End of the Blu-Ray / HD-DVD Format War? 266
Next week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas should shake up the format war. The NYTimes reports that Warner Brothers will announce the Total HD disc that can store both Blu-ray and HD-DVD content. The article also mentions that LG (along with "possibly other gadget makers") is expected to announce a player that can play both formats. According to Yahoo, LG has not announced pricing, but the Times notes that such dual-format devices are bound to cost more than existing players. And the Times outlines the many considerations that would come into play before studios decide to release their content in both formats on a single disc.
Excellent (Score:4, Insightful)
And to a lesser extent the Betamax / VHS war.
Re:Excellent (Score:5, Funny)
And to a lesser extent the Betamax / VHS war.
Please elaborate on how DVD±R drives ended the Betamax/VHS war...
Re:Excellent (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think it has something to do with robot monkey ninja pirates from outer space.
Re:Excellent (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Excellent (Score:4, Funny)
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Well, there is, more or less...
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Re:Excellent (Score:4, Insightful)
Imagine someone who doesn't know too much about the technology who walks into best buy to buy a movie player. They can buy a HD-DVD player for $500, a Blu-Ray player for $1000 or a Dual-Format player for $1250; the Best-Buy salesman is trying to make more money so he starts talking about how neither format is ensured success so they should probably buy the dual format player. After looking at the move players they walk over to the movie section and see some titles in HD-DVD that are not available in Blu-Ray, some titles in Blu-Ray that aren't available in HD-DVD and there are less Total-HD titles than either of the other formats; on top of this the Blu-Ray/HD-DVD titles are $30 where the Total-HD titles are $35. After all of that they notice that Best Buy is having a sale on DVDs where 2 of their favourite movies are on the 2 for $15 rack and they have a working DVD player at home.
Every sale of a Total-HD disc or Dual-Format drive prevents the industry as a whole from choosing one format as their standard.
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A winner is DVD (Score:2, Insightful)
Where "the cheaper format to produce" == standard-definition DVD, right?
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While CD sales are down, and legal mp3 sales are up...I still believe the CD sales are much larger than mp3 or other lossy format sales are.
Frankly, I don't think the drop in CD sales are due in total to rise of lossy format online sales, I think it has more to do with the crap that the record companies are trying to pawn off to the general public as musical talent these days....
They are producing anything WORTH buying....
$1200 dual-format player (Score:2)
They can buy a HD-DVD player for $500, a Blu-Ray player for $1000 or a Dual-Format player for $1250
Or they see in the video game aisle that they can build their own own dual-format player. Taking the example of the United States, I can buy an Xbox 360 with HD-DVD accessory for $600, a PS3 premium for $600, and get two free game consoles (PS3 and 360) and a free Linux PC (PS3 Open Platform [playstation.com]). There's your $1200 dual-format player.
(Before you go complaining about European PS3 launch delays, HappySqurriel wrote $, and $ != €.)
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You conveniently overlooked.... (Score:2)
You're conveniently overlooking the fact that the industry failed choose either DVD-R or DVD+R, yet somehow we have managed to survive into 2007 without civilization collapsing and with both formats still available. Forgive the hyperbole, but my point is so what if both formats survive?
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Big, big difference. You're talking blank recordable media. If the Blu-ray/HD-DVD conflict only affected blank media, it wouldn't be a big deal. But we are talking about factory pressed discs with movie content. It is a big problem that you can only get some moves on one format.
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That war was already pretty much over by the time DVD recorders got anywhere near competitive with VCRs.
Only hope (Score:2, Interesting)
Has Sony sold a License? (Score:5, Interesting)
or has some one (LG?) gotten around this some how?
Mods do not RTFS (Score:5, Informative)
The ability to make a player that plays both formats has been around for a while now (nearly as long as the formats infact), however Sony (and the rest that hold the patents on Blu-Ray) were refusing to sell a license for any device that would play both formats. Now LG is announcing that they will be sellign one.
so either they are ignoring the Patents (and will get sued horribly for it) or have gotten a License (or found a work around).
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but it would stand to reason they have their own license to use as they please.
They have their own licence to use as they please within the confines of the licence. Just because I have a licence to use XP Pro on my home computer (yes, I do, I actually plunked down for the retail version...my reasons are my own) doesn't mean I can do what I want to Windows. (Assuming I actually adhere to the licence)
True, I can violate that licence and MS likely won't com
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http://www.blu-raydisc.info/license_info/rewritabl e/flla.htm [blu-raydisc.info]
Under FLLA, licensee will be granted a license to use the Blu-ray Disc Format Specifications and Blu-ray Disc Logo to develop, manufacture, use or sell the products categorized as follows.
Unfortunatly, in order to read the licence, you have to pay to get one which is either $15k or $2.5k, I'm not quite sure... Either
Media Providers Benefit (Score:2)
Maybe not! (Score:5, Insightful)
As has been noted in an earlier post, Blu-Ray disks hold more data. Those behind Blu-Ray would not be happy to see their disks reduced to computer archives rather than media as Warner Bros. sells content to happy consumers. This could be a considerable loss for Blu-Ray as empty disks sell for much less than disks with media.
Something that is not mentioned in the article is why consumers would want either format anyway.
I have a 1080i television and a seXbox-360, but I don't want either format because of the DRM and the lack of features. Maybe in the future when they can offer something substantive, as DVD did when it displaced video tape, I'll consider Blu-Ray, HD-DVD, or Total DVD. Right now, DVD looks just fine to me.
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So don't buy it if you're not interested in HDDVD/Bluray. I for one am. You may not be interested in jumping from 0.3MP to 2MP video, but others are.
Your 360 will let you download a few (very few) HD movies right now, but they're all ~5GB downloads, and currently in 720p only. Downloads might eventually broadly surpass disk media, but for now, the easiest way to get a 25/30/50GB chunk of video data is with physical media.
Also, in the eyes of the law, DVD's are DRM'd too. If DVD's are okay now, then
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I was trying to convey the feeling I have that these new formats are going to fail in a collosal way.
For instance, on December 10, 2006 Richard Siklos wrote in a New York Times article titled The Hat Trick That Didn't Happen
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Yes. That's exactly why unification is a Good Thing. Of course, the best thing would have been not screwing this up in the first place.
``"I think the fastest way to end the format war is through decisiveness and strength,"''
No. The best way to end the format war is to not have multi
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I think that applies to consumers more than the companies. If consumers don't play in large enough numbers to make a difference, we win!
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I don't think it will be long in coming, but for the time being, I still consider the next gen DRM to be unbroken.
CONTENT (Score:2)
While I think this is great news, I don;t see a happy marriage in HD-DVD/Blu-Ray's future, just as we didn't see comb DVD/DIVX devices. Once went on to be wildly popular, while the other went tits up. The same can basically be said about VHS/Beta.
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I think the GP was referring to the old technology that really sucked ass [wikipedia.org] where you get a movie on a Divx disc and it expires after a couple days, not the Divx/xvid codec.
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We didn't? I seem to recall seeing these on display in stores and in advertisements. Perhaps I was hallucinating?
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A solution for a problem we didn't ask for... (Score:5, Insightful)
WB and Paramount get free passes for being the only studios to support both formats. Everyone else gets Fs.
The HD market is a tiny swab of moist air in the filled water bucket of DVD revenue. I think sales are still under 1%. I can guarantee you that they would be at 5% or more if this stupid format war never came around. That's the main issue.
I don't understand why Universal (and to some extent WB) continue to make these HD DVD/DVD combo discs. For the uninitiated, these are dual-sided discs, with the DVD on one side and the HD DVD on the other. Dual-sided discs are always more complicated and expensive to manufacture and they're really not a value-add to consumers. Most big releases on DVD go with multiple discs rather than multiple sides. So, it makes it a crappier product and on top of that, they charge a premium, anywhere from $10 to $20 (MSRP) for our "benefit"! Note: expect this to play out in this new/twin/hybrid Blu-Ray and HD DVD format. Why pay $25 for one movie when you can pay $40 for both, one of which is unnecessary?
And here LG joins the fray, offering a dual-format player for $800-$1300. Nevermind that at that price range a savvy shopper would be already able to buy both players. HDTV owners aren't buying the new formats because they don't want to pick the losing side. Why don't they want to pick the losing side? Because they don't want to buy a new player for the winning format years down the road. Mind you, in 2009 or 2010 HD players are going to be $199. So these people are holding off because they don't want to spend $199 in another year. And a new $1000 player is supposed to calm these fears?
I can't put it any clearer than this: they fucked up. Everyone did. And now to make up for their mistakes, we should pay extra. And we won't.
The best part? The statements we'll hear in 2008 that the HD market isn't catching on. And who's to blame? Why, not the studios, but pirates! Pirates took our profits.
This whole ordeal is being played out by giant billion-dollar corporations that are basically repeatedly hitting themselves and each other in the groin with a hammer. When we ask them to stop and re-think what they're doing, they just ask us for money to cover the medical expenses. And then they use that money to buy more fucking hammers.
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They are not worried about the hardware, they are worried that in 2 years they could
Re:A solution for a problem we didn't ask for... (Score:5, Insightful)
> in 2 years they could have spent $5000 on content (early adopters are often collectors) in a format which they can no longer buy a player for.
And as a special DMCA bonus, if they try obtain the (illegal) tools to (legally) spaceshift it to another medium, they get to go to Federal prison.
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Interesting point, but that doesn't explain why many early releases on DVD were dual sided single layer (DSSL). (Right Stuff, Amadeus for two immediate examples I can think of). Single side dual layer is more complex and expensive, but (a) kinks got worked out and techniques improved so the raw cost dropped down close to (if not at) DSSL production and (b) customers just like them more so they sell better.
Heck, I didn't buy Amadeus b
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I agree that they screwed up HD. I think it started when they couldn't pick ONE aspect ratio/resolution/connector. That confused boatloads of people. What was so hard about picking something nice (1080p, 16:9, and a nice digital connector) and waiting until the hardware to drive it came about? It'd be a format that could last a while. It would eliminate all of the confusion too.
If they really had their act together, they would have picked one new video connector format for both the
There were technical reasons for the suckage (Score:5, Informative)
Film content/transfers, which has more information than the HD video (which is why you could release the film, transfer to VHS, transfer to DVD, transfer to HD for D-VHS and broastcast (in both 1080i and 720p), and transfer again for the HD formats with a 1080p version), and all look good. However, film is shot in 24 frames/second. To make DVD players cheaper, the content is converted to 480i/60 (one film frame for 2 DVD frames, one film frame for 3 DVD frames). Then, we started to get HD Ready sets that supported either 720p or 1080i, and if you are analog (and therefore 1080i), you can also do 540p, so once you support that, might as well support a 480p signal, analog is cool that way, just update the electronics and show a different image, digital sets like Plasma/LCD/DLP need to scale to their digital output), so we got progressive scan DVD players. Reading notes on the DVD (normally, or comparing and guessing), we convert those 2:3 frames with a reverse pull down, to get back to 24 frames that we show progressively... this matters because if you just show the lines you get:
Frame 1: film frame 1
Frame 2: film frame 1
Frame 3: film frame 2, but half the lines are still from film frame 1
Frame 4: film frame 2
Frame 5: film frame 2
Frame 6: film frame 3, but half the lines are still from frame 2
So you can't just add in half the lines and show it progressively, you have to figure out when the frame changes.
So, for film, IDEALLY you want to sent 24 frames/second, and let the set adapt accordingly (whether showing one frame twice, and the next three times, or even better, be able to process the image at 24 frames/second and show them each once for longer).
However, given the allocation of bandwidth for HDTV, and the realities of MPEG-2 encoding, we essentially got 4 "useful' formats, and a bunch of stupid ones, 480i/60 4:3 (for simply digitizing existing legacy content is useful), 480p/60 (kind of useful for game systems) in both 4:3 and 16x9, this was pointless, a 480p 16x9 format was sufficient to handle digitally sending DVD quality images, and 720p/60 and 1080i/60. 720p/60 is the most resolution you could get in the stream at 60 frames per second, progressively, and 1080i/60 was the most resolution you could get at 60 frames/second interlaced.
Now, should we have both progressive and interlaces, I would say maybe...
If you are shooting something fast moving like sports, you want the 60 frames/second, so 720p/60 was the ideal format for broadcasting sports events. If you are shooting something slow moving, like a nature show (which was a lot of early HD programming, and it looks great, but not sure the purpose), you don't care about as many frames, and interlaced vs. progressive matters less, but getting 1080 lines was useful, making 1080i/60 a useful format for these. However, for film transfers, which will be a large portion of HD footage for a while, 1080p/24 made a lot of sense, you are only sending 24 frames/second, so why not get the extra resolution.
Remember, the TV stations had a dream, promise HDTV, and deliver it maybe to the cable/satellite operators over a line, but not OTA. Only 10% of people got their programming OTA, so TV stations largely existed because of government decisions to keep them (as opposed to the network simply selling content to cable/satellite directly), so their idea: either broadcast 6 480i signals, requiring no new equipment other than digitizing, and all of a sudden, you have 6 channels to sell ads on. A local market with 7 stations would conceivably have 42 channels available without paying a monthly fee, that's kinda cool, and all the networks have a bunch of digital stations that the created fo
Who cares? (Score:2)
I think none of these will fly at any premium until display technology is sufficiently cheap.
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480i via S-video has alwas seemed very close to Composite when used with decent (paired) S-video cables [not ripoff Monster]. Both worlds better than F [coax] of whatever quality.
HD Disk format wars are over (Score:2)
You think.. (Score:2)
I suspect that this mystical wonder player will cost somewhere around $1,300. I base this price on absolutely nothing.
Won't cost more for long (Score:2)
I can see how it plays out.... (Score:2)
I think that most of us can deal with progressive scan DVDs for quite some time, especially since 1080p televisions are more than 10 years away from being the norm. Hell, most people, believe it or not... don't have HDTV sets in their home yet. And that technology has been out a LONG time.
2 x 2 (Score:2, Funny)
On the one hand we've got discs that have both HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, and on the other players that play both formats.
Somebody slap somebody!
1 year and crack free (Score:2)
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Re:Total HD Player (Score:4, Informative)
No, its the other way round. They are claiming that these Total-HD disks will play in both HD-DVD and Blu-ray players flawlessly. If the manufacturing costs of these disks is comparable to HD-DVD/Blu-ray disks, it might just click.
Re:Total HD Player (Score:5, Interesting)
Or look at it this way:
People don't know which way the market will swing. Some manufacturers are trying to win either way with a disc that can be played in both players. However, once the market is decided, nobody will buy them, what'd be the point? If the market never gets decided, consumers will just get bored, buy an HD/Blueray drive and still ignore Total HD.
Whatever happens, I reckon a year from now Total HD will be all but forgotten.
Re:Total HD Player (Score:5, Insightful)
I doubt it. Both formats' relative failure up until this point has nothing to do with the "format war". I use quotes because there really isn't any war to speak of; nobody cares. Look throughout recent history, and you'll see that nobody cares about incremental quality improvements in media format. If the media's physical shape or size changes, that's something else, but there aren't any physical changes here. Even broadcast quality upgrades have been ill-received, and have only come about because the FCC has mandated it. In this case, I don't believe a regulatory agency even exists to mandate media format upgrades.
So, dual mode discs or dual mode players or even a total end to any disagreement between content producers will change nothing; HD-DVD/Blu-Ray will each go the way of DVD-Audio (do most of you even know what that is?).
Re:Total HD Player (Score:5, Insightful)
An interesting side note on formats...
Most of my friends who have the new wide screen HD TVs don't have HD service. Furthermore, they stretch standard TV to fill their wide screen which makes everyone look fat. They end up with a low quality distorted picture but they are really impressed with their new "media experience". This is the real HD experience. I doubt there is any real demand for true HD.
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I love HD. I find that people that bitch about HD generally are being stubborn.
It really is different. It really does look vastly better. Watch a PBS show or Discovery show in 1080i/p, and you'll see the difference too, as long as the set is setup correctly.
Re:Total HD Player (Score:5, Funny)
Most of my friends who have the new wide screen HD TVs don't have HD service. Furthermore, they stretch standard TV to fill their wide screen which makes everyone look fat. They end up with a low quality distorted picture but they are really impressed with their new "media experience". This is the real HD experience. I doubt there is any real demand for true HD.
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Re:Total HD Player (Score:4, Funny)
You've completely ruined my off-the-cuff flippant remark with logic.
Shame on you.
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Speaking of anecdotal evidence...
I think that is true only of people who really haven't seen HD. Even my mom, who watches approximately no TV on average, is stunned by HD quality and will sit in my brother's room watching something like Discovery HD for 60-90 minutes. That's pretty much unheard of for her in most cases.
She wants an HD TV. She just can't justify the cost right now because, in her words, "there's nothing wrong with our TV." When either
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when was the last time you purchased a monitor that couldn't display games or video at HD resolutions? when was the last time you saw a laptop advertised with a 4:3 screen?
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Re:Total HD Player (Score:5, Informative)
Standard Television signal is approximately 480 lines of resolution, meaning there are 480 different pixels in every vertical line on the television, and the signal is interlaced, meaning that the TV displays 1/2 of the lines in the first scan (1st, 3rd, 5th, so on) and then the second half of the lines in the second scan (2nd, 4th, 6th, so on). This means that at any given time, only 240 of the lines of video on your TV are being updated, meaning that you're not getting all 480 lines of solid resolution. They are _there_ but they are not being displayed at the exact same time.
HD Television is either 720 lines of resolution in non-interlaced format or 1080 lines of resolution in interlaced or non-interlaced format. Even with 1080i, you're still getting 540 lines of resolution per scan -- more than double that of standard television. The actual resolution is almost 3 times as high as standard definition television. With 720p, you're getting more than 3 times the detail per frame than on 480i! You'll note if you research that there is a strong following of videophiles who claim that 720p is actually a more detailed picture than 1080i/p, but personally, I like my 1080i just fine.
The moral of the story is that if your brother can't tell the difference between an HD source and a 480i source, he needs a new set of eyeballs or to clean the 3 feet of dust off the television.
I have a Hitachi 51s715 51" HDTV and the difference between standard definition content and HD content is more than apparent, it is _obvious_. Anyone that isn't truly blind can see the amazing difference in clarity, color depth, black reproduction, etc.
I'm not sure if you're making your story up, your brother is a blind moron, or his TV sucks wastewater, but one of the three is true -- an HD signal cannot be mistaken for an SD signal by anyone with eyesight!
Lastly, regarding programming, Comcast offers free HD with any PVR system, DirecTV has a solid lineup of HD channels, Charter offers a good selection for no additional cost (you just have to call for the receiver), Dish Network has a poor selection but also has HD... Anyone saying it's hard or difficult to get HD service in their area must not be in an area serviced by any of those four major providers.
(ps, I'm not a video scholar, and my description of TV resolution is probably far from 100% accurate, but does cover the basics. Correct me on it if you want to, but I'm not claiming to have pioneered the NTSC standard or anything.)
Re:Total HD Player (Score:4, Informative)
1: sdtv is 480 lines. But those lines are measured as fine vertical lines. Or dots per horizontal scan line.
But, the fact that ntsc is also interlaced is also in this context, irrevelant. That only becomes revelant when talking about how many scan lines there are horizontally. Thats in the next kettle of fish.
2: There are 525 of those scan lines in ntsc, but only the odd lines are refreshed, then the even ones, in any two vertical scans. In ntsc we lose about 22 lines for vertical synch and hidden data, like closed captioning yadda yadda.
3: By the time the video is filtered well enough to keep it in its assigned ntsc channel, we have only about 330 dots per scan line left, nothing higher gets through else the Friendly Candy Company comes calling with a citation in hand for adjacent channel interference. Done well, this is still subjectively sharper than your old vhs vcr could ever do, which was in the 240 line range.
4: So sdtv winds up being about 480x400, interlaced. This ain't hdtv by any means, but because theres no analog noise, and no analog ringing artifacts or color 'dot crawl' it does look better to the unwashed. ntsc, the best we can put on your scren, is about 330 vertical lines by about 500 horizontal scan lines, which, with the 3 line comb filters we use to enhance the sharpness of horizontal lines in the image, loks subjectively sharper but is in fact the equ of about 200 real horizontal lines. Those filters are why you occasionally see some very slight slanted line in the pix literally snap from one line to the next on your screen. This of course requires matching filters in the viewers set, which only the top of the line stuffs have.
5: 1080i, which I've seen quite a bit of, is much sharper. But I can recall, long before we had an ATSC stds body to codify this stuff, seeing a Zenith demo at the N.A.B. show, a demo tape playing from a specially modified type C 1" machine with the tape moveing at about 30 ips and the drum whining similar to the old 2" quadruplex machines, of about 10 minutes of Stars on Ice, with Red Buttons, all that 1 hour tape could hold.
The stars all had their names embroidered on their tee shirts, and with the camera at max wide angle to show the whole floor, Red stopped and took a bow from center ice. You could read his t-shirt when he straightened back up. On a projection screen 4 foot high and 8 feet wide he was maybe 6" tall in that image. That was a 2x1 aspect ratio pix and I'd estimate the real, working resolution of that setup was at least 10,000x5000.
The image compression wasn't quite as good as mpeg2 (it was still under development itself) then and was done in hardware both ways. The data rate from that modified type C was in the 500 megbytes/second area. In other words, that single picture would have occupied more than all the bandwidth available in a 120 channel cable system. Not terribly practical in the real world.
As an exersize in what could be done, I've seen it, so even 1080i today is just a wannabe to me. OTOH, it (1080i) is far far better than anything I've seen in my 40+ years as a broadcast engineer watching our own on the air ntsc signals through a $5,600 fcc standard receiver. We haven't nick-named it Never Twice Same Color without reason.
--
Cheers, Gene
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In response to the AC (flame) above regarding my us
Re:Total HD Player (Score:4, Informative)
Many cable guys don't set the box up properly when they come to your house.
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My favorite thing to watch in HD is sports, there is a HUGE difference between watching a
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We
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There is a compelling reason to want higher capacity disks for computer data. This will also help drive adoption of next gen drives and disks.
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Please, PLEASE don't give the MPAA ideas like that!!!
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I agree no one really cares but I still think we will be seeing HD content of one type or another in a couple of years. The problem is that the media companies have built it up to be some great thing and invested millions probably even billions into the whole HD idea. They will force it though whether people want it or not. Combine that with the fact that all HD formats have a ton of DRM and the media companies have a reason to upgrade. What won't happen (and what the media companies would like) is people r
Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm keeping out of this arguement though, I really don't care which is better until one of them fails. Too much DRM, too many faults and cost is just too much.
Monkeyboi
Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:5, Insightful)
Brilliant. A single criterion for superiority.
Why - does it need more? (Score:4, Insightful)
So since the two formats are otherwise the same physical size, support the same codecs, and support the same protection system - do you need any other form of superiority to declare it better, especially as someone who may potentially look to be storing or moving large amounts of data on these discs? What is it you are looking for?
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Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah. I have some backup tapes that can hold more than my hard drive but I still use my hard drive as my primary source of data storage. Why? Because storage capacity isn't everything. I'm not saying BluRay is or isn't superior but I'd wager data throughput will be a much bigger factor. The cost of the reader and writer will also be significant, especially if the only difference is indeed storage capacity.
Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:4, Insightful)
Both HD-DVD and blu-ray use blue-lasers, so that is a non-issue. Blue-Ray has more capacity per layer (25GB/layer) as opposed to HD-DVD (15GB/layer), but a dual-layer HD-DVD has more than enough space to hold a movie and all the crappy extra feature, especially when using h264 or VC1 codec. So extra space for blu-ray is also irrelevant. Extra space may be needed for games, and IMHO thats where Blu-ray will shine. But for movies HD-DVD is a better deal because in the end you get same audio/video quality as blu-ray at half the price. Blu-ray might just end up being a gaming-format for ps3 and nothing more.
Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:4, Interesting)
The current "big thing" with TV programs is to package them in seasons for sale on DVDs (sometimes along with Extras).
If this idea makes the jump to HD media (which is a reasonable assumption), then the extra space means less discs in the set, or the same number of discs with more space for extras.
Just because the extra space doesn't seem relevant for one application (storing a movie with some extras) doesn't mean it couldn't be used for some other parallel application that might need it.
Thats like saying "people will never need more than X amount of HardDrive space in their machines, since all you need is X to install WindowsXP and a word processor". Some people do things like Video or Audio editing which might need more space. Others need to run large Databases for businesses.
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This would sound like a really good point unless you've ever actually purchased or rented one of these DVD sets, and wondered why there's only two episodes on a disc. The reason for this is that you can charge mo
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No skin off my nose; I get 'em via Netflix anyway.
HD price adv is temp, Larger BR capacity is not (Score:2)
The greater capacity of BR is something that will remain and since everything else is essentially the same (codecs,resolution,DRM) I would likewise choose BR for the greater capacity, especially when I think that someday thi
Re:As much as I hate Sony... (Score:5, Interesting)
HD-DVD is currently much less expensive for consumers, and manufacturers of both discs and hardware. This may not be the case forever, but (hypothetically) if it is cheaper to produce 2 or 3 HD-DVD discs then to produce 1 Blu-Ray disc the storage capacity advantage is not really important.
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Why are Blu-Ray discs cheaper or equal then (Score:2)
You are buying into the lie that Blu-Ray costs a huge amount more because you have to retool the factory to a greater degree and so on and so forth.
Yet those are fixed costs. There are already a lot of Blu-Ray discs being pressed - because PS3 games all come on Blu-Ray, meaning the volume is such that retooling is a non-issue as the cost is spread out over a lot of discs (the same plants pressing games can p
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Yea, because all those people that don't have access to broadband are not worth selling to. All those people who are too poor to pay for internet connection consistently every single month (or Cable TV with digital and pay-per-view fees, or plain old standard telephone line even) , but who could afford a DVD or two now and then are also not worth selling to. You'd be suprised how many people that don't have any phone, TV cable, and other basic services have quite nice st
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Disc-based media needs to be retired.
Yea, because all those people that don't have access to broadband are not worth selling to. All those people who are too poor to pay for internet connection consistently every single month (or Cable TV with digital and pay-per-view fees, or plain old standard telephone line even) , but who could afford a DVD or two now and then are also not worth selling to. You'd be suprised how many people that don't have any phone, TV cable, and other basic services have quite nice stereos, TVs, game consoles, DVD players, etc. They just choose what to save up for and what to not keep paying for again and again and again. Do neither of those two groups of people deserve to watch movies?
Sorry, but we're not quite to a point where your everything from the internet and nowhere else market works.
I have to call bullshit on this one. I don't believe there are people who don't have cable OR internet OR a phone who buy significant amounts of DVDs. I also disagree with the idea that disk media should be retired, but I just can't go along with your claim without some evidence to back it up.
And it isn't about whether someone "deserves" to watch a movie. It is about whether it makes economic sense to offer a particular product. I think there is a lot of life left in standard def DVDs. I think that some ki
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Trust me...I do. I know people that had tv's and dvd's, didn't have internet (except the occasional free trial offers over dial up)....and quite often, they let the cable and/or phone bills get behind and those were cut off. The ONLY form of entertainment, was OTA tv, and dvd's. Hell, I had friends like that that I gave my old dvd players to so they could
Got a deal for ya (Score:2)
Currently I can get a Netflix movie (which includes Blu-Ray and HD-DVD discs) quicker than I can download a 5GB file over a torrent or direct from a loaded server. And I have a cable modem with upgraded service.
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And you think there's a snowball's chance in hell that Big Media will support that?
Perhaps it will be nice for consumers, but I'm sure Big Media will lobby for a hefty levy on blank EVD media and get it "because it's really only used for piracy" in countries where such levies exist, e.g. many EU countries.
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Make a standard that takes solid state memory, capable of arbitrary resolution and supports the best quality and the most most common formats. Make it cheap (no lasers or moving parts should help a fair bit). Initial market will be home videos and people with media on their PCs that they want to view on their television screen.
It will take a few years for media to become cheap enough for it to be worth releasing pre-recorded movies but if there's enough of a market without them t
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Comparisons at this time are mostly inconclusive as well.
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You're right but reached the wrong conclusion (Score:3, Interesting)
Blu-Ray will obviously win because they have these things going for them:
1) The studio that makes content that looks most impressive in HD (Disney with Pixar, which can re-render at true HD resolutions with no grain or noise in the image).
2) Star Wars
3) The number of PS3's in homes now and in the future mean there are already an order of magnitude more Blu-Ray players in consumers hands than HD-DVD, and that gap will only grow wider.
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