24th October 2003, 5:06 PM
MSNBC
The article is somewhat interesting, but one part in part in particular caught my eye.
This guy obviously doesn't have a clue what he's talking about. First of all DVDs are no where near that fragile and they are actually a lot more durable than VHS tapes. Also, although pirating is prevalent, companies are making MILLIONS on DVD sales.
Anyway, I just thought people might want to read this article.
The article is somewhat interesting, but one part in part in particular caught my eye.
Quote: 10. DVDs
The DVD was the most eagerly adopted electronic consumer gizmo in history, but I’d feel bad if I failed to complain about the evil of these things. First and worst, DVDs are unbearably frail. Any benefit one gets from “clearer pictures”—on what HDTV superscreen, exactly?—is quickly removed by the catastrophic effects of a single thumbprint or scratch. Plus, just like CDs, DVDs as physical objects will prove to warp and delaminate.
Most loathsome of all is the fiendish spam hard-burned into DVDs, which forces one to suffer through the commercials gratefully evaded by videotape fast-forwards. The Content Scrambling System copy protection scheme doesn’t work, and the payoff for pirating DVDs is massive, because unlike tapes, digital data don’t degrade with reproduction. So DVDs have the downside of piracy and organized crime, without the upside of free, simple distribution. Someday they will stand starkly revealed for what they really are: collateral damage to consumers in the entertainment industry’s miserable, endless war of attrition with digital media.
This guy obviously doesn't have a clue what he's talking about. First of all DVDs are no where near that fragile and they are actually a lot more durable than VHS tapes. Also, although pirating is prevalent, companies are making MILLIONS on DVD sales.
Anyway, I just thought people might want to read this article.
Sometimes you get the scorpion.