|  | Posted by kim on 05/20/07 13:31 
"guv" <guv69@msn.com> wrote in message news:jhb0531pm5d1ll29qcdpbqgkheebupj7m4@4ax.com...
 > On Sun, 20 May 2007 11:27:42 +0100, "Dr Zoidberg"
 > <alexNOOOOOO!!!!!!!@drzoidberg.co.uk> wrote:
 >
 >
 >>> I at first I thought that HD-DVD would win but after reading more and
 >>> more
 >>> about 'the war' it did look like the tide's were turning against HD-DVD
 >>> in
 >>> favour of Blu-Ray.  Whether either get the 'critical mass' to make them
 >>> main stream I think remains to be seen.  I personally can see one of
 >>> them
 >>> becoming the next laser disc of the film media world.  Downloading is
 >>> where the future is IMHO.
 >>>
 >>Video on demand certainly looks to have potential through cable.
 >>More so than downloading conventionally as more and more ISPs introduce
 >>caps
 >>and restrictions on what you can get with extra usage charges potentially
 >>coming as they have in Aus and NZ.
 >>
 >>If you have to pay once for the content and again for the bandwidth it
 >>will
 >>be very pricey.
 >
 > True, which is why your choice of ISP is important. I'm now with BE,
 > which claims to be unlimited, though there is a soft 350GB cap. Thats
 > an awful lot of downloads - which I never get anywhere near. And with
 > my D/L speed of 1.3MBps, a full DVD5 can be got in about an hour.
 >
 > Its all good ATM - but I can see the time coming when big D/L ers are
 > hit by silly caps or content analysed. That said, with on demand how
 > thats going to work with this in mind is anyones guess.
 
 Easy, they'll just increase the compression and degrade the picture quality
 till it's no longer worth watching.
 
 (kim)
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