I pretty much tolerated the rest of your reply but that is bullshit. Do you even understand why sony use blueray? For those of you who dont heres a breif guide: Basically at the moment when you burn a CD a laser burns pips in surface of the disc. These pips are then read by your console by a red laser. This is done by waves being sent at a angle, towards the reflective surface of the CD. So you can imagine when a wave hits a place where there is no pip, the wave will reflect in a different posistion to the one that hits a pip. These are then read as 0's or 1's (off's or on's, low's or high's) and the data is read that way. Now because the lasers we are using atm are at the red end of the electromagnetic spectrum the wave lengths are longer, meaning the pips have to be big (ish in relative terms, we are talking half a wavelength here). So that we can put more pips on a CD some clever people have decided, you know what, lets go to the other end of the electromagnetic spectrum (the blue end). This means that the wavelength is much smaller meaning that the pips burnt into the CD dont actually have to be as big. This means that more pips can be on one CD and so increasing the storage space on one disc. So, how exactly is blue ray a 'dying format'