Wal-Mart Begins Massive Push For HD DVD 338
Several readers sent us word of Wal-Mart's ordering 2 million HD DVD players from China. Hans V wrote, "My kids work at Wal-Mart and the manager there has been talking about this. HD-DVD's are selling like mad there so I hear." Another reader sent us a few links in Chinese and summarized them this way: "The first batches of these blue-laser HD DVD players are to land sometime in 2007, with complete fulfillment of the order [from Fuh Yuan] in 2008. The deal could be worth up to $300 million US, which translates to $150 per player. If so, by the time Christmas 2007 rolls around, Wal-Mart could be selling these for less than $200 retail, although some speculate that the initial manufacturer suggested retail pricing might be in the ballpark of $299. Currently the cheapest high-definition player is a Toshiba HD DVD with an MSRP of $399." By comparison Blu-Ray players, manufactured in Japan, are not expected to drop below $1000 until next year. The International Herald Tribune writes about the risk Toshiba is taking by bringing in Chinese manufacturers to trump Sony in the format war.
We have a winner! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We have a winner! (Score:5, Insightful)
I saw an ad in Entertainment Weekly pushing the idea of discs that had DVDs on one side and HD-DVDs on the other. Anyone want to bet that studios supporting HD-DVD will soon issue all their new (non-BluRay) films in this format? Those discs will play in ordinary DVD players, and they will be already adapted to one HD format if the customer decides to upgrade to HD. Backward compatibility and possible lock-in: what a beautiful combo for a marketing department!
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They lie.
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I imagine that eventually, films will come out in the crossbreed
Lot more than "just plastic" (Score:5, Interesting)
I'll bet that the cost of manufacturing a 2-disc set is significantly higher than producing a single-sided one; personally, I'd rather screw the artwork on the discs and save the money. They're just buckets for bits anyway.
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They're already doing that and more. For the foreseeable future all HD releases, whether blueray or HDDVD, will be accompanied with a DVD release, much like the transition to DVD from VHS for a number of years. So you run off a few more thousand DVD discs, and run them over to the assembly line along with the HDDVD discs.
For that matter, the majority of DVDs I buy come in multiples, as I buy mostly seasons. 6 DVDs in one package.
I'll bet tha
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There was a huge thud with DVD-Audio and SACD with the same premise - higher quality but only if you had the player for it. That format war took out both formats and this might do the same once on demand, downloadable movies gain traction. They won't need a special player and won't even have to get off the couch.
The average Joe (who shops at Wal-Mart) will own an HD television? Second, the HD-DVD or Blu-ray disks will have higher quality but will the average joe spend 10x more for it than a standard DVD p
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You'd be suprised; the local TV section is about 50-50 for HD and SD. The HD section looks to be 2/3rds the TV section, but that's because HDTVs average substantially larger. 50" HDTVs aren't uncommon, and they minimize out at around 20". For STDVs they max out around 36", and min out around 12"(kitchen tubes?).
And I seriously doubt Walmart stocks anything that doesn't sell.
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Re:We have a winner! (Score:4, Insightful)
PS3, HDTV, and FCC's analog switchoff (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:PS3, HDTV, and FCC's analog switchoff (Score:5, Insightful)
What do you think the odds are that the type of person who isn't willing to spend the money on cable or satellite TV is going to spend $500+ on an HDTV when they could instead spend $50 on a converter box? Don't forget the government subsidy [com.com] on a converter box, making the cost as low as $10.
Also, how much of an intersection do you really see between the set of people with old TVs that don't spend any money on television service and the set of people who are early adopters for the PS3 ?
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Also, how much of an intersection do you really see between the set of people with old TVs that don't spend any money on television service and the set of people who are early adopters for the PS3 ?
That's a small Venn Diagram, but the point is this article is from 2005. Also it's actually about upscaled DVD9. Thanks for playing however. I'm serious when I say even I can't believe I have less faith in slashdot editors with every one of these 'stories'. If you're going to just spew hate on Blu-Ray go to the trouble of making a false weblog or something. This article was made so long ago it didn't even consider PS3 with Blu-Ray.
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Well Broadcast/c
not going to happen... (Score:2)
they set it to 2009 because they expected hd to penetrate more quickly, but it's not for obvious reasons (alienating early adopters with drm, continually changing their standa
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For example, all the new TVs I've looked a
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You just tell yourself that. The deadline's been pushed back over and over again for years.
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Right let's assume that PS3 owners don't have HDTVs but suddenly everyone shopping at walmart does?
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Re:We have a winner! (Score:5, Insightful)
You're fooling yourself. Families often had multiple VHS players and now often have multiple DVD players. Even the hardcore AV folks are going to balk at spending $500+ per Blu-ray player after their first. Get a player under $200, though, and it looks far more attractive for the masses to replace a DVD player with an HD DVD player.
No, the price of the player is absolutely critical and if Wal-Mart is selling HD DVD players for half or less the cost of the cheapest Blu-ray player, Blu-ray will be looking at a disaster. Blu-ray has had a good few months thanks to [dumb] people buying PS3s but Sony has, in essence, raised the price of the PS3 by $50 (by killing the unit that was $100 cheaper) and still doesn't have great games to sell that system. Even if they can get a $400-500 Blu-ray player on the market, people aren't going to pay a premium for it over an HD DVD player with the same capabilities, and the [non-Sony] studios will follow the installed base.
Oh yeah, and if by "a lot more content industry support" you mean Sony and a couple other companies that haven't produced much, if any, Blu-ray content, then you're right. To me, it looks like the companies that have paid lip service to being on the Blu-ray bandwagon are still waiting to see how things shake out.
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Yeppers. And I, for one, couldn't be happer: anything to quash yet ANOTHER attempt by Sony to lock us into another godforsaken proprietary format.
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You mean proprietary like CD and DVD? You do realize it's not just Sony behind BD. You do realize that the majority of the successful formats for media in the last three decades have had sony in there somehwere. CD, DVD, 3.5", minidisc. they fell a lot when they went it on their own. But they have had a hand in almost all the successful digital media formats. Prop
Re:We have a winner! (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple - Makes DVD Studio, which includes support for making HD-DVDs
Dell - Only cares about data, not movies
Hewlett-Packard - Only cares about data, not movies
Hitachi - Only cares about data, not movies
LG - Released the first combo HD-DVD/BluRay player (which they have promised to update with better HD-DVD support).
Samsung - Recently announced that they are going to be releasing an HD-DVD player for the holidays.
Warner Bros. - Releases on both HD-DVD and BluRay, but is only releasing many of their most popular movies (including the Matrix trilogy) on HD-DVD due to the lack of interactivity available on BluRay players.
Sun - Only involved because they managed to get Java into the BluRay spec. Some of you may know what a pain it is trying to release Java programs that work well on different versions of the JDK. Well, guess what, it's even worse on BluRay. Read this link to find out how much fun it is for the studios trying to use BDJ, they end up writing the same thing 8 different ways in the hopes that one of them will work in the version of Java on your player: http://www.blueboard.com/bluray/qa_dragonslair.ht
Re:We have a winner! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We have a winner! (Score:5, Informative)
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HD DVD Wins (Score:2, Informative)
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VHS had no previous iteration - it was a completely new method of distributing media, so it was an easy sell.
DVD proliferated because of significant technical advantages over VHS - mainly startlingly better picture quality, and ability to output 16:9 widescreen formatted video.
However, HD-DVD and Blu-Ray only offers one advantage over DVD's: superior picture quality. This is only evident, however, on relatively new HD T
"Writes"? (Score:5, Informative)
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Well, that's not an anachronism. That statement was entirely accurate when the IHT article was written — in October 2005.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Writes"? (Score:5, Funny)
sony [slashdot.org], haha [slashdot.org]
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Re:"Writes"? Don't forget... (Score:3, Funny)
And 100% of those posts have to mention rootkits!
Re:"Writes"? (Score:5, Informative)
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This link is more up to date http://gear.ign.com/articles/782/782359p1.html [ign.com]
They won't be sold until Q4 2007 though. From the link
April 20, 2007 - In breaking news today, it would appear that mega-retailer WalMart has contracted a Chinese manufacturer to produce millions of low-cost HD-DVD players. Though somewhat obfuscated by translation issues and the breaking nature of the news, the current internet consensus suggests that Taiwan based manufacturer Fuh Yuan, in cooperation with TDK, will produce the
Why do OPs so sledom verify before posting? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Videophile hysteria preemption: yes, I know they aren't the same. Go take your meds.
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Educate yourself.
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=8
blacklisting (Score:5, Insightful)
Ii would suck to be working there on that day.
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Once a player is available for under $100, the key will be hacked out of it, and the chinese knock-offs of unlicensed, dual-format players will arrive in mass quantities.
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By "there", you mean the department at Sony responsible for explaining to the CEO why all of your products have been removed from the shelves of the largest retailer in the world? Yes, that would indeed suck.
No, Sony will have a $600 player shortly (Score:5, Informative)
Here:
http://www.sonystyle.com/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinit
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I'd bet that by Christmas you'll find Blu-Ray players for under $300. The price ramp thus far has fairly closely matched DVD players when they came out, with the exception of the slight stall at the end of 2006 with the blue laser shortage.
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Its not that hard to believe... (Score:4, Insightful)
HD Radio (Score:5, Informative)
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Blu-Ray could win but be called HD-DVD (Score:3, Insightful)
Hold off (Score:2)
Forget the increased disk sizes and high definition, most of the classic programs don't need it.
I won't be re-buying any of my already bought DVDs (about 220). They are all classics, and I'm in the process of converting them all to Xvid files so I can watch them on-demand.
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How does converting your purchased DVDs to XVID make them any more "on-demand" than just watching the DVDs themselves?
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Well, I suppose if you have a gigantic hard drive (or several of them), then you could have all your movies accessible without swapping discs in and out.
Though I'm happy to boast that my own laziness threshold, while low, is still well above swapping a DVD.
Does HD-DVD... (Score:3, Funny)
...improve the dialogue of the movies?
Once more, with feeling. (Score:5, Funny)
Preposterous!
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So, you're saying that the company that created Betamax, ATRAC encoding, the S-Link protocol, Minidisc players, Super-AudioCDs, Memory Sticks and Universal Media Discs might actually lose a format war
Don't forget CD, DVD, 3.5" floppies and MiniDisc (in japan)... all collosal failures right?
They don't have the best record but when they cooperate with others on a format like the ones I specified they tend to win. Then they attempt to go it alone they flame out. Blu-ray is a co-operative format. It's the form
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Scene from Starwars (Score:2)
Almost a finished war... (Score:2)
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Your first statement is wrong. Pr0n has not chosen sides. The story came when the lead guy at Vivid said some stuff about Sony not helpin
Walmart killing the PS3 (Score:4, Interesting)
The justification for the high price of the PS3 is that it is also a Blu-Ray player. If Blu-Ray loses the format war, where does that leave the PS3? Don't even try to say that the PS3 is a superior game console to the Xbox 360. F.E.A.R. was just released on the PS3 and it has inferior graphics to the Xbox360 or PC. The PS3 version was released 6 months after the Xbox 360 version. Nearly every game released on both platforms has inferior graphics and no online for the PS3 version.
http://ps3.ign.com/articles/782/782476p2.html/ [ign.com]
We are looking at a $199 HD-DVD player in the near future. At $150 cost per unit, I think Walmart is going to charge $199 a piece. Walmart works in volume. If they do this, you're going to see $249 players from other retailers. I guess all of the people who are saying that they are waiting for a sub $200 HD player will be buying one soon. Is Sony preventing the release of cheaper Blu-Ray players or is it just taking too long to bring down manufacturing prices?
HDTVs are about to be widely adopted. On Walmart's website, they are selling a 37 inch 720p/1080i TV for $698. I'm not saying it's the greatest quality television, but it's not outside the price range of the middle class. So you can buy a HD TV and player for under a thousand dollars.
If Sony had joined the HD-DVD coalition, they would be in a much better position. There would have been no format war and the PS3 would have a HD-DVD drive which would be the certain high definition format. Sony would still collect some royalities, just less than a Blu-Ray victory. Sometimes the safe option is the best option.
Okay, I'll bite.. what is the big deal? (Score:3, Interesting)
When it comes to back up, I don't use DVD. I use disk to disk to disk, or disk to disk to tape. Sure, the distribution disk for FC8 might fit on one disk, but uh, so?
For anyone but those interested in the bleeding edge or new technology, what is the big deal?
Article from 2005, where are the players? (Score:2)
Better than DVD how again? (Score:3, Interesting)
Pssst, wanna buy the Brooklyn Bridge? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless the studios change alignments and go neutral by Christmas it is all over for HD-DVD. Period. I am dubious anyone can make an HD player for 50 dollars (say, how well does "Children of Men" play for you on your XBox 360?). Maybe the mechanism, but it takes a lot of horsepower to do all the modern codecs at full HD and with the DRM overhead.
I suspect this will all turn out to be a huge misunderstanding that is blown all out of proportion by the HD-DVD camp looking for any good news to hang their hats on after having gotten beaten badly 4 months in a row. Children of Men is out and Matrix preorder has also come and gone. HD-DVD doesn't have any more ammo in the content pipeline to compete with the big titles coming Blu-Ray's way in the next few months.
If you include PS3 players Blu-Ray sells more players every month than HD-DVD has sold in a full Year.
Having been to China, they call DVD9 HD-DVD on the street and on the packaging. I suspect we are talking a conventional DVD player that scales conventional DVD to HD resolution. This could definitely be produced for $50 dollars or less. I do not believe they can make $50 HD-DVD players that actually work. Remember this stuff has to have HDMI for God's sake. If it were possible to do the processing, they'd still probably still have to skimp by piping out component only and hope the Down Rez flag never gets set on future HD-DVD discs.
Blu-Ray also has two additional layers of DRM (and yes I know how much slashdotters all hate DRM) and these will be used for the first time soon. Since the AACS is now completely compromised, the studios will really be watching to see how well Blu-Ray's additional layers hold up. If they last even a few months, the studios will offer up HD-DVD on the altar as a sacrifice to the DRM gods.
It's not all about how cheap the players are. People that can afford a decent big HDTV (and it really does need to be big to see the BIG difference) can afford a $500 Blu-Ray players (and yes they exist now, pay no attention to the "$1000" player FUD, hell buy a PS3 for $600) and will care more about how many movies are available. Sure HD-DVD will be 100-200 dollars cheaper this Christmas, but Blu-Ray will have the movies and will eventually be considered a must buy item for good HDTVs. People that don't have HDTV or are satisfied with DVD don't need either.
Produced in China for Wal-mart (Score:2)
Quality before
And they'll fail anyway (Score:2)
I don't know about you... (Score:2, Insightful)
Monster cables anyone? (Score:2, Funny)
Disney and Walmart dictate player direction (Score:3, Interesting)
Horrible Research Often Helps Dramatic Posts (Score:4, Informative)
Samsung BD-P1000 $664.99 in store at Best Buy [bestbuy.com].
The same player for $699.99 at CompUSA [compusa.com]
Sony 2x2x2 Blu-ray BD-RE, internal ATA drive $699.99 at CompUSA [compusa.com]
The Samsung again for $699 at Circuit City [circuitcity.com]
Or the newer Samsung BD-P1200 for $799.99 at Circuit City [circuitcity.com]
Then there's the Lite-On Blu Ray Burner for $399.99 at Fry's [outpost.com]
And the Philips BDP9000 player for $799.99 also at Fry's [outpost.com]
Man, I can't wait for next year when they finally drop below $1000 at places other than every single major retailer.
That said, the original poster also misquoted the actual article. There was no mention of Blu Ray players as a whole not dropping below $1,000 until next year - simply that Sony themselves aren't planning on dropping prices on their own models until then.
Yes, a hypothetical glut of HD-DVD players at $200, if WalMart aren't trying to use the low cost to generate large per-unit profits, could have an interesting effect. Still, we're talking 2 million players total... The XBox360 already has a $199 player and a greater than 5m units capable of adding it - yet the format war's hardly been won or even taken a lead.
That we're looking at a Christmas with next generation DVD players hitting the $200-300 mark is interesting if nothing much more than people were expecting. Overhyping it by misreading, misinterpreting and misstating everything around it, to try to elevate the drama of it however is kind of a shame.
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American have already voted: winner is foreign (Score:2)
I'm sorry but Americans have voted with their wallets decades ago. From cars to screwdrivers, Americans have said they prefer the lower cost foreign made goods. You are recycling a very old argument/sentiment. Anyone else h
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s/Walmart/Costco/g
So they're actually shopping elsewhere? (Score:2)
Which means they've convinced themselves they're shopping at some other department store? That whole walmart=looking rich phrase melted part of my brain.
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Wake up. The majority of electronic things you buy are already made in China. It's a little late to complain about it.
Re:Way to go- increase US dependence (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, Fuh Yu will be making the players for Wal-Mart.
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At least fact check before you start being pedantic or try to act smart.
Taiwain is just an island. The country is called the Republic of China.
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Funny resolutions (Score:4, Informative)
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Please kindly direct me to the 1280x720 source?
I'll let Google do it: broadcast in 720p [google.com]
As for the DLP thing, you can't compare that to an LCD, anymore than you can compare the 1 bit noise shaping DACs in CD players to a "regular" DAC.
Any more than people compare the PCM of DVD-Audio to the 1-bit noise shaping of SACD?
And anyways, why would I want to dither, when the freaking resolution exists in the RSDS spec?
You don't want to dither. The majority don't care about it they are price-sensitive. Display manufacturers target the price-sensitive part of the demand curve by producing "entry level" (that is, inferior) products.
You still can't beat a good CRT for color depth and viewing angle. All the LCDs and plasmas I've seen for under 4k$ are all rubbish
Remember that a bigger TV (e.g. direct-view CRT) has the opportunity cost of lost use of real estate that the TV occupies. Do people who currently use a 27" or smaller
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