I wonder when we'll get decent amount of completely uncompressed video & audio fitting into an optical disc? (Or at the very least, lossless video).
That came out ages ago. It was called Muse, and nobody bought it because it was hella expensive.
The problem with making a new format is that convenience is more important than quality. The CD is 25 years old, yet sadly its still the best sounding mainstream format...and its dying because people are buying 128kbs AACs from iTunes. People want the shitty sounding stuff because it fits into a smaller package. Example: Dark Fact up there that seems to be indicating that MP3 players are an advancement over CD players. Technologically they are, but most kids are listening to ultra shit quality 128kbs MP3. The best quality audio I can get on my iPod is a CD encoded to something that sounds as good as CD (wav, aiff, Apple Lossless). Almost without exception I can't get anything better than CD, which is sad because CD isn't even very good. Hell, my home computer can record 24-bit 96khz stereo uncompressed, but I can't buy anything that high quality because SACD and DVDA are flop formats with almost no titles worth purchasing. WTF?
I think one of many mistakes in the HD war is marketing these new formats as mainstream instead of connoisseur formats. Every since DVD came out I've been interested in the next thing. DVD wasn't actually an improvement over LD in every way. It was a somewhat lateral movement. Its better in some ways, but the real advantages over LD are the connivence and price. The things are small and cheap as hell, and so are the players. You don't have to flip them like LDs, or rewind them like tapes. They are so cheap that you don't have to take care of then like an LD that costs $40-100. Just buy another one for $10 when you scratch the hell out of it like a slob. Those are the reasons why DVD took off, and those sorts of changes aren't present in BR/HDDVD. In fact, BR and HDDVD are less convenient because ripping them is nearly impossible, there are no portable players (save $1800 laptops from Sony), etc.
The format war is over. I'm not happy that Sony came out on top, but oh well. I expect Toshiba to offer a dual format player quiet soon. They are going to have to make BluRay players eventually, so they might as well throw HDDVD playback in there for free.
There is not a single thing above that I don't agree with.
I hope to get a MUSE system one day, but no telling when that will be. Even then, there aren't that many titles that really interest me on it, mainly b/c I just don't care to spend as much as people are getting for the players that are compatible with the format these days, not to mention buying the whole MUSE decoder and other equipment for it.
The way the market is going, is all about convenience. Apple/iTunes, and all these other online carriers are teaching the damn kids that MP3 is the way to go, b/c you need to carry it on you, on your player, on your phone, etc. I still buy CDs. I convert all my own MP3s, and at no lower than 320kbit for my own personal listening. 128 is ass, and 192 is borderline with me. Even when I first started doing MP3s of my own, I was doing 192. 320 sounds pretty much like CD to me, and it is much easier than digging out my originals all the time, so they stay safe in case something happens to the file. It is nothing once you learn how to encode your own files.
SACD flopped because of too much new hardware requirement and copy protection. I have a couple of them, and I can't even get the full quality out of them! My DVD player supposedly supports it, and I have a surround receiver, but I get nothing but stereo no matter what I do. Completely worthless (and now dead) format.
DVDA I also have a couple of as well. I am rather impressed with what I have heard, in comparison to the standard CD versions or even listening to it in 2.0 on the same disc. Very nice, and it's kinda sad that there is little done with this these days as there should be.
There are Dual players out now (albeit none by Toshiba), and also it is very easy to rip HD-DVD/BRs with AnyDVD supposedly.