played the wii but im plaining to buying one for my sister |
OMG so am i! Coincidence? I think not!
And of course hes played the wii...who hasnt?

Sri Lumpa said:
A hundred minute of uncompressed 16 million colors 1080p video at 30fps takes almost a terabyte, and that is WITHOUT any audio so I seriously doubt that blu-ray with its meager 50gb for a double layer disc is uncompressed. The difference is blu-ray is compressed, downloadable HD movies are compressed more and thus more likely to have artifacts (assuming the same codec is used). |
Yup. Higher compression is more prone to the video messing up and/or lose of quality.
Well I agree... DL is at the moment a thing of the future, at least until we are talking about the mass market ;)
Vote the Mayor for Mayor!
| ahcheng said: Dream some more Sony.......... anyway PS3 is doomed |
Thank you for being so openly trolly. Now you can cut that crap out. This is your only warning.
Galaki said:
Yup. Higher compression is more prone to the video messing up and/or lose of quality. |
and Blu-ray is 1080p native. I believe downloaded movies are 720p at best.
Thanks for the input, Jeff.
| Sardauk said: Some interesting input from the big chief at Sony (starts speaking about the Playstation at the middle of the article) : http://www.welt.de/english-news/article2358382/Future-of-Sony-Ericsson-uncertain.html "Have you every played with the Nintendo Wii, your rival's game console?" Stringer: Yes, I have. More seriously: - No price cut for the PS3 - Still losing money on the console (unlike the Wii) but catching up by selling games - Blue Ray remains the key differentiator vs Internet distribution "Another five to ten years will pass before people are downloading significant numbers of high-resolution films from the web. At the moment the quality doesn't even come close to that of a Blu-ray player." ... is Microsoft too optimistic with the full Web approach ? |
I think what stringer is missing is VOD technology.
That and a lot of people don't care about HD.
VOD tech is rapidly growing, and while some people will want hard copies. A lot however will move on.

When you took the helm, Sony consisted of a bundle of stubborn corporate divisions practised in resisting each other's advances. Is that a thing of the past?
Stringer: Not entirely, but the company has changed enormously. I adopted Sony United as the name of the mission, and everyone who works for us understands it now. Some pockets of resistance remain, however, in some areas.
What are the sticking points?
Stringer: I set the target, to be achieved by March 2011, of a product portfolio in which 90 percent of the devices will be capable of networking and connecting wirelessly. It's a tall order. Our engineers have to work across all our divisions in order to develop standards. This includes the consumer electronics division as well as the film and music production units. The younger employees don't have any problem with this approach, but as in any large company there are pockets of resistance. My rallying cry at the last management meeting was ‘Get mad, get mad when someone beats you!
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A lot has been written in Fortune and Forbes about how Sony's divisions want to basically compete against each other rather than working together. I like Stringer's approach of making the divisions work together and we're seeing it w/ the PS3: movie downloads (many will be from Sony pictures), Home's movie theatre, Home's streaming music, music video downloads in 2009 (Sony's music division) and from other interviews Stringer wants his HDTVs to have a little device attached that will enable customers with internet to download movies from Sony and skip the pay per view stuff altogether. It would make since, b/c Sony is also a movie company and therefore could get a fat profit margin off of the project.
With respect to the Ericsson, I dunno. Perhaps Sony can slowly buy out the partner. Also, the prices for the cellphones should be going down, as some new OLED displays which will be less power hungry, cheaper, and thinner thus more attractive, will make for more purchases of phones albeit for all manufacturers not just Sony's phones.