Road trippin red hot chili peppers cover

Road trippin red hot chili peppers cover I guess streaming is the next after Blu-Ray as the internet is becoming faster and faster. I have no idea but I m sure it s going to be smaller and better. We want things compact and flexible and with more power. Movies will be available in the internet and someday we won t use disks to store movies. I m thinking about special road trippin red hot chili peppers cover of flash drives for movies. They would be smaller but can store much more movies than disks do. movielover, on 21 August 2010 07:55 AM, said: Movies will be available in the internet and someday we won t use disks to store movies. I m thinking about special type of flash drives for movies. They would be smaller but can store much more movies than disks do. Actually, I believe I posted a story about 6 mos. ? ago about kiosks in airports that will allow you to do download to a portable device while you are waiting As far as storage capacity, the blu ray discs time is just about up. The future will be either holographic storage which has a theoretical limit of 6 tb per disc or something Sony is working on which has 500gb storage capacity per layer. Now that is big as it is almost equivalent to my external drive. I hope manufacturers would also try to upgrade the system of the disc to withstand scratches. If the disc is scratch and it was full then it would be a big failure. Think of it this way, if they make it scratch proof and rewritable hundreds of times than you would be paying an enormous price per disk, because basically what you d get was a hard drive. Disks need to be easy to produce and cheap to sell. bangthebass, on 05 October 2010 10:29 AM, said: Think of it this way, if they make it scratch proof and rewritable hundreds of times than you would be paying an enormous price per disk, because basically what you d get was a hard drive. Disk need to be easy to produce and cheap to sell. I agree with you completely. But my point is it is useless to create a disc with a very large storage and still very susceptible to scratches, which I think is the common problem of discs. I mean we could place small files into it so it will be scratched then only a few data will be damaged. So what is the use of the big size then? If we are going to fill the disc and it had been scratched then a lot of data or the whole data in the disc will be damaged. Oh well, we ll just have to wait for it to arrive and check it for ourselves. It useful because data is getting larger and larger as transfer speeds and general computer speeds rise, look at it this way at the time when everybody was using floppy disks which have 4 mb data space what was the point of starting to put data on Compact Disks CD s which have 700mb s of data space? Yes disks are sensitive, but if the content is to big to be practical to fit it on smaller disk, you don t really have a choice. 0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users English PCM 1 Surround 48kHz/16-Bit English Dolby Digital 1 Surround French Dolby Digital 1 Surround Spanish Dolby Digital 1 Surround Reviewed by Peter M. Bracke As I write this, The Grudge 2 has just opened to the tune of a 22 million box office weekend. Hardly a small number, but something of a comedown not only for the franchise, but for the wave of Japanese horror film remakes that has flooded Hollywood recently. Perhaps the barely-respectable opening for The Grudge 2 is a road trippin red hot chili peppers cover call for the niche genre the films final gross is certain to be a far cry from the 100 million-plus The Ring and the original Grudge scared up a few years back. Perhaps the era of the screaming dead kid in the bathtub is finally over maybe reimaginings of unseen low-budget Swedish snuff flicks are next? In any case, youd have to think back pretty hard to the summer of 2005 to remember Dark Water. A perfectly respectable studio entry in the Japanese redux sweepstakes, it nevertheless sank without a trace at the worldwide box office. Its a polished and well-made if unusually depressing and turgid affair. As dank as sewage and about as much fun, Dark Water reminds us that in horror, oppressive atmosphere and scares can only take you so far. If you dont have at least some glimmer of humanity to your story, audiences wont leave the theater with that all-important, post-fade-to-black sense of uplift and your film wont make any money.

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