They're going to be on tape, not DVD. Fox, Universaal,Dreamworks and Artisan are first out of the gate. Titles will include Independence Day, Die Hard, X-Men, U571 and both the Terminator films. D-VHS claims to record at a higher bit rate than the U.S. HDTV standard, so the picture would be better than broadcast HDTV.
Warner and Columbia are abstaining, saying that D-VHS is not a commercial product.
Apparently Fox and the other D-VHS backed studios say this is by no means intended to replace DVD. They feel that D-VHS films will be for a niche market. DOES THAT SOUND FAMILIAR ? I wonder if they will be transferring them in P&S or OAR.
Well, I don't own a HDTV set , nor a S-VHS tape player, so I guess I'll just stick to my lowly DVD picture.
Seriously,though, is this going forward or backward ? I have some VHS tapes that are over 10 years old and the drop outs drive me crazy. Many have been replaced with clean DVD transfers in widescreen.
Will this really catch on ? Do I have to invest in a hi-def projector and a D-VHS tape player ?
My Homepage!
Warner and Columbia are abstaining, saying that D-VHS is not a commercial product.
Apparently Fox and the other D-VHS backed studios say this is by no means intended to replace DVD. They feel that D-VHS films will be for a niche market. DOES THAT SOUND FAMILIAR ? I wonder if they will be transferring them in P&S or OAR.
Well, I don't own a HDTV set , nor a S-VHS tape player, so I guess I'll just stick to my lowly DVD picture.
Seriously,though, is this going forward or backward ? I have some VHS tapes that are over 10 years old and the drop outs drive me crazy. Many have been replaced with clean DVD transfers in widescreen.
Will this really catch on ? Do I have to invest in a hi-def projector and a D-VHS tape player ?
My Homepage!



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