Underclassman trailer i get 17mbps sustained

Underclassman trailer

i get 17mbps sustained. however i still stand by my claim that you will get users willing to wait a couple of hours for a movie. BR movies can be compressed to smaller file sizes 10gb and still retain a lot of their original quality. On a side note, downloading films also reduces quality. There is a reason the Blu-Ray disks can hold over 20GB of data. And also with regards to your torrent argument. How many of those people would have copied movies from their friends, or bought them from the local pub, if the torrents werent about? the downloading of files doesnt reduce the quality!!!!! it is the compressing of the underclassman trailer that reduces the quality, you can get full quality DVD rips, BR rips etcetc off the internet no problems. heeeeeeps of people would have borrowed from friends, or gotten them from another source, if it werent for torrents. thus complimenting my arguement that the torrent society is large and has a big impact on sales. I dont want to argue either. I just get a little aggravated when it seems people think you could stop selling physical media tomorrow, move to online downloads and think the world will be a happy place. The net would die in its current state. The best easy to place example I can think of is look at what happened when Microsoft offered Longhorn for download. As I recall they got so many downloads that they needed to restrict it to prevent the internet from stalling? Not the best example, but it shows what would happen if everyone starting downloading continuously. ill admit you have shown me a bit of light, the current internet cannot support anything. its struggling enough as is. i know that physical media is still going to be around for a while, it serves great for the movie sector, backup sector and many other areas. its just a waiting game for the moment. Crazy small interwebs, huh? Hows it going? BTW, I dont know how everybody puts up with this Apple secrecy with each new product launch. Its driving me crazy although mostly because I really needed a new notebook about a month ago and this is the underclassman trailer time Ive really paid any attention. Its killing me to keep waiting for the actual release of new notebooks that may or may not have the features I need in a new notebook, when theres dozens of Wintel models I could get today that I know meet my needs likely dont look as cool, not officially supposed to run OS X, etc, but still available, and quite well specd. Oh, well. Patience is a virtue I suppose. whatever you do, DONT BUY NOW!!!! you know what i did, i finally gave in to my gut feeling and bought my CD MBP, only to have the new C2D MBPs be released 5 days later: smart just wait hahaha. take it from me! whatever you do, DONT BUY NOW!!!! you know what i did, i finally gave in to my gut feeling and bought my CD MBP, only to have the new C2D MBPs be released 5 days later: smart just wait hahaha. take it from me! that had to hurt a bit. But, Im definitely NOT buying now even I can hold out 9 though barely. The only question is whether Apple puts out a machine on the 14th that meets my specific requirements. If not, I have several other options to choose from but I would like to get one of the MacBook Pros. As much as I like OS X and Apples design ability, at the end of the day if a machine doesnt do what you need it to, then it just wasnt meant to be I guess. This may seem like a stupid comment, but isnt Blu-Ray a hardware component, not software? What i mean is, how could Blu-Ray be supported by a software update? Or is it for the updated computers? you know what i did, i finally gave in to my gut feeling and bought my CD MBP, only to have the new C2D MBPs be released 5 days later: smart The Apple Store endeavors to offer you competitive prices on current Apple products, selected Sale and Apple Certified Reconditioned products, and third-party products. Your total order price will include the price of the product on the day of shipping plus any applicable sales tax and shipping charges. Apple reserves the right to change prices for products displayed at the Apple Store at any time and particularly to correct pricing errors that appear on the Store. Should Apple reduce its price on any shipped product within 14 calendar days of shipment, you may contact Apple Sales Support at 1-800-676-2775 to request a refund or credit of the difference between the price you were charged and the current selling price. To receive the refund or credit you must contact Apple within 14 calendar days of the price change.

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