So. Many of you know that I feel that Blu-ray is the superior technology, b/c I am a believer that one is allowed to do more, when there is more space to use. Parkinson's Law clearly states "Data expands to fill the space available for storage." I got this term from my sociology textbook and it meant something completely different, but when I searched it online I was surprised to find the exact definition I had been hoping to get.
Will someone please tell me why HDDVD is better than Blu-ray, or vice versa. What are the pros and cons of both technologies. I obviously am more steered toward Blu-ray, so steer me the other way. Unlike many people I have an open mind on all things, so hit me with your best shot, fire away. If you don't mind, I'd like something w/o out spin. Just factual information. Nothing like: In a few months when more Blu-rays begin to use more BD-50 the PQ will be as good as HDDVD is today. That is not what I am looking for. I want facts. I've searched the internet for them, but there is always a bias somewhere. Can you guys give me some facts w/o spin.
That i would greatly appreciate.
Will someone please tell me why HDDVD is better than Blu-ray, or vice versa. What are the pros and cons of both technologies. I obviously am more steered toward Blu-ray, so steer me the other way. Unlike many people I have an open mind on all things, so hit me with your best shot, fire away. If you don't mind, I'd like something w/o out spin. Just factual information. Nothing like: In a few months when more Blu-rays begin to use more BD-50 the PQ will be as good as HDDVD is today. That is not what I am looking for. I want facts. I've searched the internet for them, but there is always a bias somewhere. Can you guys give me some facts w/o spin.
That i would greatly appreciate.