orcishgamer: Of course everything does. My only argument about BluRay losing this generation is that they saddled the physical release with so much dog-crap that people who would have been inclined to wholesale support it had both price and the dog-crap reasons to avoid it, especially when streaming in areas with high bandwidth is getting so damned good. Sooner or later the unicasting issues will be all but solved and that will be all she wrote for TV and physical discs. What does a high quality HD rip weigh in at these days on TPB or whatever? I'll be able to cram a 2 TB drive in my pocket by the end of 2011.
DrakeFox: Didn't they just release a 2TB Micro SD card? So that'd be 40 Blu-ray (dual layer) discs stored on a device which can fit through the hole in the middle of one of said discs.
As for compatibility: Yes it's a compatibility issue, but when the issue is introduced because of changing copy protection schemes, I'd still dub it a kind of DRM issue.
Can I just say this? (well, of course I can... who is gonna stop me?)
Blu-Ray is an absolutely awesome technology!
But, it is also an absolutely shitty technology.
Awesome because... well, look at it. And that's it. That is the end of the awesome train. Sure, it holds a lot of data, but from the practical point of view, it simply offers a far better picture (other than actual film) than anything else you can view in your home.
But it is shitty... because it is a solution in search of a problem. We didn't NEED an amazing new form factor. The industry did. But whatever... a good form factor is a good form factor... except for this... rather than locking down a standard, like DVD did, the Blu-Ray standard continues to evolve, partially from feature creep and partially from updated DRM.
This makes for an appliance in your home in constant need of firmware updates. Fine, if you have a PS3 or an Internet enabled Blu-Ray player (usually). But if you have an older Blu-Ray (like mine that I got "free" as part of the deal when I bought my 55" TV), you have to download the firmware update on your PC, transfer it to a thumb drive, get behind your rack and find the USB port, plug it in and do some sort of rain dance.
Not an issue for me. I'm pretty technically competent. This is a big issue for my parents. This is a big issue for the majority of non-geek humans. A PS3 is the best possible Blu Ray player now, but that isn't gonna drive the sale to the non-gamer who just wants to upgrade their home theater.
Blu Ray should be what DVD is. A disc that you insert into a player, which provides a menu that allows you access the content. It should not be an interactive Internet experience. It should not allow you to update your Facebook status during the movie. It should not create a complex web of barely watchable extras. It should not offer a chat client so you and your friends can all text each other on screen during Inception. It should just be a DVD with more data and better picture and sound, with a spec that is locked down at launch.
Imagine if your toaster was like Blu-Ray. You get up and discover it is no longer able to make toast because you bought English Muffins instead of wheat bread and now you have to update your firmware to eat breakfast.
And the majority of consumers want to put a Blu Ray disc (or DVD) into the device, and watch the movie. They don't all have wireless networks, thumb drives, always on Internet connections, and in many cases, the desire to stumble through all the new types of extra features. Lock that spec down and call it Blu-Ray... If they had simply developed a better DVD, I'd be exactly as happy as I am now. I have never thought, "hey, I want to email my thoughts on this movie to my friend in Seattle using my Blu Ray player and a remote control."