
Dolby Buys MIT's DTV Vote for $30 Million 192
An anonymous reader writes "MIT's campus newspaper, The Tech is reporting that the university will be receiving $30 million from Dolby Laboratories. This payment is in return for MIT's vote on the "Grand Alliance" committee responsible for choosing the audio standard for digital television (DTV). Dolby also appears to have paid off Zenith, another committee member. The professor representing MIT on the committee stands to receive $8 million personally.
But here's where it gets truly odd. After dutifully voting for the Dolby standard, MIT attempted to collect on the bribe, but Dolby refused to pay. So, MIT sued to collect. In the end, MIT and Dolby settled out of court.
Says The Tech, "There's clearly a conflict of interest," [MIT's Jack] Turner, [associate director of the Technology Licensing Office] says, but, "it can't be avoided. MIT's reputation as being pure... in its academic evaluation of things is very important." Yeah sure."
She blinded me with... (Score:5, Funny)
It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:5, Insightful)
Apparently not.
Re:It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:3, Insightful)
And MIT settled for 30 million dollars??! I would have auctioned my vote off! Get Phillips and Dolby in a bidding match? Sky's the limit!
Haha. I hope Lim feels like a greedy idiot. "Man, if I'd been a little more principled, I'd still have my reputation, and if I'd been a little less principled, I'd be the seventh wealthiest man on the planet. As it is, all I've got is my lousy 8 million bucks, glaven..."
=)
Re:It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:4, Informative)
It's too bad I can't comment on some of the just plain wrong stuff I see going on, but I need my job.
Ok, this post was worthless, mod me down. #;^)
Re:It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:3, Insightful)
Q. Why are the politics in higher education so dirty and cutthroat?
A. Because the stakes are so small.
Re:It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:2)
Well, it's not exactly a quote because Henry didn't use the Q/A format. But, as Dr. Michael Aquino recently noted in this post [google.com] on alt.satanism,
Re:It's so funny when people even ADMIT it... (Score:2)
I respect the institution as an incredible place of science and learning. However, these instituions scruples are not those perscribed by their vague veil of moral and ethical purity.
Makes you wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:5, Interesting)
"It's lucky 3G spectrum wasn't available earlier in the United States or cell carriers would be dropping like flies. The bungled DTV system saved their ass.
The FCC assigned a royalty sharing organization, ATSC [atsc.org], to deliver a "unified" Digital Television system. But ATSC had no motivation to use the improved European-developed COFDM DTV system [dtg.org.uk] now the world-wide DTV standard. Unlike ATSC, it works. You can get it free over the air [freeview.co.uk] or in a bus. I believe former FCC director William Kennard is to blame. He didn't want to slow down the "lucrative" 3G auctions. Now we're stuck with a broken DTV system, the VHF auctions are delayed (again), and everyone lost...except the cellular carriers.
In the UK, all you need is a $99 box with rabbit ears [comet.co.uk]. US broadcasters are stuck. They may eventually be forced into PPV and soft porn since only rooftop antennas can pick up ATSC. The FCC let this happen. It's criminal negligence."
No rooftop antenna needed. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:5, Informative)
You can also get HDTV via satellite-- HBO and Showtime have HDTV channels-- and in some markets via cable.
It's a gross exaggeration to say that the DTV system in the US is "bungled" or "broken."
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
Its my feeling that the nationwide HDTV rollout is many years behind schedule - at some point all stations had to have X percentage of broadcasts in HDTV by 2001 or something and they had to roll thhe date back because there was no demand to justify the local broadcaster's investment. If the delays and ambiguity is due to trying to profit off of spectrum sales or undue corporate influence, then Id call that bungled.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
Its precisely why the government gets involved. Because without the government you DO have a chicken and egg situation. But with the government you have a "lay the egg or go to jail" situation.
In summary the government is involved precisely to FORCE them to put it out because everyone knows they will not on their own.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
It's true that there's not anywhere near as much HDTV as their is regular TV, but that's to be expected. HDTV requires more bandwidth than regular TV (6 MHz per channel as opposed to 3 MHz for NTSC TV), and production and encoding equipment is expensive. But is it accurate to say that the rollout is "many years behind schedule?" Not really. That's because there isn't really a schedule, to speak of. The FCC has mandated that the chunk of spectrum currently used for NTSC TV transmission will be reallocated in 2007, at which time broadcasters are expected to turn off their analog transmission equipment. That's a long way off, so don't expect to see changes happen in days, or even months. The process takes years.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
Briefly - you're wrong about the TV costs. Go look at the Best Buy circular for this week - there are more sub-$2k HDTV monitors advertised than there are $2k+ ones advertised.
You're wrong about the standards - they're well defined and sensible. There was no reasonable alternative to Dolby Digital anyway.
You're somewhat wrong about cable HDTV - there are at least 6 test markets currently, from various providers. It's expected that HDTV cable will be widespread within 3 years. Both Dishstar and DirecTV are adding more HDTV as well.
You're clueless about the rollout requirements on DTV, but that's ok - so was the FCC. A 10 year changeout on broadcast standards was insane, and that's what was originally mandated. Roughly 75% of all stations requested an extention on the requirement to be broadcasting DTV by May 1, 2002. That means 25% of them are, which isn't bad really. All top 10 markets have the 4 major networks broadcasting (with some caveats in NYC due to 9/11).
Is DTV behind schedule? Yes. Is it bungled? Somewhat -- the biggest disaster was the FCC stating that cable "must carry" laws did not extend to HDTV. Rupert Murdoch (Fox) is being a total asshole about the entire thing. But it's still happening, sets are falling lower, and the requirement for TVs to include receivers will clinch the deal. The spectrum of the old analog channels will be reclaimed in a decade or so, and that's that.
Yes... this is the "short" version. Maybe it's a good thing the cat rampaged on my computer.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
wow. thanks for the info. I went to Costco yesterday and i saw a 32" HDTV set for $900. Thats the lowest price ive seen. The image wasnt that much better on that set but the larger DTV sets were jaw-droppers. the source was DirecTV.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
I've come to the conclusion that free OTA HDTV is merely a chimera, a figleaf to allow the Congress to give away hugely valuable spectrum to its friends in the broadcast industry. Now that the broadcasters have their hands on new full 6-MHz channels (free of charge), all this HDTV silliness will be forgotten, and the broadcasters will eventually sell their ill-gotten excess digital capacity to the highest bidder.
However, the broadcasters may be hoist by their own petard. In order to swindle the taxpayers out of more spectrum, the broadcasters had to pretend to support OTA HDTV. They then had to live with HDTV bitrate requirements in the modulation system design, ultimately resulting in 8-VSB. Now the gift from their Congressional pals may be worth substantially less then they expected, if it's hobbled by a marginally functional modulation scheme.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
Pure FUD. That's not what's happening at all. In fact, just the opposite is starting to unfold. The major networks-- ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, PBS, UPN, WB-- are rolling out more HDTV content this season than ever before. I don't have the numbers in front of me, but there's some prime-time network programming available in HDTV every night of the week. And, with the sole exception of Fox, we're talking about high-bandwidth 1080i or 720p programming here. What you're describing could happen, but it hasn't so far, and there are no signs that it will, so talking about it is pure speculation.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
Unfortunately, my own personal observations at home (and I'm not living in the urban canyons, but in a typical suburb) have soured me on the future of 8-VSB. I hope I'm wrong.
Re:pls post some howto urls for 8vsb! (Score:2)
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:5, Insightful)
COFDM has it's advantages, but 8VSB was chosen for good reason - stronger signals over longer distances at the same power levels. This is a valid decision given the sub-urban nature of US viewers. CODFM is a convenient solution for multi-path issues in urban areas, but those advantages were rendered moot last year with the introduction of 3rd generation chipsets that reduce multi-path interference.
Also, the European system ISN'T HIGH DEF. It's 16x9 standard def. It's comparable to our satellite and digital cable receivers.
ATSC receivers will be the same price ($99) by next Christmas thanks to the FCC requirement for ATSC tuners to be included in sets larger than 34 inches. The cost of the chip sets are about $100 now. They should drop dramatically (to about $35) now that volumes will be increasing.
The COFDM vs. 8VSB debate was ended 18 months ago among the DTV adopters. Put it to rest.
Re:The FCC is bungling DTV (Score:2)
8VSB does work. I use a pair of rabbit ears and a DTC-100 to pick up local high-definition stations in Indianapolis: WFYI, WISH, and WRTV. Fox also has a digital channel, but it is typically standard definition.
Look, I work for a company with an interest (and note that I don't represent Thomson in my statements) but you're buying into another company's propoganda. One can pick up ATSC with an indoor antenna. I'm doing it in my house right now.
COFDM is a good scheme. The U.S. has a standard, though, and COFDM isn't it.
8-VSB vs COFDM (Score:2)
Yes. (Score:2)
What the hell is the point of a comittee? (Score:5, Funny)
How do I sign up to be a comittee member so I can get bought with absolutely no reprecussions?
Re:What the hell is the point of a comittee? (Score:2)
Re:What the hell is the point of a comittee? (Score:5, Insightful)
MIT has shown us the true 3 step business model:
1) Build a seemingly immaculate and incorruptable reputation.
2) Prostitute everything you worked so hard at.
3) Profit!!!
Re:What the hell is the point of a comittee? (Score:2)
There are ethics still out there.
I have no respect for those who have no ethics.
Re:What the hell is the point of a comittee? (Score:2)
As far as this sort of thing goes, the UC system is a lot more immune to the suasions of the almighty buck.
What's A CAMEL? (Score:2)
Bribery as acceptable business practice? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Bribery as acceptable business practice..yup (Score:2)
Re:Bribery as acceptable business practice..yup (Score:2)
you are only allowed to bribe goverenments in the third world to secure a monopol on the market and get your hand on their natural resources.
If that's the way it works, then everyone should be allowed to do it.
Re:Bribery as acceptable business practice? (Score:2)
Yeah. Gangsters should also be allowed to sue for non-payment of extortion fees.
confucious says (Score:4, Funny)
Re:confucious says (Score:2)
How much?!? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How much?!? (Score:2)
I am working with previous generation equipment (and thus, standards) but I believe Dolby Digital 5.1 is something like a 448kbps (per channel) stream whereas DTS 5.1 can be full bandwidth.
Although these days many DVD's come with both DD and DTS soundtracks which leads me to believe the DTS folks started compromsing on that full bandwidth potential in order to fit on discs.
Re:How much?!? (Score:2)
Consider that you can buy a receiver with DD but not dts, but good luck finding one that supports dts but not DD.
Yes, DTS is a superior format, but it also suffers from significantly lower market share in the home theater department. DVD helped that along with DD being one of the standards (all dts DVDs are still required to contain either a DD or a PCM track to meet the DVD standard).
With that in mind, I still have to wonder why DD felt the need to pay so much, unless some people were considering 2-channel PCM audio, which would have been absolutely stupid.
Whats the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
I was under the impression that MIT was there to represent the people.
Re:Whats the point? (Score:2)
and i thought this kinda thing would have led to SEVERE DEVASTATION in the claws of the press anywhere in the world with any standards on trusting academical institutions. oh well, maybe next time they won't be bothering to ask from MIT and ask just auction off the whole thing in the first place.
A real kick in the crotch (Score:2)
Re:A real kick in the crotch (Score:2)
Yup. Last night I watched Saving Private Ryan in 720p/60 with 5.1-channel Dolby Digital sound. Unedited. For free. On ABC.
Digital TV is a mystery to most people because the equipment is still pretty pricey. But that simply means the economies of scale haven't kicked in yet.
Quick scan of the article (Score:5, Informative)
Then, in 1997, they had a royalty dispute with Dolby over the royalties. The settlement out of court is the $30 million mentioned.
The interesting part is that that 1993 decision helped make US digital tv use dolby instead of mpeg, like they apparently use in Europe
American origin a factor? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:American origin a factor? (Score:2, Insightful)
If the United States mandated a digital television standard that required the use of an audio (or video) standard based on foreign IP, it would not play well politically, and would have the effect of leeching more money out of this country. It's bad enough that there are no domestic producers of television sets left in the U.S. Since this country seems best at generating IP rather than manufacturing, licensing fees are a good way to funnel some of the wealth back to U.S. institutions.
In response to someone in another branch of this thread who chalked this up to nationalism, I would counter that this move is no more nationalistic than similar technology decisions made in countries like Japan or France.
Re:American origin a factor? (Score:2, Funny)
bribery! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:bribery! (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, I don't think MIT turns out too many politicians - they turn out exclusively scientists and engineers. If it was politicians, I wouldn't care - we know they're a bunch of scoundrels - but what is truly frightening is that the ethics of scientists are supposedly held in higher regard than those of politicians. "Bias" is a much dirtier word in science than in politics. So to have MIT students see their advdisors and teachers getting rich off of graft is a very sad thing indeed.
One more reason I'm glad I didn't go to MIT for grad school.
Re:bribery! (Score:2, Insightful)
Try looking slightly beyond the boundaries of the U.S. Having accomplished that initial feat, I suppose the name Netanyahu might ring a bell. Or the names of past presidents of Colombia, Puerto Rico, or Costa Rica. Or, come to think of it, the names of significant non-Presidential U.S. politicians.
Not to be an ass, but... The MIT paper "The Tech" has a running list of notable politicians from MIT, for those who want to do 30 seconds of research before posting. It is not comprehensive, but it's a good start.
One more reason I'm glad I didn't go to MIT for grad school.
If you're worried about problems like MIT's current flap, then I suppose you didn't go anywhere for grad school. Name a significant research institution that doesn't occasionally find ways to put itself in this situation.
Gimme a break.
Re:bribery! (Score:2)
Second, you are right - no institution seems immune. However, MIT does seem to set the standard for places not named Bell Labs or Livermore.
As for grad school, I'm at Caltech. Yeah, we have our issues, but nothing like that.
Re:bribery! (Score:3, Insightful)
No. We'd call Dolby a Special Interest Group, and call the money a "campaign contribution".
Same thing, different labels.
i dunno, but it sounds like a good idea to me... (Score:2, Insightful)
Which sounds like a pretty good idea to me. I mean, why have competing standards and go through all the expense of that when they're nearly the same, and one side is willing to be bought out and move on?
Real Web Address (Score:3, Informative)
This is outragous (Score:2, Insightful)
Whats even worst is that they took them to _court_ over it - am i the only one that things this is disgusting? what the fuck is the point? where are we headed if we can clearly, publicly buy off votes and even bring people to court when the bribe isint paid?
Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:4, Informative)
Please read the article, it's actually a bit more of "Dolby tried to screw MIT out of royalties" instead of "MIT accepts bribe to vouch for Dolby standard."
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:3, Insightful)
Please read the article more carefully. Dolby is paying MIT $30M in royalties FOR A USELESS TECHNOLOGY! If MIT's own DTV standard had been chosen, they would have earned substantial royalties, but since they sold out to Dolby, they missed the boat. But, Dolby paid them anyway! That's why it's vote-buying.
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:5, Insightful)
Pot, kettle, black. Which parts of these paragraphs did you not understand?
The article clearly makes the point that the MIT system (the one that Jin invented, I assume) was technically superior, but Jin and Dolby carved out a deal between themselves that gave both Jin, Dolby and MIT a cut of the winnings, regardless of who won.
Once the financial issues were stitched up, Jin was free to cast his vote with Dolby, despite independent tests showing that the MIT system was superior -- and his allies appear to be arguing that his motivation was patriotic rather than financial.
Now in future, would you please not lecture other people unless you've read and understood the article yourself?
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:2)
Yes, which is not an issue in my opinion. It's a conflict of interest, but both his interests were served, as well as the public's.
The "issue" is that he voted for a technically inferior system over the technically superior one. The article claims that Dolby is only slightly worse than the MIT system.
Also, the technically superior one he helped develop (one can only assume). So it's safe to assume that he would see some benefit from this as well.
For compatibility, all involved should have gone with the Philips system, which the Europeans were already working with. But the Philips system was technically inferior to both MIT and Dolby.
Dolby seemed to already have more support, so Jin could compromise and support Dolby, ensuring that a quality system was used.
So: to sum up: Jin probably had a stake in the MIT system being adopted, but was willing to compromise.
The MIT and Dolby systems were about the same quality, while the Philips was clearly inferior. The board was already leaning towards Dolby, and by voting for MIT, Jin might allow Philips to snatch away the standard. So, voting for Dolby was a compromise that benefitted all involved.
(not that this is exactly what happened, i'm sure, but i think it does have some impact on things. You can see things like this happening in public development all over; best current example is LVMS in the linux kernel. Not all of them involve money as blatantly as this one, however.)
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:2)
Correct, but if anything, this mitigates Lin's conflict. To begin with he only stood to gain financially if the MIT system is approved, so they worked out a deal with Dolby, that they would share royaties if EITHER if their systems were approved. If the MIT system had won they would be paying money to Dolby. That gave LIN 2 horses in the race instead of one. He still could have voted for the MIT proposal, but he didn't because it wasn't going to win.
All of this is moot, however, because everybody on the "alliance" presumably had a bias towards their own proposal, and in the end this is just a proposal to the FCC that made the decision.
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:2)
Re:Royalty Payment, not out-and-out bribe (Score:2)
The MIT system was technically superior to Dolby, by apparently a small margin. The votes were already swaying towards Dolby, so to ensure that a quality standard was used, he voted for Dolby. The small margin be damned.
See also: United States Presidential Election, 2000; the effect of Nader on Gore's constituency, with an emphasis on the outcomes.
Educational experience (Score:4, Informative)
Buying Votes? (Score:2)
Couldn't their students help them out? (Score:5, Funny)
Secret MIT/Dolby Deal Sours the Standard (Score:5, Insightful)
From the Tech article:
"It was very closely held information that there was an agreement between MIT and Dolby," Rast said. "It wasn't something that everybody knew about at the time," he added. "It wasn't common knowledge."
"I think the other members [of the Alliance] would have been quite upset" if they had known about such an agreement, said Joel Brinkley, the author of Defining Vision, a comprehensive account of the HDTV standardization process, and a reporter for The New York Times.
"I was not aware of it, and I was speaking to all of them," he said. "Many millions of dollars were at stake. The contract for Dolby was one of the best things ever to happen to that company. They are now the audio system for every television that will ever be sold," he said.
Reaping what ya sow. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a clear example of the bastardization of higher learning because of the influence of money. 2+2=4 even if the boys at Pfizer want it to be 5... It may be tempting sometimes to come up with the answer of 5, when somebody is paying you multi millions to do so.
Perhaps it is a good opportunity/time to re-evaluate the funding of research and development at universities. A proposal I would like to see is that government heavily subsidizes the research, but all the profits from products that come from the research are plowed right back into universities general funds, paying for more research as well as lower tuitions, and more outright scholarships.
Re:Reaping what ya sow. (Score:2)
(It sounds to me like you're saying universities need to be exclusively funded by a combination of government and tuition - because anything else "taints" their decisions and "pureness" of education provided.)
I do agree that any of these "back door deals" are completely dishonest, yet I don't think more govt. funding is going to be the real "fix" we need.
As has been brought up in many a past Slashdot discussion, universities and colleges have a major problem with overpaying their deans and other high-level faculty members. A good start to budget-cutting would begin by dropping the needless "perks" such as free housing or vehicles for these people, already earning upwards of $100,000 per year to be the political "go between" and figurehead for the schools.
If government is going to provide funds for education, it seems more "focused" if they at least provide them directly to students, for use at the school of their own choosing. By awarding research grants or other such funding to particular universities - they're already "playing favorites", and encouraging wastefulness. If you let the students vote with their dollar for the schools they want to attend, the universities are forced to compete based on their own merits and perceived educational value to students.
If they try to take short-cuts, such as accepting millions/billions from private industry in return for approving products as "best technology" without doing the studies, or outfitting the campus with a single vendor's "gifts" -- they'll eventually lose credibility, and therefore customers (students).
Even though some of us don't seem to like to admit it (probably because the services provided are so important), colleges and universities are nothing more than *businesses*. They should be left to run like businesses.
Re:Reaping what ya sow. (Score:2)
A mockery! (Score:5, Insightful)
There is absolutely no point in giving MIT another vote on any panel. They'll just use it like a cash windfall which it's NOT supposed to be. We could actually sell standards control to the highest bidder and put the cash to some use, we don't because it's obviously a bad thing. MIT doing this by proxy is no better, in fact it's worse because they betray a trust.
Re:A mockery! (Score:2)
Does Ralph Nader ring a bell?
Re:A mockery! (Score:2)
Re:A mockery! (Score:2)
Wasn't a deal the whole point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Similar issues during DVD spec votes... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've seen people in the theatrical sound industry rakishly refer to Dolby as the "Microsoft of film audio".
Re:Similar issues during DVD spec votes... (Score:2)
DTS is bit-inefficient, and is very bandwidth hungry, as it compresses less.
DTS isn't _just_ a codec, you get the engineering and mixing services with it, and I suspect that the engineering has a lot to do with the improved quality. I believe that Dolby allows just about anyone to get an encoder, DTS only has a few labs that are allowed to use it.
Another problem with DTS on a DVD is that DTS takes about 2x the bandwidth to get the better quality audio, and depenging on the situation, the improvement is marginal for most people. Full-bandwidth DTS takes 15% of the available bandwidth available for DVD-Video, in some cases, taking away from the bandwidth available from the video compression and actual disc space for value-added material, such as extras. The highest bitrate DD uses about 5% of the available bandwidth per track.
Another handicap of DD is that sometimes mixers make sacrifices to make it more downward compatible with ProLogic decoders.
One thing that DTS is pretty well known for doing is mixing their audio to be an average 4dB louder than DD at the same reference level - for someone that isn't on to that trick, DTS is definitely going to sound better, clearer. not _just_ on the merits of the codec. A lot of people might not be able to tell the difference as quickly.
Re:DTS decoders were not available yet (Score:2)
Re:DTS decoders were not available yet (Score:2)
Re:DTS decoders were not available yet (Score:2)
Re:Similar issues during DVD spec votes... (Score:2)
This is incorrect. Have you even read the DVD Forum specs?
DVD's must have EITHER an uncompressed PCM track OR a Dolby Digital track in order to be a licensed DVD product. No DVD is required to have a DD track EXCEPT in the absence of a PCM track.
Here is a simple formula for bribe takers (Score:4, Funny)
2. THEN you vote as asked (if you want future bribes).
I mean if someone offers you a bribe, are you expecting them to keep their word later as well???
Don't forget... (Score:2)
3. Profit!
Go on, mod me down, my karma is Godlike and I get 5 mod points a day...
Kind of Funny... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Kind of Funny... (Score:2)
Re:Kind of Funny... (Score:2)
I wasn't questioning Bose's mathematical acumen, his ability to make drivers with great midrange, or criticizing him as a person. I was simply stating that his speakers are nothing special which is ironic given the MIT cachet. Before you dismiss me as a niggling audiophile, let me tell you that my ears are far from golden, mostly owing to too many sessions with speakers without precipitous drop-off above 8kHz.
What are heroes if they can't be questioned? I guess a second irony would be that an accomplished MIT professor and consumer electronics designer needs a fanboy undergraduate to stand up for his products and reputation?
How HDTV standards are chosen (Score:5, Interesting)
None. The date of the decision was cancelled, and a full boeing of americans went to Brasilia (the Capital) to bribe people. Now you see the potiticians saying that "oh,wehave to choose this based in the economy, not tecnical meriths... The americas will let us export TVs for the USA!" Ok. Let's see:
1>Brazil makes 2 TVs and sells one to USA and other to some brazilian, gets money of 1 from the USA and other is paid with brazillian cash.
2>Brazil sends 70% of boths TVs price to USA for "royalties".
Veeeery smart.
Re:How HDTV standards are chosen (Score:2)
At any rate, my sense is that it's much more important for a developing world economy to factor in market globalization concerns--even over technical concerns--than it is for, say, the US. It's probably a necessity. The US can devalue both technical and globalization concerns due to its monolithic nature. Lucky us. This is continually becoming less and less true, thank goodness.
Re:How HDTV standards are chosen (Score:2)
If Brazil could export TV's to the US, then they'd be building them from the same components the US is building them from, much of which come from Asia. Their advantage, though, would be lower labor costs.
I'm pretty disapointed in my fellow American and European liberals for being all upset about exporting of jobs to developing countries and their (by our standards) exploitative labor laws and working conditions. They need an influx of capital to develop their economies--capital that results from trade and not loans--and selling off their precious natural resources dirt-cheap is squandering many non-renewable resources compared to labor, which is renewable and in great supply. I'm convinced the "concern" that American workers feel for developing world workers is a veil behind which hides pure self-interest.
Anyway, I think my main point still stands. A developing economy has to be very concerned with globalized trade in all their economic decisions because being a part of the global economy is the only way they will prevent their continuing being sucked dry or be isolated and withering.
It's not quite as bad as it sounds (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It's not quite as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
Grand Alliance? (Score:2)
Seriously though, that is one arrogant name.
It's my understanding that congress... (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd rather wrestle a pit bull for a pork chop.
(btw, to confirm the "S" in Hollings' name I looked him up on google with:
riaa representative "back pocket" congress)
-dameron
Re:I love fragmented standards... (Score:5, Insightful)
The vast-- and I truly mean vast-- majority of people will never know that the United States, Europe, Asia, France, and wherever-the-heck-else have incompatible television signal formats. For obvious reasons you can't receive Asian terrestrial broadcasts in Europe anyway, so for most people the issue simply never comes up. It's just not that big a deal.
Re:I love fragmented standards... (Score:2)
Re:I love fragmented standards... (Score:2)
Re:I love fragmented standards... (Score:2)
Which means... what? I don't see your point.
Multiple standards are a ploy by manufacturers and broadcasters to control market share....
Blah, blah, blah. You know, when you hear hoofbeats, you should think "horses," not "zebras." There are three different standards for analog TV broadcasts because the three standards were developed in different places and at different times. There was basically no reason to work together on a single worldwide standard because having one wouldn't have benefitted anybody at that time.
There are different standards for terrestrial HTDV broadcasts because, yeah, the standards were developed at different times and in different places. The Japanese had an 1125-line analog format in the 80's, I believe, but when the time came for the Americans to develop their own system, they wanted to improve on that standard. Thus, the ATSC formats transmitted over 8VSB.
Not everything is a conspiracy. Some things just evolve naturally.
Re:I love fragmented standards... (Score:2)
Re:Paying for legislative votes (Score:2)
Re:Haha (Score:2)
Obviously, the people at Dolby would agree with your evaluation.
(How much did they (promise to) pay you for that opinion?)