keep in mind that HD DVD has Better Quality than Blue-Ray
Every review I have read comparing the same movie in both formats says the HD DVD is better quality. If you look at the Dolby web site, the Audio specs are much better with HD DVD than Blue Ray. Also, last month, the #1 selling DVD player on Amazon was the Toshiba HD-A2
Blue Ray uses MPEG2 for Video, that is NOT as good as the VC-1 that HD DVD uses for video
Detroit - I'm not sure why you turned a question about HD DVD into your personal pedalstal to spout lies about Blu-ray. If that's what you want to do, then I will happily hand your *** to you...
1. From day one, Blu-ray has delivered uncompress, lossless audio on way more titles than HD DVD has ever managed. It continues to do so on a regular basis. Blu-ray audio, on average, is superior than HD DVD.
2. Dual format studios have been mastering for the lowest common denominator. This means HD DVD, then transferring to Blu-ray. Studios which have stepped up and mastered for both Blu-ray and HD DVD separately (Paramount I believe) have shown as good, or better results on the Blu-ray title. If studios were really mastering for Blu-ray instead of HD DVD, you would see audio quality cut, extras removed, and video bit rates lowered to allow the film to fit on a 30GB disc. This is a studio decsion, not format specific.
3. VC-1 is superior to nothing if the bitrates and headroom is available and utilized properly. MPEG2, VC-1, and AVC have all shown incredible results on Blu-ray, while VC-1
must be used on HD DVD due to the lack of space.
4. Since inception, not one Blu-ray supporting studio has gone neutral or switched sides. Paramount and WB both went neutral before launch towards Blu-ray and in this last week a couple of foreign distributors ... maybe even more, have announced support for Blu-ray after being HD DVD exclusive.
5. This week, Target, BJs Warehouse, and Woolworth all announced that they would exclusively be carrying Blu-ray in their stores.
While you can talk about image quality all you want, when viewing all discs available on both formats, and taking their results as an average, Blu-ray and HD DVD produce nearly identical results... But, at the end of this year, Blu-ray will still have Disney, Fox, and Sony studios exclusively, while HD DVD will only have Universal exclusive.
So please, don't make HD DVD out to be more than it is, or better than it is. It is a very good looking format which has no other company, besides Toshiba, making HD DVD only stand alone players, and it has one exclusive studio that is rumored to be under exclusive contract only until the end of this year.
The only thing HD DVD really has is price, and when Toshiba subsidizes players, it is an artifical price which has locked out other manufacturers.
Want proof of price?
Samsung has a Blu-ray player that is $600 right now.
Later this year they will have a dual format player and it adds $450.00 to the price of their entire Blu-ray player to add HD DVD. That's $450 for just the technology to run HD DVD, not the cost of the case, electronics, etc. HD DVD costs no less to manufacture than Blu-ray, Toshiba is simply willing to subsidize to gain market share.
But, what happens in two years when Blu-ray players hit $120 and HD DVD players are $100? Do you think consumers will give up 40% of the studios just to save 20 bucks? They aren't doing it now, and they won't be doing it then.