For some time, people have been refusing to move from using DVD to Blue-Ray. DVDs were first introduced in 1995 and dominated the market for some time before the coming of Blu-ray in 2006. By this period, people had already built a wide collection of movies. IMO did not feel great by such tech and beginning to use a new disk format faster. From the year 2006 to 2008, there was an issue between Blue-ray and HD DVD about PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 about the best format for the games. For those who aren’t console gamers did not want purchase the Blue-ray or HD DVD because not knowing who the winner is. No one wanted to embrace the old tech and collect movies they are not going to use. There is not much difference between Blu-ray and DVD, especially to the normal viewers, especially if you watch movies on smaller TVs. There is nothing new to many people, especially when you have to purchase your catalogue once again in the latest format, which will almost cost you than the DVD variant. During the period, many people had their own DVD players in their homes. Many people would not be willing to replace the machines with the new technology. Even if you bought one Blu-Ray player for your house, when you purchase DVDs for sale, would you buy one which can watch on one machine or different machines? The truth is that the streaming technology has affected the ability of Blu-ray to replace DVDs for good. In addition, those who did not want to use Blu-ray earlier, suddenly saw how media content would be delivered to them at home. It now made more sense to use some content on the internet, and the rest with their DVDs.
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