You actually argued my points for me, neither of the examples made the previous offering obsolete and neither does BD Live. I can still continue to enjoy every new Blu-ray movies after the new players are out, the only difference is that I can't enjoy new features that may or may not be included on those discs and that I may or may not have even wanted to see.
As for Sony telling people in advanced, you can't be serious, it's not like they advertised having these features to J6P, sure they embellished a bit in their "Blu-ray is better" press releases, but who doesn't? And J6P doesn't read 'em anyways.
"You actually argued my points for me, neither of the examples made the previous offering obsolete and neither does BD Live. I can still continue to enjoy every new Blu-ray movies after the new players are out, the only difference is that I can't enjoy new features that may or may not be included on those discs and that I may or may not have even wanted to see."
Were you trying to sound like a BD fanboy with this post Ben? There's a HUGE difference. Let's use your iPhone example. If I download a song from iTunes, it sounds the same on the iPod as it does the iPhone. There's no extra features on the iPhone, other than the fact I only need to carry one device. Nothing is obsolete.
With the CPU, all of my old programs run the same on the new CPU as they do on the old - there's NO difference aside from speed.
With the BD player, I don't get all of the content from the BD disk. That's BAD. How can you not see that, even with your Sony glasses on?
And the BD camp HAS been advertising these "enhanced features" since day one, saying "They're coming soon!" Guess what? They're not unless you buy more hardware.
“While it's not exactly punching it out with the heavyweights in multi-room audio, the Mint Studio does certainly hold its own with many similarly-priced iPod docks out there.”
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
Glad I don't disappoint.
You actually argued my points for me, neither of the examples made the previous offering obsolete and neither does BD Live. I can still continue to enjoy every new Blu-ray movies after the new players are out, the only difference is that I can't enjoy new features that may or may not be included on those discs and that I may or may not have even wanted to see.
As for Sony telling people in advanced, you can't be serious, it's not like they advertised having these features to J6P, sure they embellished a bit in their "Blu-ray is better" press releases, but who doesn't? And J6P doesn't read 'em anyways.
"You actually argued my points for me, neither of the examples made the previous offering obsolete and neither does BD Live. I can still continue to enjoy every new Blu-ray movies after the new players are out, the only difference is that I can't enjoy new features that may or may not be included on those discs and that I may or may not have even wanted to see."
Were you trying to sound like a BD fanboy with this post Ben? There's a HUGE difference. Let's use your iPhone example. If I download a song from iTunes, it sounds the same on the iPod as it does the iPhone. There's no extra features on the iPhone, other than the fact I only need to carry one device. Nothing is obsolete.
With the CPU, all of my old programs run the same on the new CPU as they do on the old - there's NO difference aside from speed.
With the BD player, I don't get all of the content from the BD disk. That's BAD. How can you not see that, even with your Sony glasses on?
And the BD camp HAS been advertising these "enhanced features" since day one, saying "They're coming soon!" Guess what? They're not unless you buy more hardware.