Gah just realised i butcherd the quotes in my last post, d'oh!
Actually, DVDs didn't. It allowed videos to be placed onto discs a lot easier and be read by specialised technology. So, essentially, you COULD watch videos using discs. It's impossible for CDs to do that (I think), you can only use computer drives to read them and them temporarily store them on your hard drive whilst watching the movie.
CDs were able to be used for things other than games. Music and the like, which they're still used for because they're the best format.
Blu-Ray's been out for... About eight years, now? Five in the Western market? It really doesn't seem like people are that interested in them. Maybe because of the expensiveness of all players, but I don't see it dropping any time soon (maybe five to ten years) and by then we'll have that holographic disc on the rise, as it has already been developed - all they have to do now is manufacture it far cheaper.
What are you basing this "people aren't interested" thing on? Seriously, is it just becuase you personally don't use them? Because people you personally know don't use them? They're the standard format for hi-def media, people are definatly interested in them.
Really, get a printing press or whatever. I'm sure you can't.
Photocopiers allowed your average person to do all this. It doesn't matter if it could be done, it matters if the masses can do it.
The average person COULD make copies of things, as I've said. Beorn pointed out taht companies hired huge pools of typists. Why do you think that was? So they could make copies of things. It's not like pre-photocopiers people just stared a document dumbfounded as to how they might replicate it. Yes it was more time consuming, but it's not impossible to type up the same document twice.
I'm not saying that it never will, but by the time Blu-Ray is in a place to be competitive with DVDs, there will already be technologies overtaking Blu-Ray.
Here. People are buying HD TVs etc because they allow them to watch HD channels and because they LOOK pretty damn nice and wide. People aren't buying Blu-Ray because it's really not that interesting. Total spending on Blu-Ray discs: 151.4m euros. Total spending on DVDs: 1.3bn euros. There's a massive difference, and as the article says, sales have already slowed, even during Q4. (ie. Christmas?)
Disc could get damaged, lost, etc etc. More discs, less data gets lost if you lose a single CD. Nevermind there's no real point in shoving it all onto a single CD when you could have a pretty boxset.
That's pretty much what I'm saying, but I'm fairly certain I'm correct. It's just a transitionary step (and not even a longlived one) up to higher formats which will probably just be as useless.
So you're logic is that any format past DVD is useless? ANY transitionary step between incrimental increases in technology is utterly a waste of time?
That article you linked makes a lot of leaps of logic based on very few facts, but even so comparing the adoption rate of DVDs to blu-rays without considering any other factors is pretty silly. Was the economy in a huge recession when DVDs were being adopted? Was there a huge digital alternative when DVDs were released? Was piracy as easy and as widespread when DVDs where released? etc...
Discs could get damaged, true, but I'd argue that it's easier to take care of one disc than 7. And if you do damage your blu-ray that contains the entire first season of the wire, you can just go re-buy it. What happens if you damage disc 1 of season 1 of the the wire? You go buy the entire season again. Wheres the difference? Having a pretty box is flat-out silly as an answer. I'm sure if you want a massive pretty box someone will sell it too you, even if theres only one disc inside.
You still really haven't convinced me that you aren't just complaining about blu-rays beacuse you personally don't use them. Again, you're entitiled to your opinion, but don't try and argue that something is utterly useless and a dead format just because you don't use it. Note: I don't use blu-rays myself either, but I know plenty of people who do.