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CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 20 • 5/17/1997 |
Date: Sun, 11 May 1997 18:14:04 -0500 (CDT) From: Geoff Oltmans To: Tom Howe <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Re: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 19 On Sun, 11 May 1997, Tom Howe wrote: > From: Jesse Skeen> > Sorry if this is getting a little off the topic of the mailing list, but > I want to put in a few more comments about DVD. As was mentioned in the > last mailing, DVD's look worse on bigger screens. The first time I > commented on the "blockiness" of DVD to a salesperson at "The Good Guys" > (a store that is anything but) he said "oh, that's because it's on a > projection TV. They never have a very clear picture." Funny, that's also > what they told me a couple years ago about DSS (WHY are so many people > actually buying that thing???) This is something that really scared me about DVD...I heard that they were using MPEG for compressing the video early on. After working in AV&C (a Tandy Brand store), the artifacting really got to me. Seems my fears are confirmed. :) > I wonder how salespeople sold CED's when they came out. Did they try to > convince people that they didn't actually see the disc skip, or that it > was nothing to worry about? It's funny how old video magazines often > wrote about CED players as a viable product, seems the companies were > putting cash in their pockets for not saying that they were a joke. Now > history is repeating itself. This is exactly the reason that I like to take magazine comments with a BIG grain of salt. Video Game mags are the worst for this candy-coating stuff...or just plain writing about things they haven't the slightest bit of information on. > Date: Sat, 10 May 1997 04:01:35 -0700 > From: Tom Howe > To: ceds@teleport.com > Subject: Best and Worst Side Breaks on CED's > Mime-Version: 1.0 > > How about some discussion on what people feel are the best and worst breaks > between side 1 and side 2 they have ever encountered on a CED. Here are my > choices: > > WORST: > "2001" (Part 1) > Side 1 ends at 37:43 as the ship is landing on the moon, almost mid-note in > Strauss' Blue Danube Waltz. Why couldn't they make it one minute longer to > complete the scene and finish the song? This is I think the worst I've seen for breaks. I wish they had made the thing 3 sides instead of four. It would have been a lot more enjoyable. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sun, 11 May 1997 18:18:23 -0500 (CDT) From: Geoff Oltmans To: Tom Howe <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Re: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 19 Another comment about DVD for Video: At this point in the game, I really don't see DVD as a viable option. The players I've seen are $499 so far, they are NOT recordable. So, the only market they can hope to appeal to is the high-performance home user. However, the high-performance user is more likely to buy Laserdisc for three simple reasons: A. Cost is the same as DVD. B. More titles available. C. Higher Resolution picture. Hey, it's off topic (sort of), but I want to see some traffic. :) *Geoff!* ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 03:27:15 -0700 (PDT) From: Jesse Skeen To: Tom Howe <ceds@teleport.com> Subject: Re: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 19 Regarding the comment about side breaks, I've noticed on a lot of the older movies, both CED and laserdisc, that they ended sides at the end of reels in the theatrical prints. Old transfers show the changeover marks; most new ones don't anymore. That's why "Rustler's Rhapsody" has a really bad side break (someone asks a question at the end of side 1 and the other guy answers at the beginning of side 2!) but it's still OK to me since that's where the reel ended. Movies on the Vestron label are really amusing because they always tried to cram as much as they could on side 1, sometimes they didn't even stop at the end of the reel, just took it as long as they could til the end of the side, the time counter often reaches 60 on these before it ends. This gives really short sides to short movies; I have The Lenny Bruce Performance Film and "The Magic Pony," both of which are under 75 minutes, so side 2 of these runs under 15 minutes! It's funny to look at the surfaces of these discs and see how little space was used. I have "Tempest" and "Never Say Never Again" which are 2-disc sets of movies that ran just slightly over 2 hours, and side 3 of these is also very short. Most discs seem to spread over sides more evenly, but these are exceptions! BTW, why didn't they make a special "Turn Disc Over" type of message for unused sides, like side 4 of a 3-sided movie for example? Considering the market CED was intended for it seems it would have been ideal, rather than just having an "End" code immediately at the start of the side, I bet this caused a lot of people to think their players were broken! Laserdiscs always have interesting stuff on their unused sides, the funniest is the upside-down turtle, others have generic printed messages saying "Program Material is recorded only on the other side of this disc." Since my laserdisc player is autoreverse, these sides come up by themselves after the end of the movie, and for some strange reason I always let them play through before putting the disc away! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 12:50:56 -0600 From: David Potochick To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: CED Digest Vol. 2 No. 19 -Reply Woah.... Finally someone agrees with me on DVD..... I'm not crazy... I still don't see how DVD is going to sell..... Yes they're smaller than LD's but the picture quality is really grainy.... I went back to Best Buy after another writer to this CED page told me that I probably saw a flawed disc. Well, I saw another disc and it looked pixelated.... I'm not impressed with DVD at all.... I see it going the way of the CED... I think when CED's came out the sales pitch had to do with CED being the best thing there was at that time. VHS tapes were a lot more expensive back then from what I remember and CED's were selling for a lot cheaper. You also have to remember that in the early days of the Laser disc there were a lot of flawed LD's. I read somewhere that there was a 90% return rate for the old Discovision LD's.... They simply didn't have the technology perfected back then.... I'll have to come up with my own Best / Worst disk side endings.... So far my favorite is still "Raiders Of The Lost Ark".... I was the one that pointed that out a couple of Editions ago..... As for the worst.... I'll have to do some research.... Later, Dave. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 12:57:16 -0600 From: David Potochick To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: Weird CED's Tom brought up the best and worst CED topic.... How about the weirdest CED's.... The weirdest CED that I have seen so far is "Jane Fondas Workout Video". My wife was watching this and said,"What woman in her right mind would exercise while wearing a necklace???" She said that any woman would take off her necklace because she wouldn't want her neck scratched up.... The whole workout video is just plain weird... Another weird CED is Paul McCartney's "Rock Show"... I can't believe that we actually had time to watch the entire thing.... I get bored after the first fifteen minutes..... The worst pan and scan is at the beginning of the movie "Benji". At the opening credits, you see the whole scene shift to the left to compensate for names..... More Later, Dave. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 13:14:55 -0700 From: Tom Howe To: ceds@teleport.com Subject: Video Magazine Survey The May '97 issue has a survey form on the last page titled "Mad As Hell" which has a number of items to be checked off that are upsetting to people regarding video technology. One category is "Lack of DVD movies," so under the "Other" category, where you can write in your complaint, I wrote "Lack of any new CED movies since 1986." Maybe if enough of us make a similar complaint they'll mention it when the results are tabulated and printed in a future issue. Besides mailing in this form to their New York office, you may also simply email them with your complaint referencing the "Mad as Hell" survey. The address is: VideoMag@aol.com
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