Well, they 're all PCs more or less. DVD players, HD-DVD players & BD-players have PC components and run some type of closed OS. Their discs just store data, they don't contain the movie engraved as VHS cassettes did. Then it's all up to the player, its processing power, its software etc. That's why the same movie can look very different subject to the quality of the player. And its also why some players can play video encoded in different codecs, say Xvid or WMV, AVC etc. So they really are PCs with a very limited scope. Plus, they look nice in order not to disturb your living room aesthetics and they run silent in order not to ruin your viewing experience (hear that Xbox 360 + add-on? :p) Toshiba's first HD-DVD player was just a bit too obvious about this fact. Welcome to the digital age.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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Well, they 're all PCs more or less. DVD players, HD-DVD players & BD-players have PC components and run some type of closed OS. Their discs just store data, they don't contain the movie engraved as VHS cassettes did. Then it's all up to the player, its processing power, its software etc. That's why the same movie can look very different subject to the quality of the player. And its also why some players can play video encoded in different codecs, say Xvid or WMV, AVC etc.
So they really are PCs with a very limited scope. Plus, they look nice in order not to disturb your living room aesthetics and they run silent in order not to ruin your viewing experience (hear that Xbox 360 + add-on? :p) Toshiba's first HD-DVD player was just a bit too obvious about this fact. Welcome to the digital age.