I purchased a Blu-Ray/VHS player so if a student came in with one we could 
accommodate, but my department is not going to purchase any discs.  (I had to 
bring in my Up Blu-Ray to test the machine-gorgeous) It is to my knowledge the 
only Blu-Ray player on my campus and will probably be the only one, other than 
computer blu-ray drives, this campus will have.  Upconverting players do a very 
good job and none of the projectors on my campus are at high def. 

regards 
jhs 


John H. Streepy
Media Services Supervisor
Library-Media Circulation
James E. Brooks Library
Central Washington University
400 East University Way
Ellensburg, WA  98926-7548

(509) 963-2861
http://www.lib.cwu.edu/media

"Hand to hand combat just goes with the territory.
All part of being a librarian" -- James Turner "Rex Libris"

Transitus profusum est nocens!




>>> Pamela Bristah <[email protected]> 9/24/2010 8:18 AM >>>

A perennial question, but a good one to revisit to from time to time: 


> 
Are you purchasing Blu-Ray titles for your library, or are you holding off?  
(I'm especially interested in hearing from college and university libraries, 
since we're in the same boat.) 


> 
If you're purchasing, what criteria do you use?  Do you re-purchase titles you 
have on DVD, or only new titles?   


> 
Having just about completed switching the collection from VHS to DVD, the 
thought of moving next to Blu-Ray makes me want to lie down and go to sleep, 
for about 45 years.  And, the cost would be prohibitive.   


> 
Wouldn't it be a wonderful thing if libraries could go straight from DVD to 
streaming video, at Blu-Ray image quality?  For feature films, not just 
educational and documentary titles?  Oh well, a girl can dream. 

______________ 

Pamela Bristah, Collections Librarian, Wellesley College, 106 Central Street, 
Wellesley MA 02481 

phone 781-283-2076, fax 781-283-2869, [email protected] 


>
> 
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