Video Players
1988: Pioneer CLD-1010 Laserdisc Player
•Price: $1427 ($2278 adjusted for inflation)
•Resolution: 420-line
•Output: composite
•Media supported: Laserdisc, CD-audio, CD-video
2008: Panasonic DMP-BD30K Blu-ray Disc Player
•Price: $500
•Resolution: 1080-line
•Output: HDMI
•Media supported: Blu-ray 1.1, DVD (with upscaling), CD
Laserdisc was the Blu-ray of 1988 — a high-quality alternative to the then-dominant video media (VHS tape then; regular DVD now). And like Blu-ray gear today, Laserdisc players commanded a premium price.
The Pioneer CLD-1010 doubled as a CD-audio player; and later models could play DVDs, too. But Laserdisc never gained widespread support from equipment makers and movie studies, and as a result its household penetration in the United States peaked at just 2 percent.
The last movie on Laserdisc came out in 2000. The format survived that long thanks to a cult following among enthusiasts who preferred its smooth, filmlike analog quality to the sometimes blocky and banded DVD format. In fact, astonishingly enough, Pioneer still makes combination Laserdisc/DVD players for hardcore fans of the Laserdisc format.
With Blu-ray's high-definition video, however, the argument is over. Significantly, Blu-ray already enjoys more industry support than Laserdisc ever did. And with buyers flocking to big HDTVs, which are hungry for 1080p content, Blu-ray seems assured of a secure future — at least until Super Hi-Vision comes along.
References
- 15 percent of U.S. households
- other home systems were popular as well
- Tandy 1000 TL
- Bookshelf
- HP Pavilion Elite m9100z
- The Next 25 Years in Tech
- fold-up screens
- 1TB Seagate Barracuda 7200.11
- yottabyte and gibibyte
- Canon Pixma iP3500
- "fabbers"
- CompuServe
- Motorola DynaTAC 8000X
- and drug dealers
- Google's Android initiative
- 35-inch Diamond Vision television in 1985
- 50-inch Panasonic TH-50PZ77U
- the average TV screen size will have increased to 60 inches
- filmlike analog quality to the sometimes blocky and banded DVD format
- Pioneer still makes combination Laserdisc/DVD players
- at least until Super Hi-Vision comes along
- rhapsodized about the wondrous Sony D-10 in 1987
- the iPod Touch
- declined from what it was in the Discman
- EOS 650 was the first in Canon's EOS line
- lives on in the EOS Digital Rebel XTi
- Now that parity has been achieved
- knocked the bottom out of the film market
- full-frame image sensors
- Nintendo NES was a great value
- Nintendo Wii
- its advanced Cell
- The Legend of Zelda
- Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare












18%
9%




















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