I guess it's something that probably should be reported, but I think the worst part of the format war being over is having to hear about every company one-by-one that official drops the format.
Agreed, I think we understand the format war is over. We are assuming that every company is stopping its hddvd support since hddvd lost. It's getting kind of repetitive.
I quickly scanned through the comments on this story and only found a few people who objected to the picture used to highlight the demise of HD-DVD. Well, to me, the picture is more than irrelevant to the story, it's disturbing. To equate something as trivial as the HD controversy to an image of an atomic bomb is highly insensitive to people who had the thing dropped on their country. We should all object to the use of this kind of imagery.
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I guess it's something that probably should be reported, but I think the worst part of the format war being over is having to hear about every company one-by-one that official drops the format.
I'd love to see one fucking article that just says "everyone is dropping a dead format. Surprise!" and be DONE WITH IT FOR GOD'S SAKE.
Agreed, I think we understand the format war is over. We are assuming that every company is stopping its hddvd support since hddvd lost. It's getting kind of repetitive.
I quickly scanned through the comments on this story and only found a few people who objected to the picture used to highlight the demise of HD-DVD. Well, to me, the picture is more than irrelevant to the story, it's disturbing. To equate something as trivial as the HD controversy to an image of an atomic bomb is highly insensitive to people who had the thing dropped on their country. We should all object to the use of this kind of imagery.