Quote:
More than double is not enough money to offset their costs. ATMOS decoding licenses are not cheap by any stretch of the imagination.
You and Michael seem to know a lot about Dolby atmos licenses. How much are they exactly? I can't seem to find any info and you seem to know it all!
Quote:
You could save yourself a ton of money by not buying active speakers and instead buying a good AVR and good passive speakers. You do not need balanced outputs for ATMOS.
Well a Ferrari drive could save himself a lot of money buying a lada but that's hardly the point.
Theres a reason 99% of recording studio/mastering studios/production houses use active speakers. They sound better.
Quote:
You can buy an excellent Denon or Onkyo unit for a LOT less than that. If you bought straight from the manufacturer and therefor paid the highest price possible, the 5200W will only run you £1699.
Or powerdvd can support the latest Dolby and DTS formats in exactly the same way they have been for the last decades. (I.e decode to analogue)
The DAC's on DVR's aren't much cop either, especially for music. Then there's the cheaper components, software crossovers, noise from components being too close together. I could go on but I've covered this at least twice already in this thread and the powerdvd14 one.
Quote:
Most people still use the speakers in their TV for sound. Doubt that? Before you do, first ask yourself how many people listen to MP3s on their IPOD instead of CDs or Vinyl. Then ask yourself how lazy you think most people are and if they are actually going to run wires across the living room (or through walls) to put up even a 5.1 system. Then ask yourself how many of these people will know that reflective speakers exists so they do not have to cut holes in the ceiling (though dedicated ceiling speakers are superior - as anyone who has researched ATMOS would know).
you're making sweeping generalisations and huge assumptions. You might hang around with people like that but you can't judge everyone the same.
The people you are talking about aren't one of the people who have viewed this thread 8000 times.
Quote:
After asking yourself those questions, you will realize that yes, most people still use the TV speakers for their sound. Of those who upgrade, most move to a sound bar that simulates surround sound and think it is wonderful.
see above response.
Quote:
Now you are demanding a company spend a lot of money to add a feature that almost no one will use. Decoding ATMOS is not the same providing ATMOS encoded sound - so the comparison many make to games is useless. Games have encoded sound, they require you do have something to decode ATMOS, such as an AVR. In this way they are just like movies.
I can't be bothered to go into why your wrong on so many levels., This has been explained to you already by another poster.
Quote:
Putting ATMOS in PDVD is just as silly as restoring HD-DVD to PDVD. Unless a large buyer tells Cyberlink they want it added, it will never be added.
if they don't, there is no point in buying it, there's is no point in powerdvd at all, might aswell just use vlc
Haswell 4770k watercooled @4.6 ghz. 16GB RAM,
Nvidia 980TI GTX, Marantz AV7702mk2, Apogee Duet, 3x Adam A77X, 4x Mackie MR5's, 4X Mackie CR4
Panasonic PT-AT6000e projector, 120" fixed projector screen, Panasonic ST30 50" TV.