Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I just moved into a new apartment and have been reading about all of the new power strips out there, especially the green ones. I was wondering if you had any suggestions about which "green "power strips are out there with decent joules ratings. And when I say green, I mean power strips that have the remotes or switches to turn off all electricity flowing to certain plugs and with at least 2 plugs that are always on. I was looking specifically at sub $50 because I will need two, but if that is not possible I could be convinced otherwise. Thanks!"
Before everyone piles on to Nfinity...again, think of this in another perspective.
A format that exists only in China...could that be a workaround to international copyright rules?
I guess I should've put a few more words in there...not copyright for the format, but for the actual movies. I think one of the ways the US put the squeeze on China and other countries for piracy was that it could be exported to the us. With hd dvd dead, could they tell u.s. studios to pound sand?
I'm pragmatically still waiting for another closeout BH200 sale that will sell both dead formats when movies go the way of songs.....online.
"The next thing is digital downloads. Everyone agrees, the only thing is how fast it will spread.. I would say by end of next year it should get massive traction and most of the content will be available in HD too."
I don't think so. Most people actually don't agree.
The broadband infrastructure in the UK is already very slow due to people downloading shows and movies off of the BBC iPlayer etc. and without upgrading the entire country's broadband, it will stay this way
And I don't think that will be happening in the next few years. This is the same story in soo many other countries as well. So, everyone who is saying that physical media will be replaced within the next 10 years is sadly mistaken.
@Nfinity, the format is shares a lot of tech with HD DVD but it is not the same. Physically it is close except for modulation. But it uses different audio / video codecs, crypto / DRM, and interactive menus. No HD DVD player will ever play a CBHD disk and it seems unlikely to me that any CBHD player would bother to play HD DVD disks unless it implements the full HD DVD software stack. And that seems unlikely when HD DVD is dead and the exercise was to reduce foreign patents. If combo players do appear they will be CBHD / BD players, not HD DVD players.