China to Promote Own Alternative to DVDs, EVD 410
supermanksu writes "Seeking to compete on its own terms in the lucrative entertainment industry, China announced a government-funded project Tuesday to promote an alternative to DVDs and 'attack the market share' of the global video format." This has been an ongoing project.
ugh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ugh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ugh (Score:5, Insightful)
This is Tuesday. China's the Good Guy today.
Seriously - an alternative to DVDs that supports HDTV and has no copy protection, region control, or licensing (CSS) restrictions. How bad is that? If DVD had been invented by geeks, that's what DVD would have been!
Seems this is just the logical successor to VCD or SVCD. It's also backed up by tens of thousands of tanks whose commanders can tell Jack Valenti precisely where to stick it.
Re:ugh (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe I'm wearing a tin-foil hat, but I sure don't believe China wants open formats. They would rather dominate the market so that they can get all of the royalty fees from other nation's vendors.
Problem with the Chinese strategy is that they don't have any content. All the major content providers won't release their content in the China-Uber-Alles format if they can't control it. Seems to me China has to depend on indie films to carry this ball, but unlike OSS, it takes more than a few pizzas and caffeine to make a flick, unless the PRC is about to flood the world with Communist pr0n...
Re:ugh (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you mean that they don't export any content. There is a huge amount of domestic video being passed around in China (Chinese movies, music videos and concerts and TV programs). Of course, since the rest of the world doesn't speak much Chinese, most of this content stays at home.
Also, because of the mass producing pirates pushing prices down, very few legit DVDs are available. Most content is distributed in the form of cheape
Re:ugh (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, you're wearing a tinfoil hat. But as we say - a thief believes every man steals. Being American, you are used to the fact that American companies and the American government want to dominate the world and rake in all the wealth they can get - that what capitalism is all about.
As for Chinese films - I have
It's all about the money (Score:2, Insightful)
EVD uses the same media format as DVD (ie. two 0.6mm polycarbonate discs with reflective layers read out using a coherent light source), so they still have to pay royalties to Time-Warner, Philips, Sony, Matsushita, Thomson-RCA, Toshiba etc for the disc
Not good enough (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, the acronym EVD ("enhanced versatile disc") seems extremely contrived to sound just like 'DVD'.
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Doubt they will force everyone, it will be enough for the format to be adopted domestically. As long as they market a combo DVD-EVD player, and push for releases of content on EVD in China, then what does it matter if you purchase this format or that?
DVDs are already segemented acording to their region, which might end up making it easier to introduce a regional DVD
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not good enough (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not good enough (Score:5, Interesting)
"It took forever for people to fully embrace DVDs"
Were you not born until CD's had already replaced casset tapes? The DVD format was the most quickly adopted new media format ever. CD's were around since (I think) the late 1970's, relatively easy to get a hold of by the early-mid 80's, but not really fully adopted until the early 90's. That's around 15 years from invention to full adoption. It took DVD's something like 4 years to do that.
Then of course there were the superior formats that were never adopted (read: laserdisks).
Anybody old enough to know how long it took tapes to become common over LP's or eight tracks?
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
It is notable that many retail places no longer even sell movies on VHS, but still sell music on cassette.
Re:Not good enough (Score:5, Informative)
Actually... [consumerreports.org]
Seems like a disaster in the making to me, but people gotta have their tunes!
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember it because whenever we'd go on class trips I'd make sure I was in their car. We listened to Star Wars and Return of the Jedi. I still remeber holding the 33 1/3 sleeves in the car.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
That has, as far as I know, never really/fully happened. LPs had a better reliability than tapes for pre-recorded media. CD replaced LP, not the tape.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Informative)
Billy Joel's "Songs in the Attic" was the first album ever released on CD, way back in 1981. One could argue that CD's didn't really catch on until 10 years later.
DVD's were supposed to flood the market for Christmas 1996, but didn't quite make it in time. That's right, kids, 1996. The titles were originally released in Japan: Blade Runner, The Assassin, The Fugitive, and Eraser. (yechhh) Then the first ones in the US were on March 19, 1997, and were IMAX remakes
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:4, Insightful)
To be fair, the difference between CD's and cassettes is not as big as the difference between DVDs and VHS. CDs were nice because they were higher quality and you could instantly skip to other songs, but they were trouble to jog/travel with. DVDs are higher visual/audio quality than VHS, but they're also smaller (CD's weren't as compact as casettes) and they have extra bonus features that VHS couldn't hope to do.
CD's were an upgrade to casettes with tradeoffs, whereas DVDs are a much larger upgrade to VHS with much fewer in terms of tradeoffs. It's not all that surprising that DVDs took off.
EVDs are higher resolution and may be cheaper, but is that enough to be adopted? Boy do I doubt it.
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Interesting)
Another fact
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Just to antagonize you some more, the first generation DVDs were often quite crappy, because of the primitive early codecs used in creating the video streams. I personally kept buying LDs until I was given a DVD-ROM drive back in 1999 or 2000.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Interesting)
It think the original poster meant better than VHS.
p.s. Betamax lost becasue Sony wouldn't license the format to Porn. Sounds like the same argument from the Chinese...
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:4, Funny)
Now where's my billions?
Re:Not good enough (Score:5, Interesting)
I suspect the EVD might actually be endorsed by the big US media companies. If the country responsible for a lot of piracy uses a peculiar local format, it essentially makes those discs region encoded. Of course the manufacturers in the US and Europe would also have to agree not to support the format for it to be effective at stemming piracy.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:5, Insightful)
The pirates are always happy to pursue any moneymaking opportunity they can find; within a few months of their introduction, pirated DVD's were already almost as widely available as VCD's, and no doubt once people start buying EVD players the same thing will happen.
Then, once people have EVD players and widely available disks, legitimate movie companies will have no choice but to adopt EVD; otherwise, they'll have a base of millions and millions of consumers who have no choice but to buy pirated EVD's. And considering the pragmatic-to-a-fault attitude of the Chinese courts and legislators towards such matters, I suspect that they'll give the studios a hard time about cracking down on pirated EVD's until legitimate alternatives are available. Yes, since they're not well-protected those EVD's can then be easily pirated as well, but since that's already true about DVD's it hardly makes a difference at this point (and will probably translate to further cost savings since there's less sophisticated decoding hardware required, perhaps even allowing them to use older and cheaper processes for chip fabrication etc).
So this could be a real coup for the Chinese - single-handedly force the studios to adopt a poorly-secured, proprietary video format just to stay in the market.
Don't look for these to show up in the US, though; DVD players are already way too common, so they'll never show up officially, and considering eBay's sheer and utter spinelessness towards MPAA legal threats it's doubtful we'll see them show up there either.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
China has developed a new compression system. With the licensing restrictions on mpeg and mp3(Geesh just look at what you gotta go through to watch DVD's under linux) this could lead to a new popular standard, just because it doesn't have the draconic licensing restrictions that mpeg and mp3 have.
It goes even deeper than just a disc, set top 802.11 video recievers, sattelite transmissions, with no licensing needed.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
AFAIK, the impossibility to view a DVD under Linux is due to the CSS problems, not the MPG/MP3 problems.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Interesting)
I was a reasonably early adopter of DVDs. But it was more for the toy factor. What are these benefits over VHS?
1. Higher resolution video
2. Higher resolution, multi-channel sound
3. Extras
You know what I think? That's not a huge list. How's this for a list:
1. I have to pay for all of my old stuff again. Not so bad - it's a new format, someone has to be paid for the conversion
2. They're fragile. You can drop a VH
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Informative)
Have you ever actually done that? VHS cassettes consist of a few big pieces of plastic that snap together. Drop that on concrete and there is a good chance it'll break apart. Drop a small, light piece of plastic, nothing happens. Maybe a few scratches, but so long as you don't throw it on the concrete there won't be any major damage.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
I'll let you try this one out: crack the corner off a VHS video and try playing it. Sure it will get dust in it quicker, but I'm pretty certain you'll be able to play it still.
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Interesting)
I got a DVD-ROM for my PC about ten months ago and have been getting DVD disks exclusively from the public library since then.
Here's what I like about DVDs:
-clear sharp image on PC monitor.
-ability to copy the movie to hard disk so that I can watch it for 15 or 20 minutes at a time over several days or weeks after returning the DVD to the library.
-ability to get the text dialog as subtitles from the movie into a text file.
Fractals the Grassy Knoll of compression (Score:5, Informative)
A well encoded DVD has very high quality, certainly on par with Betacam SP, the high end analog broadcast production format before digital took over. A well encoded disc won't show significant artifacts.
HDTV resolution goes up to 1920x1080, which is about 6.5x the pixels of DVD (720x480). How high do you want to go? The cheapest displays that can meaningfully do more than 1920 lines wide on a largish screen are awesomely expensive.
Today's displays are crappy? Compared to what? A tapestry? IMAX? We're really at the beginning of a golden age for consumer video technologies. The quality you can buy for $5000 is vastly improved in the last three years, let alone the last 30. Most people don't have eyes good enough to appreciate anything beyond a good 1920x1080.
Lastly, fractals are really the Grassy Knoll of video compression. Yes, Iterated was created to make products on them. No, fractals didn't work. I spent a lot of the mid-late 90's working with Iterated's stuff in different forms. Bitrate scalability was interesting (you could truncate the file at any point, and the more bits you grabbed, the better an image you got). Compression ratios were somewhat better than JPEG. They scaled pretty well. But the net gains were too small to overcome the market share advantages of lowly JPEG.
Iterated simply couldn't make a business around fractal compression. They sold their stuff to AltaMira, who still are selling their fractal compression stuff. Iterated morphed into a company providing image management solutions for the prepress industry. There was still some fractalish stuff underneath, but that wasn't where the value was really added.
The big thing about "fractal" compression is that it wasn't really fractal - its ability to take advantage of self-symmetry was very limited. Heck, even with today's computer power, a "true" fully automatic fractal compressor would take unbelievable amounts of CPU power - many orders of magnitude beyond what realistic video codecs do today. You're basically extending motion search into so many axes.
The only fractal video codec was ClearVideo, which was interesting I suppose, but was roundly stomped by both DCT H.263 derived codecs, and VQ derived codecs like Sorenson Video 1.
Almost everything good about fractals has been inherited by wavelets. And wavelets have also inherited fractal's difficulty in handling motion estimation. That's why DCT and DCT-derived codecs still rule the roost today. Wavelets are great for still image, but no one has come close to devising a really competitive wavelet motion codec.
Maybe someday we'll have a revolution in codecs, but DCT-based codecs like WMV9 and AVC keep on trucking in providing excellent compression efficiency, scalability, and decoder performance.
Re:Not good enough (Score:3, Funny)
They should make it sound more 'Chinesey' like their Fireworks and Food:
'Eternal Visual Delight'
On avoiding paying American royalties fees (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me try to explain it here. Avoiding paying royaties to US and EU is a major component of any sensible comercial or industrial policy in a developing country. in market the size of China's any cent not leaving the country is a cent to be invested in a million of important things to the Chinese population.
Incidentally that is also one of the major reasons for countries like Brazil, India and China to be seriously looking at Open/Free Software - in the medium and long term, the savings in royalties not send abroad usually justify any short-term problems that may arise.
Re:On avoiding paying American royalties fees (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:On avoiding paying American royalties fees (Score:4, Insightful)
Just out of curiousity, what do the licensing fees run per DVD player? I can buy a bottom-end player for less than $40 at Circuit City or Best Buy. That has to cover the cost of the original manufacture in the Far East, shipping to the US West Coast, transport to Denver, and the fixed costs of the retailer (floor space, etc). I'm guessing the licensing fee is $1, $2? What will it cost China to develop a complete standard that does not infringe on any of the international patents -- $10M? $100M? I know China is a potentially large market, but that's a lot of sales. I suspect that there are more political motives afoot.
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
You can get HDTVs in the 40-52inch range for around $1000 today, provided you don't have a problem with rear projection. I don't think it's going to be irrelevant much longer, especially with the FCC pushing it so hard.
Horrywood (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Horrywood (Score:2)
John Woo.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Horrywood (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Elf
2. Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
3. Matrix: Revolutions
4. Brother Bear
5. Looney Tunes: Back in Action
6. Love Actually
7. Scary Movie 3
8. Radio
9. Tupac: Resurrection
10. Mystic River
Some of the best movies out there are Chinese. Check out Wong Kar Wai's movies, Jet Li's movies, Sammi Cheng's movies - different genres but great shit. In addition, Chinese audiences are more open to foreign movies than Americans - VCD shops will sell top
Re:Horrywood (Score:2)
Who is this really going to help ? (Score:2)
Simon
Re:Who is this really going to help ? (Score:2)
.
Re:Who is this really going to help ? (Score:2)
By trying to (legitimately) avoid DVD patents and regional encoding, it seems to me like they're trying to avoid control mechanisms over the media and modern culture.
China is 20% of the global market (Score:2, Informative)
That's enough to sustain their own format, and to attract interest from foreign media providers.
If India was to team up on the EVD, they'd have 35%!
Re:China is 20% of the global market (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Who is this really going to help ? (Score:5, Insightful)
How on earth do they expect this to fly with a highly patriotic and semi captive market of only a billion or so people?
It's madness.
And certainly no one here on Slashdot would feel inclined to adopt the standard if the Chinese choose to make it competitive by releasing it as an open standard ala the CD.
We just love attempts to "DVDize" the Compact Disc.
What would be wrong about taking the format out of the hands of the MPAA and DVD Consortium? Just the fact that it comes from China?
Like the compass, silk, lacquer, gunpowder and noodles?
A good idea is a good idea. I think an open video format is a good idea. If that's what the Chinese are up to I'll go at least one round of The East is Red with them.
KFG
Re:Who is this really going to help ? (Score:2)
If nobody else wants to be the market leader in just China, I'll volunteer. It will be a struggle selling to a market with over a billion people but I'll struggle along somehow.
WoO! (Score:2, Funny)
Ongoing (Score:5, Funny)
Good news! (Score:2, Informative)
This will help keep the ability to produce and distribute content within reach of everyone, instead of just the large medi
Licensing and market share (Score:4, Interesting)
At quick glance, the license doesn't seem "open" which means you'll end up with another controlling factor one way or another...and someone will have to come up and battle with a different version of deCSS. If that is the case, it can't be good.
Secondly, DVD has a heck of a market share. I suppose if anything has a population to take a chunk out of market share, it would be China. However, from observation, it would be difficult to budge the hold that DVD currently has.
I'm thinking along the lines of Ogg Vorbis vs. MP3 -- with Ogg being free (though I'm not sure the EVD will be a free format) and MP3 having the market share. Ogg may have crept up in terms of getting hardware/software support, but it's still not dislodging the majority of MP3 users even though it's of a higher technical quality.
I suppose any disruptive technology to run interference on DVD would be a Good Thing(TM)
Haven't they been attacking dvd's for some time? (Score:2)
Re:Haven't they been attacking dvd's for some time (Score:2)
In Related News, Jack Valenti . . . (Score:3, Funny)
"This isn't about marketing dominance or intellectual property rights," said the movie industry mogul, "They hate our freedom!"
Re:In Related News, Jack Valenti . . . (Score:2)
Simon.
Ogg Theora! (Score:5, Interesting)
The Chinese market is huge. Many DVD players are made in China. It seems very likely to me that the EVD standard will at least carve out a niche for itself. Potentially, it will have sufficient impact that all future DVD players will be made EVD-compatible. It ought to just be a matter of putting some more stuff in the ROM of the DVD player. It this really is based on Ogg Theora, there will be no fees or royalties to pay.
Of course, the MPAA will probably drag their heels about releasing Hollywood movies in EVD format. But I would love it if there was a widespread standard based on Ogg Theora, so I could burn my own discs using nothing but free software and know that my friends have players that can watch the discs.
steveha
Re:Ogg Theora! (Score:4, Informative)
VP5 and VP6, not Ogg Theora (Score:2)
Oh, well. I can still hope that the EVD standard will play Ogg Theora as a bonus. Most DVD players can play VCD, so that isn't too unlikely.
Thanks for the correction.
steveha
Predicting 0% marketshare for EVD (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Predicting 0% marketshare for EVD (Score:3, Insightful)
Reduced patent encumbrance means cheaper players and media. Everyone wants that (except the MPAA and the MPEG consortium).
Basing their codec on an open source one means that we'll have the ability to play these under Linux without breaking the law (and perhaps even encode our own material without uber-expensive authoring software (or breaking the law)).
No region protection means we can buy the
Re:Predicting 0% marketshare for EVD (Score:2)
You are right, it is not.
Unless China wants to spend $100 million (or more) marketing the new format to Western consumers
You don't get it, they want to adopt it for their internal market.
Even in China, it will be an uphill battle
Unless the government ban all other media. Don't forget also that almost zero DVD players are out there in China. At best, they have VCD players.
I don't see why Chinese consumers would buy the more expensive format, unl
Re:Predicting 0% marketshare for EVD (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm from "former eastern block" so I know how things are being managed in such places.
Those who refuse get a bullet in the head.
For refusing to get EVD? Are you really SO stupid that you believe that?
Things are very simple. People aren't -forced-. Things just get arranged in such a way, that if they want otherwise, it just doesn't pay - by far.
In communist countries, big monetary transactions are relatively scarce. You buy food, maybe clothes, maybe some small home equipment. People earn little, but these cost little too. No problem. But if you want luxury goods, they usually cost more than in the west. People just almost never can afford them. But there IS a "window" for them - special government coupons that allow you to purchase a luxury item from limited pool, for very decent price. You get those by communist means: "Everyone gets one", "Those who deserve get one" or by a bribe or friendship or such. The caveat is, the items are of exact specification. So an university may purchase in "internal export network" a CD drive for $50 or use a coupon for EVD for $10. A worker at a factory instead of getting a lousy $50 bonus for really superb job over several years, may get a coupon to buy a brand new, quite decent PC (conforming to government specs, from the pool) that will cost $80. Want to get DVD instead of the EVD inside? Pay $100 from your savings and enjoy! The system works quite well in promoting what the government wants. Of course, you have to be very lucky, or hard working... or have good contacts, to get such a coupon!
No Comment (Score:5, Funny)
They probably had to get a couple of people in to help them off the floor after they fell out of their chair laughing.
How many 'standards' (Score:3, Insightful)
It will all end up a big unuseable jumble if this trend isnt stopped...
While im not for 'one vendor' ideas, 'one standard' IS good.... ( oh, and make that standard open.. )
EVD, huh? (Score:2)
Solid state? (Score:3, Interesting)
IMHO following the "disk" trend is a mistake. CD and DVD could have been made i.e. rectangular, with drive that would just sweep the laser ray over immobile surface. Cheaper, faster, less error-prone... and less resembling a vinyl record, so Sony decided it should be round and rotate instead, so people would prefer to buy it.
I still hope some next generation media won't follow dumb marketing trends and prefer efficiency over "legacy looks", but it seems China failed my hopes this time.
Re:Solid state? (Score:3, Informative)
Do EVDs support the notion of "regions"? (Score:2)
If they do, I don't care at all.
Video Codec Appears To Be VP5 & VP6 (Score:4, Informative)
Remember -- fifty years ago, Japan tried to colonize Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia is still pissed.
Anyway, the video codec appears to be On2's VP5 and VP6 -- which, being much newer codecs than MPEG-2, support HDTV resolutions and DVD bitrates -- supposedly with quality as good, if not better, than Microsoft's solution. (Caveat: I was not impressed with VP3, the algorithm open sources by On2 and being tweaked heavily into Ogg Theora.) Not said is what's being used for the audio codec. While audio compression and video compression are two very different things, it's problematic when the two are grown utterly separate from one another. DVD has this problem -- MPEG-2 and AC3 (Dolby Digital) have slightly different frame sizes, making it much more awkward to edit accurately.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
EVD sounds superior (Score:2, Interesting)
I think this is a good thing. If Hollywood doesn't support it then maybe independents producers might. A HDTV recordable version using blue lasers would be very cool.
Re:EVD sounds superior (Score:3, Interesting)
Back in the days before DVD, all we had here in the "advanced" US was VHS. Terrible resolution (much worse than even NTSC is capable of displaying), tape instead of disc, etc. Asia, OTOH, had the VCD, and later the SCVD. But Hollywood didn't like VCD so it never happened here.
Now, if my prediction is right, we Americans will be stuck with crappy DVD, with region coding, commercial
Questionable history! (Score:3, Informative)
First off, VCD isn't really any better quality wise than VHS. VCD is digital, so you don't get analog errors and wear, but it has only half the temporal and vertical resolution.
VCD didn't fail in the states for any reason other than that it didn't provide any better customer value than VHS. VCD won in Asia since it's a cheaper medium to counterfeit. In general, Asian audiences also seem more willing than US audiences to accept lower quality for lower price for video. Have you looked at many of those au
ObCliche.. (Score:2)
Ok, sorry.
Finally! (Score:2, Funny)
I can tell you this.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hollywood and their bullshit can go jump in a lake.
An Extreme Yo-Yo By Any Other Name... (Score:3, Funny)
Encryption/Protection (Score:2)
a) It can be happily embraced by the linux/open-source/etc community, and anyone who doesn't want to get sued for actually trying to do something with their disc that wasn't in the "box" the creators intended
b) The movie companies will hate it, and probably not use it, for the reason in (a)
Didn't see a whole lot about the encryption/etc on the disc, perhaps I just overlooked it though.
Golden sales period? (Score:2)
Ahhh yes, the golden sales period... when carolers go from house to house singing the praises of Chairman Mao.
Makes me feel all nostalgic and sentimental.
Bravo (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh dear :/ (Score:4, Funny)
DVD, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, EVD, EVD-R, EVD-RW, EVD+R, EVD+RW?
Unlikely perhaps, but not impossible. Fragmentation of a so-called 'standard' is a bad thing IMO
Try getting salesmen at PC World (UK) to try and explain *that* drive!
No, I'm sorry, it's even worse (Score:4, Funny)
The difference between R, RW and W is that with R and RW you can Record and ReWrite the disc, respectively. But with an EVD-W disc you can ONLY write to the disc. Once the disc has been written, you can never read from it again.
Copy protection, hell. You can't copy what you can't read!
Article Typo (Score:4, Funny)
*duck*
A guess at what China is trying to do... (Score:5, Insightful)
China wants to manufacture DVD players, without having to pay $17 for every one it manufactures. So they invent their own system, EVD, which is similar to DVD but uses completely different file formats, video/audio encoding algorithms, etc, so no-one can complain they're infringing patents. Maybe they also have a capability to interface with a computer, for data transfer. They then get loads of films released in EVD format - this'll mostly be Chinese-language films for the China and Taiwan markets. (There might be films for other Asian markets: Japan, Korea, India, etc). Maybe there will be some USA or European films as well.
The main people buying EVD players will be in Asia, and diaspora Asian communities in Europe and the USA. The DVD manufacturers can't complain, since it isn't infringing their IP. Nor can Holywood. Then, as if from nowhere, REOM images appear on the Internet that when downloaded and put into an EVD player, make it able to play DVDs. Of course, the EVD manufacturers make public noises about how naughty it is to download these ROM images, and illegally play DVDs...
I've no idea how accurate this scenario is, it's just a guess.
EVD mainly for Chinese market (Score:3, Insightful)
Realizing cracking down the pirating is not possible in short term, the large medias companies such as Disney has been pricing their products closed to the pirated copies. A legit Disney DVD costs about $3 while the pirated costs about $1.
Waving out the royalty fee for DVD would help the media companies to close the cost gap between legit copies and pirated copies.
Moreover, Chinese manufecture about 50% or more of DVD players for export. They haven't complaining about paying royalty on that but they want EVD to be used domestically to avoid paying DVD royalty for domestic market.
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Posted by icup
In a move to fight anything promoted by the West, China has revealed plans to create it's own air.
"Western air is just too... western" says Director of Foreign Affairs Kim Woo. "Chinese air should have a more traditional feeling to it."
Kim Woo continues "China has more people any any other country, we can do whatever we want without taking orders from Western influence, including making Chinese air."
"I like the idea," said one Chinese citizen, "I live in China, so I should breath Chinese air, right?"
Although no details have been revealed about the distribution system of the new Chinese air, inside sources say it will be bottled like water and priced at roughly $1 USD per quart. Bottling is likely to take place in the US.
Plans are also in the works for Chinese water.
Re:Format? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:VCD? (Score:2)
Re:VCD? (Score:2, Insightful)
The US needs to wake up. China can do whatever it wants. All large companies (and thus US trade policy) will bend to China's every will because they can not survive without China's market.
China does not want to depend on any foreign nation for anything. By developing their own technologies, they are creating jobs for China's population which encourages them to get a better education. Not
Re:VCD? (Score:2)
Says who? China is THE big boy, and they've proven already that they're perfectly willing and capable of going it alone if need be. It seems pretty arrogant of western businessmen to try and tell the largest market in the world they need to play by our rules, especially given their current rate of economic and technological expansion.
I'd say it's your CFO who needs to wake up.
Re:VCD? (Score:5, Insightful)
your CFO is an idioty and doesn't understand China's policy at long term stratagy. pretty scary for a CFO.
Why should China play with 'the Big boys'?
'The Big Boys' are pissing off a lot of the people that buy there goods. If china comes up with a format that DVD manufatures can play, and is cheaper to press, and it gives consumers what they want, then they will win.
Keep in mind, China has longterm goals in mind, while 'The Big Boys' are having a problem seeing past the next quarter.
'The Big Boys' had better start thinking long term, put money into things that are required for a good foundation for there respective countries, and stop pissing people off. Otherwise they will loose.
Re:Some more information would be nice (Score:2)
It's backward-compatibile with standard DVDs, so it probably should have most of its (mis)features. But once you get an EVD rip of a DVD, you're free to do whatever you desire.