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I only swapped out my 2003 plasma telly in 2013 as it physically couldnt display from devices such as blu-ray. There simply wasnt any way of connecting it at the full resolution - it was obsolete if I wanted to make use of the genuine advancement in video reproduction. Plus, my old telly used a huge 400w of power whereas its replacement uses far less at 66w. Which is nice.
In the company's small cinema, over £100,000 of equipment would now be totally obsolete as it wouldnt be able to do the digital handshake required between HDMI connections although DV-I was available. Curiously, D-VHS cassette was hanging around at the time just before HD_DVD/ Blue-Ray popped up.
On the audio side, anything carrying the DTS/ Dolby Digital logos can still use the digital output from Sky boxes, Blu-ray players, PC's, laptops, tablets and so-on. Plus there are adaptors costing a few quid to add bluetooth capability - that is good, good for the environment and good for the second hand market. Unlike the hundreds of thousands of defunkt display devices that get scrapped.
In the company's small cinema, over £100,000 of equipment would now be totally obsolete as it wouldnt be able to do the digital handshake required between HDMI connections although DV-I was available. Curiously, D-VHS cassette was hanging around at the time just before HD_DVD/ Blue-Ray popped up.
On the audio side, anything carrying the DTS/ Dolby Digital logos can still use the digital output from Sky boxes, Blu-ray players, PC's, laptops, tablets and so-on. Plus there are adaptors costing a few quid to add bluetooth capability - that is good, good for the environment and good for the second hand market. Unlike the hundreds of thousands of defunkt display devices that get scrapped.