Basically just the title. With DVDs getting tossed to the wind it made me wonder when will blu-rays go? I’m gonna miss bloopers and extra scenes

Edit: A bit confused but the general consensus is that in some areas BRs have already began to be phased out while in others they’re just trucking along perfectly fine. It’ll be that way until they stop being profitable to the studios who make them. Is that correct? I don’t think the 8k argument is valid imo since that’s really niche currently.

  • wuphysics87@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    They are coming back like vinyl. Zoomers are realizing streaming plarforms can pull the plug

    • Saigonauticon@voltage.vn
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      10 months ago

      It occurs to me that I could totally put a short movie on a vinyl record. It would display “buffering” for quite a while though.

        • Saigonauticon@voltage.vn
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          10 months ago

          Sure – but at what resolution (analog signals have resolution too)? At what framerate? A vinyl should hold about 440MB of data (both sides, normal vinyl), with a read speed of 167 kilobytes per second.

          So actually… that’s less bad than I thought! You could probably get 240p video or better!

      • prole@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        The concept of vinyl still blows my mind… The fact that you can recreate every possible combination of sounds and etch it in grooves on a thin piece of plastic, then you can drag a needle across those grooves to hear the sound combinations again…

        How does a person even create something like that? It’s mind blowing.

        • Saigonauticon@voltage.vn
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          10 months ago

          I think it was done with wax cylinders first, somewhat earlier! So at least for vinyl, there was strong technological precedent.

          In the early days, it was quite a simple device! Sort of a cone to focus sound waves, with a membrane at the end attached to an engraver that carves wax. I bet it was quite hard to make those mechanical systems reliable, but I can sort of see how someone goes from “sound is a pressure wave in air” to that device!