Quote:
Originally Posted by just john
Thats a good point actually, I think blu ray itself will be better, it will have better games etc. but sony have fucked up so fucking much, people wont be interested anyway. Have you heard that the PS3 has no vibration anymore? apparently "Gamers will soon forget" "When they see the dirt pixels it'll feel like the really are off road anyway"
That is a mixture of patronising and insulting at the same time. If the 360 wasn't so shit (as far as games go) I wouldnt buy the PS3
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The funny thing is, how far back this goes. Do you know why powerlines use AC? Ben Franklin knew how to market. DC is better, except in the respect that if youe grab something and are electrocuted, you won't let go. AC, your muscles experience alternating signals to pull and push. You will likely let go, increasing survivability.
Ben Franklin coined the term Westinghoused, or something to that effect, marketing it based on the name of the people who were making electric chairs. Well, nobody wanted to be westinghoused, which not only pushed for AC, but also hurt Westing House's business.
The superior technology doesn't win, the superior marketing wins. Microsoft and other HD supporters have a GREAT propaganda campaign going, not to mention the best piece of marketing on their side (Note I don't include Toshiba, as I'm yet to see them actually try to slur or slander Blu-Ray), because people will go for the familiar. Sony's running a PR campaign as well, but it's mostly on technical specs which common people aren't going to understand. Not to mention the fact that many of the differences are only noticable on higher end TVs (and large ones, too).
Sony's marketing appears to be about on the level they did for UMD.
Of course, the real loser is the consumer. Many people on this site are probably too young to remember the last proper format war, but you ended up with exclusives on both sides, stores which only stocked one or the other, and people didn't adopt either because of the hassle.
BTW, the PS3 really doesn't have that good a library of exclusives right now, and if Blu Ray loses in the format wars, the BR format might not be cost-effective to continue mainstream manufacture. So if you're banking on its dominance still, I'd be cautious.
Just remember, not everything that's "better" wins.
I'd bet on HD taking the market, primarily because I think the average Joe will enjoy the price hundreds less than the Blu Ray (Toshiba's claiming they'll have models at a 300 or 400 price point by the Holidays) with cheaper movies, and it's still called DVD, which is going to make a pretty big difference in and of itself.
Nobody wants to be westinghoused, john.