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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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04/13/24 | Best Buy | $424.98 |
9 |
01/31/24 | Amazon | $422.99 |
15 |
01/29/24 | Best Buy | $424.98 |
0 |
11/16/23 | Crutchfield | $350 frontpage |
248 |
11/13/23 | Amazon | $348 frontpage |
130 |
11/12/23 | Amazon | $348 frontpage |
49 |
07/11/23 | Amazon | $400 frontpage |
103 |
05/04/23 | Amazon | $399.98 |
18 |
12/05/22 | Amazon | from $398 frontpage |
186 |
11/20/22 | Amazon | from $398 frontpage |
86 |
11/17/22 | Best Buy | $399.98 |
13 |
10/11/22 | Amazon | $400 frontpage |
80 |
08/14/22 | Best Buy | $424.98 |
3 |
07/12/22 | Amazon | $400 |
15 |
06/14/22 | Amazon | $406.19 popular |
40 |
01/05/22 | Amazon | $400 frontpage |
268 |
12/18/21 | Amazon | $397 frontpage |
195 |
05/10/21 | Best Buy | $400 frontpage |
250 |
01/20/21 | Amazon | $397.99 |
30 |
11/24/20 | Best Buy | $349 |
1 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
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Abt Electronics | $422.99 |
Best Buy | $424.98 |
Product Name: | Panasonic Streaming 4K Blu Ray Player with Dolby Vision and HDR10+ Ultra HD Premium Video Playback, Hi-Res Audio, Voice Assist - DP-UB820-K (Black) |
Manufacturer: | Panasonic |
Model Number: | DP-UB820-K |
Product SKU: | B07N3PQM5N |
UPC: | 885170334618 |
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You value pure convenience. That's great! It comes at the cost of many things that others may appreciate, including video quality, having a library of media to share with others, the joy of collecting, and even the ability to watch whenever you want media that may not always be available to you. For instance, I enjoy the original Star Wars without the changes. I'll pop in my theatrical DVD. Many years ago I enjoyed this silly show called Nowhere man. It's only available on DVD too, which I conveniently have. You will not find it streaming in the foreseeable future.
You opine at the cost as not slick because again, you're not appreciative of the medium. I will agree it's expensive, and I will even agree this is not the lowest this player has been. However, sometimes people are willing to pay a premium for something a little different, and maybe a little better.
There are those who still play old video games of their childhood and will spend thousands to RGB modify it and maybe get niche devices like a Retrotink5X to scale and sharpen in, or even by a CRT monitor to enjoy it as they did exactly as they did when they were children. Sure, they could play some of the games on the Nintendo switch's paid library of limited games, quite conveniently, but with more lag, but over all it's a different experience, again.
Some of us appreciate different things - no need to compare or condescend. This thread is simply is not for you.
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Watching Godzilla vs Kong, ready player one, and edge of tomorrow on streaming and physical media is a completely different experience.
I am running dual hsu vtf-3 mk5 and calibrated with Dirac through an onkyo rz50.
The people saying they can't tell the difference probably do not have a system capable enough.
You value pure convenience. That's great! It comes at the cost of many things that others may appreciate, including video quality, having a library of media to share with others, the joy of collecting, and even the ability to watch whenever you want media that may not always be available to you. For instance, I enjoy the original Star Wars without the changes. I'll pop in my theatrical DVD. Many years ago I enjoyed this silly show called Nowhere man. It's only available on DVD too, which I conveniently have. You will not find it streaming in the foreseeable future.
You opine at the cost as not slick because again, you're not appreciative of the medium. I will agree it's expensive, and I will even agree this is not the lowest this player has been. However, sometimes people are willing to pay a premium for something a little different, and maybe a little better.
There are those who still play old video games of their childhood and will spend thousands to RGB modify it and maybe get niche devices like a Retrotink5X to scale and sharpen in, or even by a CRT monitor to enjoy it as they did exactly as they did when they were children. Sure, they could play some of the games on the Nintendo switch's paid library of limited games, quite conveniently, but with more lag, but over all it's a different experience, again.
Some of us appreciate different things - no need to compare or condescend. This thread is simply is not for you.
I purchased Amelie on iTunes in HD which isn't available on Blu Ray or 4K Blu Ray and when I went to watch it the movie was no longer part of iTunes. No notice and no explanation why it was gone (probably something to do with the rights to stream it being expired). At least I own it on DVD, but will certainly buy the physical copy if it becomes available on Blu Ray or 4K Blu Ray. This is just one example of many movies disappearing from streaming services. I'll always own my physical where the quality doesn't depend on my internet service and is the best quality available.
I definitely see the value and I love physical media, but I'm more looking for the best entry level 4K player. Can anyone recommend anything in the $200 range? I'm looking at the Sony - UBP-X800M2, currently $250 at Best Buy. I'd buy the Sony - UBP-X700/M at $200 but I've read negative things about it freezing up a lot.
I have a Sony XR65X90CJ, so not a high end display but still have Dolby Vision and as I understand those Sony players have DV as well.
Thanks! I see.
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Unfortunately, discs are covered in a oily film from the manufacturer 95% of the time. You can easily see this film on most discs by holding them in the light at the right angle, although it's even easier to see on the inside surface of the glossy black cases, where you can usually even see the sucker marks from the equipment that picks up the cases. This was present on standard Blu-Rays as well, but due to the aureal density of each layer on BD-66 and BD-100 discs, anything interfering with the laser's ability to read the disc just exacerbates issues. It's a PITA, but that's the trade off for squeezing additional performance out of existing technology.
This is especially evident when people try to rip bit-perfect discs. There are probably no fewer than 100 threads mentioning this on MakeMKVs forums.
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