For what its worth, happened to spend some time kicking about all these arguments with a relatively senior guy at Toshiba North America about the time that Toshiba decided to bow out of the old format war. The general thinking from the folks with a whole lot of $$$ on the line was that winning the war of attrition for the next physical disk format would be a relatively short-term phyrric victory. Trust me, I was first in line hoping for a victor so that I could sign up for the next format but it took so long to actually shake out that, by the time it did, the next paradigm shift (to downloadable) seemed so close on the horizon that it just didnt seem worth the bother. Toshiba, with infinitely more to gain or lose in the process, essentially made the same bet. I wont claim any more insight than the next guy, but from where Im sitting, seems like a prudent call.
That said, not sure that the same reasoning necessarily holds up on an individual consumer level. Sure, replacing a big DVD library with BR seems like a silly proposition. But, I generally rent and am not buying DVDs any more either. Purchased my Oppo before the BR version came out, and it suits me just fine. But had I waited for it, Im sure I would have gone with the BDP 83 instead because: why not? No one disputes BR is better on both the picture and sonic front, so why on earth, if purchasing a new player anyway, wouldnt I throw that in as an option for rentals? If software is rental-driven, the investment required to open the door is relatively negligible. Yet, having already recently thrown down for an upscaling universal (minus BR), I see no reason to re-upgrade just to include BR.
Seem to be coming out somewhere about a middle ground. My two cents, at any rate.
That said, not sure that the same reasoning necessarily holds up on an individual consumer level. Sure, replacing a big DVD library with BR seems like a silly proposition. But, I generally rent and am not buying DVDs any more either. Purchased my Oppo before the BR version came out, and it suits me just fine. But had I waited for it, Im sure I would have gone with the BDP 83 instead because: why not? No one disputes BR is better on both the picture and sonic front, so why on earth, if purchasing a new player anyway, wouldnt I throw that in as an option for rentals? If software is rental-driven, the investment required to open the door is relatively negligible. Yet, having already recently thrown down for an upscaling universal (minus BR), I see no reason to re-upgrade just to include BR.
Seem to be coming out somewhere about a middle ground. My two cents, at any rate.