Huong dan dao bai Clearly its poorly encoded from the Master

Huong dan dao bai

Clearly its poorly encoded from the Master. Sadly House of Flying Daggers isnt getting huong dan dao bai initial reviews. Could it be the player or the disc well know but HD Digest says that 50 First Dates looks much better so Im thinking its the encode process thats suffered on HOFD and TFE Is the Sammy unit worth 2x the Toshiba HD DVD. I dont think so. It lacks support for Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD. It has no ethernet port and the menus are a bit sluggish as well. However its the only Blu-Ray player in town and if you have to have it youll likely enjoy it very much. Is the Sammy unit worth 2x the Toshiba HD DVD. I dont think so. It lacks support for Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD. It has no ethernet port and the menus are a bit sluggish as well. But its not like you can select one or the other based on price. Customers will have to go with the format that has the movies they want. Arguments about relative cost simply dont apply if the movies you want are on the more expensive format. Whomever brings me Lord of the Rings or X-Men is getting my money. If its Blu-ray, I will have to pony up the extra cash. Its that simple. Everybody has a movie or movies that will be the tipping point. And nobody is going to stand there in their local Best Buy and say Gosh, X-Men is on Blu-ray, but the Toshiba player is half the price, so I guess Ill buy that and watch Phantom of the Opera instead. Its more likely that they wont buy EITHER player. and the menus are a bit sluggish as well. I dont think that they will compare to the Toshiba unit, which takes 10 seconds to stop after you press the stop button on the remote. Based on the reviews of the two units, I would buy the blu-ray unit huong dan dao bai never buy the toshiba unit just based on ergonomics alone. Nothing as unusable as the HD-DVD player will ever enter my house. still want to go with the above statement Marzetta7? Sure do. Like I said, Im sure it still looks great, and from the review, he said it does too. However, make no mistake, this is a good-looking picture if youre not too critical. I bet the average consumer who saw this disc up and running at their local Best Buy would probably think it was darn swell. Still, complaints aside, The Fifth Element does look very good, and this is hardly a bad transfer. It just is not the best that Blu-ray has to offer. One final note. Unlike Toshibas first-generation HD DVD players, the Samsung BD-P1000 is capable of outputting full 1080p at 30 fps only via its HDMI output. Evidently the quality of the initial releases isnt holding up. that appear to generally categorize the entire Blu-ray release, I will call you on it. Yeah, thanks for the real info. are phantom Samsung Blu-Ray players in peoples home then right? All those people over at AVS dont really have Blu-Ray players then. I must be losing my mind:smokey:Indeed, you are a little sick in the head.

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