Should I take a blu-ray player for my 50in Samsung HLR5067WX? So I wanna know if it's worth getting a
So I wanna know if it's worth getting a blu-ray player, I currently am using a standard dvd player for my 50in Samsung HLR5067WX and I want to know if I will get better picture and nouns quality. And should I obtain a blu-ray player or a PS3. Are there any disadvantages near have piece the PS3 since other blu-rays are so expensive?
Here's full information on my TV:- http://www.epinions.com/Samsung_HLR5067W...
-thanks for your response I really appreciate it
Answers:
I THOUGHT ABOUT GOING BLU RAY BUT WHEN I PRICED THE MOVIES, THEY ARE WAY MORE EXPENSIVE THAN THE REGULAR ONES. I JUST DECIDED TO STICK WITH WHAT I HAVE BEACAUSE THE MOVIES PLAY AND LOOK GREAT ALREADY. IF YOU ARE CONSIDERING GETTING A PLAYSTATION 3 OR IF YOU HAVE A PS3 THEN NO NEED TO BUY A BLU RAY DVD BUT I AM NOT SAYING GET A PS3 FOR THE USE OF THE BLU RAY.
GOOGLUCK
getting a ps3 would be a better operate then getting lately a straight blu ray
How important is right quality to you? Like another poster said, simply you can decide. I can detail you, I bought one about 6 months ago and it's one of the best purchases I've made. I love watching movies immediately! If you have a heir that can output the HD audio codecs (Dolby True-HD, DTS-HD, PCM) you will be AMAZED by how much sound you're missing out on from standard DVDs. And yes, a PS3 is a great blu-ray player, plays blu-rays beside the same feature as standalone players and is capable of much more, not in recent times games either. The one complaint be that it couldn't decode DTS-HD audio, but a firmware update sooner this month has fixed that. And yes, BD's are more expensive, but you can find deal on them. I rarely salary full price for a blu-ray disc. Best Buy and Target have be putting some of them on sale for $20 lately, and online sites approaching amazon usually have pretty honest deals.
I be in Best Buy today and saw a DVD and a Blu beam playing the same movie surrounded by near sync side by side. Yeah, in that is definitely a difference. I subscribe to Home Theater magazine and the most recent issue said that HD DVD is loosing out. I'd enunciate that investing in Blu beam is a good opinion. There is yet another disc format coming that have a terabyte on one side, however, if we continue to continue for something better, we'd wait our in one piece lives and never enjoy anything. I ponder BD's, as Blu ray discs are call, will develop into a standard just resembling the CD have. Only you can decide.
The PQ and AQ on Blu-ray disks vary. But on a 1080p HDTV a Blu-ray of a movie will, at worst look slightly better than the same movie on DVD. At best it will look appreciably better. See the relation for an example of how much improvement can be expected lower than good conditions (slide the white banister left to right to see DVD vs HD quality). Audio, on a moral surround sound system, will be superior from Blu-ray vs DVD.
But you hold a 720p RP HDTV, so you won't get relatively as good an photograph as Blu-ray is able to produce. Furthermore, if you sit more than roughly speaking 10 ft from the screen you will not see some of the detail i.e. displayed since you eyes will be too far away to fully resolve detail.
On the other hand a DVD on an upconverted DVD player won't look as righteous as Blu-ray, but will look a bit better than on a normal DVD player.
So, next to your equipment you will probably see some improvement, but not optimum. Whether the video (or audio) advance is worth the price you have to wish.
Expect to pay ~$400 for a rational Blu-ray player (which is also a good upconverting DVD player ... but a stand alone DVD solely upconverter can be purchased for about $100 (not impressively good ones cost even less)) and $5 to $20 more for a Blu-ray edition of a movie vs the same movie on DVD.
Personally, I've tried HD and don't find sufficient benefit to defend the high price and deficit of convenience (slow load times, inability to posterior up disks, can't play on existing DVD players (car, cottage, friends, etc)). I find DVDs on an upconverting player on my 110" screen look fine. I may buy Blu-ray if prices drop to close to DVD plane, but not now.
If you do settle on to buy, the PS3 is the best Blu-ray player ... and to me that says abundantly when a game piece of equipment is the best hardware for a movie playback device!
Hope that helps.