Inevitably when people start arguing about the HD format war someone ends up screaming something to the effect of "well it doesn't really matter because online distribution is going to supersede both formats." Does anyone else besides me think that this is a really dumb argument?
The fact is that all of the distributed HD content that I have seen whether it be via cable, over-the-air, satellite, or Internet all suffers from the same glaring problem that nobody seems to mention - compression artifacts. Watch an HD program from your favorite distribution channel and tell me you don't see clunky, blocky, pixellated sections throughout the program. That's because the content providers compress the crap out of the film so it can fit down their thin data channel.
In order to get really great perceptually lossless quality you have to dial down the compression and increase the file size of a movie to about 20 - 25 GB. And unless you have fiber running into your home you probably can't dependably sustain a download of that size in real time.
So until they somehow fix the bandwidth problem which seems to me to be a ways off - downloadable content just doesn't seem to be a viable option and physical media like Blu-Ray or HD-DVD (or HVD for that matter) seems to be the only option.
And besides - doesn't it seem easier to store disks than to keep adding more hard drives? I just don't see why anyone would be interested in downloadable movies.
The fact is that all of the distributed HD content that I have seen whether it be via cable, over-the-air, satellite, or Internet all suffers from the same glaring problem that nobody seems to mention - compression artifacts. Watch an HD program from your favorite distribution channel and tell me you don't see clunky, blocky, pixellated sections throughout the program. That's because the content providers compress the crap out of the film so it can fit down their thin data channel.
In order to get really great perceptually lossless quality you have to dial down the compression and increase the file size of a movie to about 20 - 25 GB. And unless you have fiber running into your home you probably can't dependably sustain a download of that size in real time.
So until they somehow fix the bandwidth problem which seems to me to be a ways off - downloadable content just doesn't seem to be a viable option and physical media like Blu-Ray or HD-DVD (or HVD for that matter) seems to be the only option.
And besides - doesn't it seem easier to store disks than to keep adding more hard drives? I just don't see why anyone would be interested in downloadable movies.