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Thursday November 27, 2008

Blu-ray

It's been a long time coming, but I finally got a Blu-ray DVD player. I was psyched when I first heard about the new high-definition DVD's that were planned. But then Sony introduced one standard and a competing standard called HD DVD was being developed too. So there was a long format war with studios lining up on different (sometimes both) sides. Buy the wrong technology and you'd be stuck with a dinosaur. That's ultimately what happened to those early adopters who bought the lower tech, more affordable HD DVD players.



But even after the format war ended early this year, Blu-ray players were expensive, about $400. You could just buy a Playstation 3 which could play Blu-ray discs for about the same price. I kept shopping and waiting for the prices to come down. I think the weak dollar over the summer kept that from happening as quickly, but now the recession and a stronger dollar have worked their magic. Fry's had an ad the day before Thanksgiving for a Panasonic player for less than $200. That's a pretty good price point, plus they had a great special on memory for my laptop so that I was able to upgrade from 2 GB to 4 GB for only $20. And since they were offering a 2 GB SD card for 99 cents after a $5 rebate, I got one of those too. I should have done more research on this particular player, but Fry's doesn't tell you in the ad what model it is. It turns out it is a DMP-BD30, a model introduced last year, but one that got good reviews on Amazon.

Last night I went to Hollywood Video and rented a Blu-ray disc to try out the new player. I rented No Country for Old Men which I had been putting off seeing due to the violence and murky ending (still a good movie). It was a good one to try out Blu-ray since the Coen brothers make such nice-looking movies. It was a very simple matter of disconnecting the old DVD player and connecting the new one. Since the old one was a Panasonic as well, I didn't even have to change the settings on my universal remote control.

But Hollywood Video charges an arm and a leg for Blu-ray movies. This one was over six dollars I think. So I went ahead and signed up for Netflix who charge one dollar extra per month if you want Blu-ray movies. I'll probably do Netflix for a couple of months, though I should have waited and signed up first thing Friday morning since they won't be shipping today anyway.

Happy Thanksgiving!!!

Comments (3)

I'd be interested to hear how you like renting the Blu-ray discs from Netflix. We have Netflix but not a Blu-ray player.

The DVD player we have, though, is a dinosaur, and it's only a matter of time ...

So far so good. They don't have nearly everything on Blu-ray, but the newer blockbusters are usually available. I watched this year's Indiana Jones movie tonight (really mediocre), Transsiberian Sunday, and Bee Movie Saturday. The other two were fine, this one had a little pixellation a couple of times, but nothing bad. The picture is definitely better, but still can't make a bad movie good.

Blu-ray is more intimidating than I thought. I think at first I wasn't even really seeing true high definition because I couldn't find where to tell the player that I wanted to see 1080i high def (the most my TV will support) and it was set to 480p by default.

But then, until last night, I wasn't getting all of the sound either. It didn't seem like I was getting surround sound, but on a lot of movies surround sound isn't that noticeable anyway. So I did some research online and found out that this model doesn't actually deal with new advanced Blu-ray sound schemes (Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD as opposed to Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS on regular DVD's) and instead passes encoded audio to the receiver to deal with. Since my receiver is a couple of years old, it can't deal with that. So instead the player was outputting stereo. Now I've got it where the Blu-ray player sends out older sound formats to the receiver which it can translate. And I think the player will translate the newer formats into the older formats which would be okay. The best thing would be for it to send out 6- or 8-channel sound to the receiver in analog so that the receiver would just send that to the 8 speakers (7 speakers and a subwoofer). Some players do that, but not this one. That's what I get for not doing more research beforehand.

Lastly, my research also told me I should download firmware upgrades. You download a big file on your computer, then extract it, then burn it to a CD-R. When you put the CD-R in the Blu-ray player it recognizes that it is a firmware upgrade and does the installation from there. So I had been on v2.1, but now I am up to v2.5. There are newer Blu-ray standards that I will never be able to implement, like BD Live where a DVD can get online content. Since my player doesn't connect to the internet on its own, that just isn't going to happen. That is part of Blu-ray Profile 2.0 and this player is 1.1 compliant.

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