Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a pair of quality headphones that aren't seemingly made of glass. I'm an avid BMXer which causes me to frequently bash on any type of technology that joins me for my daily riding. I've been through the higher quality headsets in the Skullcandy line as these are supposed to be built for "abuse," which is laughable. I cant wear earbuds or canal buds, as my large ears seem to have a repelling property upon anything that sits in them. Wired or Bluetooth doesn't really matter, but I need something that can hold up to taking a few hits every now and again. I'm trying to keep 'em under $150. Thanks!"
mcloki
I do agree with you it truely is a numbers game, but your looking at the wrong numbers, studios dont care nearly as much about how many players are out there compared to how many movies are being purchased, sure there will be alot of blu ray players out there, but you have to remember not everyone one of those ps3 owners are going to be buying movies, while any 360 owner who gets a HDDVD drive is clearly getting it for the movies. At the moment HDDVD discs are selling about 3:1 vs blu-ray discs if this continues to the new year, Fox, Disney, and Lions Gate and alot of electronics manufactures would be fools not to jump on the HDDVD train. The truth is that Blu-Ray while it holds more space has no real advantage over HDDVD. 30GB is plenty for any movie in Hi Def and if you really really need those HD extras, they can go on the flip side with the dual sided 60GB HDDVD discs. One move I would like to see HDDVD push though is a much lower price for combo discs, if they could get them cheap enough that the movie studios could realse only one title, with only HDDVD/DVD and no plain DVD, they could really start getting lots of movies out there for consumers to start building a HDDVD collection before they spend the money to get the player. It also makes those discs vary usful in the sense of taking them along in your portable DVD player, laptop or whatever.