Atomic train school bus scene the loss is based on all

Atomic train school bus scene the loss is based on all expenses whether manufacturing, distribution, sales, etc. heck, GM and Ford bleed red ink all the time and its not because theyre selling cars at a loss. and remember that the PS3 and Xbox360 were still are? sold below actual production cost. The only reason I have a HD DVD player is because I bought one at Wal-Mart for 1 I always wanted a PS3 because it is the only Blu-Ray player you can buy that support Profile 0, but I couldnt afford it. And I was saving up atomic train school bus scene a PS3, but gas cost has eaten all of that savings. Now that the sales are gone, I am even less motivated to get a PS3 or any Blu-Ray player. It isnt out of the realm of possibilities that Blu-Ray got a Pyhrric victory. It will be some time before the economy rebounds, and it will be even longer before HDTVs are in over 50% of the homes. By then, something better might be out. By then, maybe we can stream movies. Already my internet connection from my cable company is fast enough to stream a HDTV over-the-air show. It cant be much longer until it is fast enough to stream 1080p streams. I think it will be a while before we can stream uncompressed Blu-ray titles. If you say an average Blu-ray disc is 35GB, a decent home cable connection is 10mbit, that is 35GB/ 25mb/s ideal 100% speed with no overhead 78 hours to download, too slow to stream. With a 25mbit connection it would still take 09 hours to download a 35GB title, again too slow to stream. Youd have to introduce compression which in my opinion ruins the entire point of enjoying HD content. True, our bandwidth cant support anything near streaming HD feeds but movies dont take up 35GB on atomic train school bus scene BR. Youll have to subtract all the audio tracks you dont want, all trailers, all extras. Also take into account most DVDs dont utilize all the space it has available either. I cant say how much one would take though since I dont have a BR drive. Too expensive. I think CorrND got it spot on. Player, recorder, and media prices are way too high for significant market penetration.

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