View Full Version : It's Official... BluRay wins over HD-dvd!
Manfred Lopez
07-25-2007, 10:13 PM
Folks, you can finally put your guns away... The format war is finally over: :gun:
http://www.engadgethd.com/2007/07/25/thieves-choose-blu-ray-over-hd-dvd-in-mass-disc-heist/
Poi Boy
07-25-2007, 10:34 PM
Just asI thought ! playing video games leads to harder stuff. from ps3 to grand theft !
-A
Tom Lowe
07-25-2007, 10:45 PM
Meh.... Blockbuster thinks they have more influence on the world than they actually do. The main factor that will determine the Bluray vs HD-DVD war is Microsoft, IMO. If they strongly back HD-DVD and decide to cut Sony's legs out from under them, HD-DVD would probably win. If they continue this half-ass support we are seeing now, Bluray will win.
I'm really surprised that Microsoft is not going for Sony's throat on this format war. It makes me suspect that they have some kind of quiet understanding going on. Perhaps MS wants Sony to build a lot of Media Center PCs? Or some other kind of backroom deal?
Mark B.
07-25-2007, 11:03 PM
Doesn't matter who wins now, holographic discs are going to wipe them both out.
Manfred Lopez
07-25-2007, 11:14 PM
Doesn't matter who wins now, holographic discs are going to wipe them both out.
Damn... HD discs are already on their way out? Just to think that I just barelly got done purchasing all the criterion titles on plain ol' DVD.
Poi Boy
07-26-2007, 12:22 AM
I hope they both die at the hand of holographic.
Aloha
-A
Gavin Greenwalt
07-26-2007, 12:53 AM
I hope they both die at the hand of holographic.
Aloha
-A
I hope all three die at the hands of Fiber TCP/IP.
Manfred Lopez
07-26-2007, 12:57 AM
I hope all three die at the hands of Fiber TCP/IP.
Ha! I hope all four die at the hands of... of... um... at the hands of having the actors come to my house and perform the stunts in front of my couch!
Ramesh Jai
07-26-2007, 02:56 AM
Ha! I hope all four die at the hands of... of... um... at the hands of having the actors come to my house and perform the stunts in front of my couch!
..I think we should all go back to watching movies in theatres... how can you beat that experience..!?!
Emanuel A.
07-26-2007, 03:14 AM
Folks, you can finally put your guns away... The format war is finally over: :gun:
http://www.engadgethd.com/2007/07/25/thieves-choose-blu-ray-over-hd-dvd-in-mass-disc-heist/
L O L
Alexander Nikishin
07-26-2007, 03:42 AM
Blu Ray is superior to HD DVD IMO.
I hope all 5 die at the hands of Chuck Norris
Jaime Vallés
07-26-2007, 06:23 AM
I hope all 5 die at the hands of Chuck Norris
As long as that's Chuck Norris in 4K... :ph34r:
Jason Murphy
07-26-2007, 06:31 AM
I hope all 5 die at the hands of Chuck Norris
And I think that about wraps that up. Go, next-gen Chuck Norris, go!
Graeme Nattress
07-26-2007, 07:31 AM
The racks of BD and HD discs in stores reminds me of the racks of UMD discs, DVD-A and SACD discs we used to see.... :-)
Graeme
Mark Mannschreck
07-26-2007, 01:10 PM
If the PS3 adds Redcode playback scaled to 1080p in firmware version 2.0, I'm fairly certain Blu Ray will win.
Manfred Lopez
07-26-2007, 01:13 PM
Does anyone think that 4K home movies will ever be a reality? Or is that something the studios will never let happen?
Petr Dvorak
07-26-2007, 01:49 PM
Does anyone think that 4K home movies will ever be a reality? Or is that something the studios will never let happen?
Definitely, I hope that somebody from Red owners will release 4K flick sooner or later via internet!
Any cheap medium with huge capacity is welcomed, but not necessary and sooner or later it will be obsolete too. ... and everybody will forget so called "wars" between thouse 2 HD discs created by media. :biggrin: :whistling:
Dave Cooper
07-26-2007, 01:55 PM
I guess the X-Box HD-DVD drive add-on wasn't very popular in Seattle. Only if Microsoft included an HD-DVD drive.
Blu Ray is superior to HD DVD IMO.
They're the same thing just one has a higher capacity.
Manfred Lopez
07-26-2007, 02:20 PM
They're the same thing just one has a higher capacity.
I think he is refering to the actual standard and vid rate and design specifications etc.
Tom Lowe
07-26-2007, 05:25 PM
I guess the X-Box HD-DVD drive add-on wasn't very popular in Seattle. Only if Microsoft included an HD-DVD drive.
They're the same thing just one has a higher capacity.
And a higher price. :greedy: :whistling:
Jeff Kilgroe
07-27-2007, 08:45 PM
All the stores I've been too in several states as well as online shops sell BD and HD-DVD for basically the same price. And the few titles that are available on both formats tend to be the same price on both formats... BD players are still a bit more expensive, but this should even out by the end of they year as the gap is narrowing. BD player pricing has been artificially inflated as most manufacturers in the BluRay camp have been following Sony's lead. At times I think Sony wants a drawn-out format war... They could have squashed HD-DVD several times by now, but have bungled every opportunity.
Blu-Ray is the superior standard, or at least it is on paper... As of right now, the dual-layer 50GB discs are only superior in terms of the extra capacity, but true superiority won't come until we can get our hands on quad-layer or better discs, especially in writable form. Blue-Ray has superior copy protection features, but this can also work against them if they don't handle it properly. IMO, by this time net year, we will still be having a "war", but there will be several affordable players on the market that will play both formats and it will be less of an issue to consumers. Universal and possibly Warner will be offering discs with BD on one side and HD-DVD on the other side as well. And I think this is the only way the current HD discs are going to survive. Holographic isn't going to wipe them from the market though... Still too early for that tech and it currently offers little that BD and HD-DVD don't. Oh, and there are more variations to holographic media designs than we can count on one hand. I also don't see IP delivery replacing discs either. It's nice to have movies on demand, but unless people have a way to place a movie on a tangible piece of media and drop it into a standard player, it's not going to take over. Too many people actually like to own a physical copy of their favorite movies.
...So, that one format to rule them all has not yet materialized.
If RED sweeps the digital production industry and REDCODE and its 4K workflow revolutionize how we work on a large scale, then I see no reason why REDCODE RGB masters on 300GB holographic media couldn't become a potential new competitor or standard within a few years. 4K for home cinema will come to pass, it's just a matter of time. Many thought that 1080p would never happen... It's here, even though broadcasters don't want to admit it.
Brian Kaz
07-29-2007, 08:29 PM
The biggest problem as I see it is that this format war is slowing adoption. Too many people are waiting for a winner before jumping in. This holiday season should go a long way in ending it. Blu-Ray has been getting the most press lately with many small studios going exclusive or neutral, and major stores favoring their format (Blockbuster, Target, BJs wholesale). Right now, HD-DVDs only real defence is lowering it's hardware prices, but this is causing all other CE manufacturers to not make HD-DVD players because they can't make any profit. If HD-DVD can't gain back significant market share after the holidays, look for Universal to start thinking neutral. If they do, there is no reason to go HD-DVD as Blu-ray will then be the only format to have 100% of the HD content available.
I think we should all go back to watching movies in theatres... how can you beat that experience..!?!
Heh, I beat that experience every day in my own house.
Doesn't matter who wins now, holographic discs are going to wipe them both out.
It took long enough for these current formats to get going. If holographic discs become the next home video media, they'll be the successor, not the destroyer.
All I know is that I DO NOT want low-bitrate HD-lite downloads that are no better than Sat/cable.
Tom Lowe
07-29-2007, 08:52 PM
Jeff, I have to disagree with you that Sony "could have squashed HD-DVD" at any time. They're already dumping everything they've got into this format war. In fact, it's Microsoft who could have crushed Bluray had that been their intention. Keep in mind that Microsoft has enough money in the bank to throw ten billion dollars into any business war they engage in, and not even miss it. Sony, meanwhile, is operating deep into the black on their PS3 and Bluray ventures, to the tune of something like a $300USD loss for every PS3 they sell.
Microsoft has a long history of winning format and business wars, while Sony is famous for losing format wars.
My read on the situation is that Gates and Co. have made a strategic bet that it won't be any type of cheap little plastic disc that wins the HD delivery war, it will be downloads onto harddrives, via platforms like their Windows Media Center, which I also believe will be the way of the future for content delivery.
Already, this is how video games are being sold. The last two games I got, Half Life 2 and Battlefield 2142, I downloaded off the net onto my PC's harddrive. The days of plastic discs are numbered, so I think Microsoft is deciding to take less interest in Bluray vs HD-DVD, which could bode well for Bluray.
Joel Kaye
07-29-2007, 09:48 PM
My read on the situation is that Gates and Co. have made a strategic bet that it won't be any type of cheap little plastic disc that wins the HD delivery war, it will be downloads onto harddrives, via platforms like their Windows Media Center, which I also believe will be the way of the future for content delivery.
I hope you're right. Somewhere between Microsoft, Apple and Google we'll probably see the future. Or Perhaps the studios will get smart and sell direct. If they're REALLY smart they'll sell OUR stuff direct. That's the paradigm shift I'd make if I was them. It's what I'd do if I was any of those guys... find a way to make you and me money off of our content.
Google will do it first IMHO.
Anders Holck
07-29-2007, 10:09 PM
I must say I'm enjoying my HD DVD's
The only thing Blu-ray has going for it, is the larger capacity (50 GB single side compared to 30 GB single side or 60 GB Dual side) and 15 mbit higher mux rate. (32.6 mbit < 48 mbit)
Other than that the BDA really fumbled this standard.
HD DVD is superior in current player features: Second video decoder for PIP or IM, Network connector, True HD and DD+ audio and built in storage.
And the cheapest player is now $230 with 5 disks, and the above features.
Current Blu-Ray player specs are 1.0, 1.1 is just about coming out next month with the Denon and 2.0 will come out 2008
1.0 is The interactivity layer BD+J
1.1 is secondary decoder for PIP IME, storage
2.0 is Network connectivity, extra storage
It's plausible that the PS3 will be able to be updated to 2.0, when available.
Disk prices are the same, with HD DVD+DVD combos having a $5 premium.
Picture quality is the same on new releases. Audio quality is mostly the same.
HD DVD's have PIP and more advanced features and will have them exclusively until next year when 2.0 debutes.
Right now it's more about which studios you prefer for the short period: Universal or Disney/Fox/Sony
What made me buy into the format was player prices, ability to import american releases at half the price of Danish (No region coding on HD DVD) Some great releases by Universal, and that at the time the PQ was more consistent at the time.
Another thing that has been bugging me is the bad press. This year the available sales data for the US have been consistently around 60:40 with the nod to Blu-ray in disc sales. And in player sales, besides the 1.5 million Ps3's the player sales are 70:30 with the nod to HD DVD.
Clearly there is no winner yet.
I don't know why the press goes crazy every time Sony sends a new press release.
The Blockbuster story was not about dropping HD DVD, it was Blockbuster starting to carry select Blu-ray in an extra 1400 stores. Both is still available in the largest 250 stores and on-line.
The Target story was about Sony buying endcaps in their stores. Target will only carry the $499 Sony player through the christmas season, but will still sell both format disks and the X-box add on.
Well, all in all, HD DVD might loose in the end, but right now I'm really enjoying the format.
For a consumer format 20 mbit VC-1 or H264 looks pretty darn good on a 50" 1080p screen.
Joe Carney
07-29-2007, 10:38 PM
Jeff, I have to disagree with you that Sony "could have squashed HD-DVD" at any time. They're already dumping everything they've got into this format war. In fact, it's Microsoft who could have crushed Bluray had that been their intention. Keep in mind that Microsoft has enough money in the bank to throw ten billion dollars into any business war they engage in, and not even miss it. Sony, meanwhile, is operating deep into the black on their PS3 and Bluray ventures, to the tune of something like a $300USD loss for every PS3 they sell.
Microsoft has a long history of winning format and business wars, while Sony is famous for losing format wars.
My read on the situation is that Gates and Co. have made a strategic bet that it won't be any type of cheap little plastic disc that wins the HD delivery war, it will be downloads onto harddrives, via platforms like their Windows Media Center, which I also believe will be the way of the future for content delivery.
Already, this is how video games are being sold. The last two games I got, Half Life 2 and Battlefield 2142, I downloaded off the net onto my PC's harddrive. The days of plastic discs are numbered, so I think Microsoft is deciding to take less interest in Bluray vs HD-DVD, which could bode well for Bluray.
I agree with this. MS has just recently went gold with Windows Home Server. They sent it to various hardware vendors (ie Dell) and others to bundle. Go to http://connect.microsoft.com/WindowsHomeServer and find out more. We are talking media serving, file sharing, browsing...all in an easy to use package that even joe sixpack can understand.
Heres a link to an ms pr video that explains it
http://channel9.msdn.com/showpost.aspx?postid=270965
Brian Kaz
07-29-2007, 11:18 PM
As I rarely watch extras, Blu-ray not having PIP certainly doesn't bother me (but I have a PS3 so I'll probably get it in firmware anyway). And while low cost is always nice, I think Toshiba artificially lowering their prices to stay competitive is going to eventually kill them. Want an HD-DVD player? Toshiba's the only game in town. At least there are choices in Blu (Sony, Panasonic, Pioneer, Denon, Samsung...). The only way to get a non-Toshiba HD-DVD player is to buy a costly dual-player.
sales data for the US have been consistently around 60:40 with the nod to Blu-ray in disc sales.
Actually, I'd say it's averaging 65:35 since the start of this year.
And in player sales, besides the 1.5 million Ps3's the player sales are 70:30 with the nod to HD DVD.
With the $100 price drop, I'm sure this PS3 number will change dramatically but it's also worth noting that the PS3 is THE most used device for playback of Blu-ray movies by far. The 70:30 hardware figure (if that is indeed still accurate) certainly doesn't paint the whole picture - which the software sales ratio bears out.
That said, HD-DVD players are getting so cheap I may get one so I can rent the current Universal exclusives. I figure, if HD-DVD does indeed die out, I'll be able to enjoy all the content in the meantime and at worst, have a nice upconverting DVD player for the bedroom. If somehow they win or it all ends in a draw - no prob, I already have a player.
While I prefer Blu just based on specs and potential, in the end a single format is more important to me - whoever that may be.
Anders Holck
07-29-2007, 11:48 PM
Yeah, with spiderman 1+2+3 coming out this year in november I think the ratio will fall way over to the Blu side. I believe many of the PS3 owners would purchase that title.
When 2.0 players come out I might buy into that as well, but I'm not a gamer and I wont buy one of the current Blu-ray standalones until they support the final spec.
But I'm also hoping Universal will release more of their great catalog titles.
Poi Boy
07-30-2007, 12:06 AM
the hole thing is really fucking lame and both manufacturers are screwing themselves. In the near term (five years) there will be room in the market for plastic discs, hard drives are just too transient. We consumers need players that play both formats until they are both obsolete, (three years maybe).
Aloha
-A
pat@hpnc.com
07-30-2007, 12:07 AM
I will worry about it in a couple of years when its all worked out one way or the other. Until then I have other things to waste money on:)
Greg Voevodsky
07-30-2007, 12:08 AM
Blu-ray has over 60% market. They also have the game market with ps3 (despite ok sales still. it still leads the hd-dvds for x-box 360 if it does'nt overheat or blow up like a sony battery). Also, BD has most of the content providers from Hollywood with 4 out of 6 studios, the game industry with ps3, and computer industry with Del, hp, apple.
HD-DVD has a small electronics company, microsoft a software not hardware (except xbox 360 which is small for HD-DVDs as an add on... it might have been different if they included it... but they did not and so far plan not!)... and for the pc industry... no real players... HD-DVD is the lessor format, with less support, and will die in 2 years... without good pc support nor game support.
There are no or few HD-DVD burners in pcs or macs or ever will be as well as hd-dvd players in the next gen councels... both are 1/3 the market. The PC industry is bigger than Hollywood, and so is the Game Business. HD-DVD looses on all 3 and will die. The quickest blu-ray wins, the better for us RED producers who want to hit the markets on Blu-Ray 1080p ASAP. The problem is we still have to support DVD and that costs us alot. DVD is going to die with Blu-Ray eventually in 5-8 years with downloads...
Until then as producers... I will now have to spend per title $1500 for 1000 DVDs, $5000 for Blu-Ray... or $6500 per title, up from $1500 per title for the next year or so... So my inventory if I make 5 titles is @#$@#... and if I were to do HD-DVD (instead of custom flix's $8 a copy...) would only be worse. I will have over $30,000 stuck in inventory for 5 titles vs $7500 now... That affects my production budgets, selling and making more DVDs or HD discs! Add another $5000 for supporting HD-DVD or now $15000 in 3000 hd, blu ray and dvds per title and see how @#$ up that is... not to mention retailers who just halfed or 1/3 'rd their shelf space. End the war, blu-ray will win, dvd will survive... lets get it done.
Im glad blockbuster had the balls to choose one format... the sooner the other retailers or distributors do the same the faster the war will end and we will have affordable duplication for a few years until downloads kill it like the CDs.... So support BD, end the war, so us indi-producers can distribute our hd titles to the masses cheeply... before downloads take over... Holographic and RAM will not be cheep viable replacements for at least 5-10 years before adoption even has a chance.
Poi Boy
07-30-2007, 12:13 AM
If we get a combo player in the $300 range the whole war thing will be mute and we can move on to the next inteligent next step.
Aloha
-A
Jason Murphy
07-30-2007, 08:13 AM
I think, as several people have already alluded to here, content support is also key:
Studios which are format neutral:
Warner, Paramount, DreamWorks, probably New Line
Studios which exclusively support Blu-Ray:
Disney, Fox, MGM, Lionsgate and Sony
Studios which exclusively support HD-DVD:
Universal (because Toshiba owns them).
As much as I like Universal's offerings, they don't have a lineup of titles that are capable of deciding a format war. It seems to me that Blu-ray has a significant advantage in terms of studio support, and therefore content.
HD-DVD players might be cheaper, and may have the MS advantage (if anything comes of that) but that seems to be about it right now. My guess is that, if this war is actually won (and it may be that something else comes along and renders this format war moot), it will probably be won by Blu-ray, just looking at support.
Tom Lowe
07-30-2007, 08:36 AM
I think the lack of HD-DVD burners is a big issue here. The lack of such burners is absolutely criminal, and has badly hurt HD-DVD's cause. If HD-DVD burners were available, I would have gotten one already.
Tom Lowe
07-30-2007, 08:37 AM
I agree with this. MS has just recently went gold with Windows Home Server. They sent it to various hardware vendors (ie Dell) and others to bundle. Go to http://connect.microsoft.com/WindowsHomeServer and find out more. We are talking media serving, file sharing, browsing...all in an easy to use package that even joe sixpack can understand.
Heres a link to an ms pr video that explains it
http://channel9.msdn.com/showpost.aspx?postid=270965
Keep in mind that Sony has been a solid backer and manufacturer for MS's Windows Media Center PCs. This is another reason why I think MS has not gone for their throats on the Bluray/HD-DVD issue, because Sony in turn could drop its support for MS's Media Center platform.
Anders Holck
07-30-2007, 09:45 AM
We'll I'm really not that religious about formats, as long as it works :-)
For indie filmmakers HD DVD does have some advantages though, that I think should be mentioned:
3x format: You can master a DVD9 as a HD DVD and either burn it to a DL DVD or replicate in a normal replication line. Thats about 40 mins at full bitrate. Or about 70 mins with average bitrate. Pretty good for shorter projects and promos. And available right now in Apples DVD SP.
AACS is not mandatory. If you replicate on BD you must have a AACS license and pay a AACS fee per master press. You can skip this for HD DVD even on DL30
Backwards compatability You can replicate combos, DVD5/15 or DVD9/30 for example. One disk can target both DVD and HD DVD.
Cheaper replication Although it doesn't matter as much on low volume batches, the price for replication is lower for a DVD9/30 than a BD50. Also very few lines do BD50.
Again this is of cause pretty moot at the moment because of lacking advanced authoring tools for any indie producer.
Again I'm not religious about this, but I do think HD DVD has some nice qualities about it.
Joe Carney
07-30-2007, 12:11 PM
I didn't know you were forced to pay the aacs encryption fee whether you wanted to use it or not.
Anders Holck
07-30-2007, 12:32 PM
I hope they change their mind about this if the format wins, and then change it in the specs. The AACS contract fee is $3.000-$10.000, and then $1700 per encryption key. The key is tied to the mastering, so if you find there is an error on your first sample, you have to pay for another one for a new master.
This of cause all applies to replication only, not burnable media.
Graeme Nattress
07-30-2007, 01:00 PM
I'd read that that was the problem with the encryption.
Graeme
PenGun
07-30-2007, 01:27 PM
Damn, you have to pay for something already broken. Harsh.
I dunno they don't seem to be smart enough to inflict strong DRM on us. Excellent.
Joe Carney
07-30-2007, 02:04 PM
I know one of MS' long term goals with HD-DVD was to provide legal copying to a windows media server (now known as Windows Home Server). I hope they follow through with that.
For sure you can make your own VC1 based content without burning to any disc and distribute via the net. So I wouldn't declare Blu Ray the winner quite yet.
While I'm always skeptical about a MS first gen product, I think they've really gotten on to something. They will have a software only version for those that want to roll their own and they will have an API to supposedly add 3rd party tools. They specifically mention IPTV as a possible add in. One of the key built in features is automated backup of disk content and easy rollback if a problem occurs. If it works as advertised, the need to have everything on a optical disk might be reduced. Consumer priced LTO tape drives anyone? Affordable Blu Ray data disks?
Jeff Kilgroe
07-30-2007, 04:23 PM
Jeff, I have to disagree with you that Sony "could have squashed HD-DVD" at any time. They're already dumping everything they've got into this format war. In fact, it's Microsoft who could have crushed Bluray had that been their intention. Keep in mind that Microsoft has enough money in the bank to throw ten billion dollars into any business war they engage in, and not even miss it. Sony, meanwhile, is operating deep into the black on their PS3 and Bluray ventures, to the tune of something like a $300USD loss for every PS3 they sell.
I'm not so sure why everyone thinks Microsoft is the sleeping juggernaut in the HD disc format war. MS initially declared support for HD-DVD, not because they favored the format, but because it shipped first. Don't forget that Microsoft is also a member of Sony's Blu-Ray consortium and MS is fully supporting Blu-Ray as well. MS considered Blu-Ray for the HD disc player add-on to the XBOX 360. HD-DVD was chosen for three reasons: 1> It allowed them to meet the <$200 price point. Blu-Ray licensing and specific components are much higher cost. 2> Less restrictive copy protection, the ability to up-scale and play more forms of content over VGA and analog component connections. 3> It's currently possible for people to create and author HD-DVD conent. Blu-Ray authoring tools are still not available in mainstream channels. This is all in MS's developer news articles. Both Balmer and Gates have stated that they are *NOT* directly choosing sides in the format war and will offer products on either side of the fence as it makes sense to do so for their customers. I agree with their choice of an HD-DVD player add-on for the XBOX 360, that made the most sense.
My read on the situation is that Gates and Co. have made a strategic bet that it won't be any type of cheap little plastic disc that wins the HD delivery war, it will be downloads onto harddrives, via platforms like their Windows Media Center, which I also believe will be the way of the future for content delivery.
Direct downloads are going to be a huge method of distribution. However, they don't make sense for the dominant form of delivery, especially for HD. The average internet user doesn't have access to the bandwidth to make this practical... People looking to buy HD-DVD and Blu-Ray care about picture quality and they're not going to want to pay the same amount for a download in inferior quality. They're also not going to wait to download 30GB of data, which even on a 7.5Mbps cable or DSL connection (about the fastest out there in most places) it's going to take over 8 hours. Add to that the desire to have something tangible. Most people still want a physical piece of media for their favorite movies. And direct download or streaming should be left for pay-per-view or on-demand type services. Or at least that's what keeps showing in most industry surveys... Apple wants to change this with iTunes and AppleTV. But they're not shooting for HD, but rather HD-Lite or Almost-HD.
Anyway, I'm very confused over this format "war" and I think more has to do with studios and distributors than a Sony vs. Toshiba battle. IMNSHO, either format could have crushed the other by now if Sony or Toshiba were actually serious about doing so. Losses taken on units sold are mostly an imaginary number and usually cost per unit figures from these companies include amortized R&D costs among other things like standard mark-up percentages not directly related to actual components in a specific unit. Either format could have dominated last holiday season if either side were willing to flood the market with $200 players bundled with 3 to 5 movie titles. But it seems to me that neither side is willing to make such a commitment and both are being extra-conservative. To say that Sony is throwing everything they have into BluRay is like saying I'm putting everything I have into winning a boxing match, but I refuse to use my left arm. Sure, they may be taking a loss on units compared to their ideal retail sales target price (some imaginary, astronomical number, I'm sure)... To use that as to expand on the boxing analogy, I'm still not using my left arm at all -- it's tied behind my back. But I've hidden a roll of quarters in my right glove.
Every step of the way in this war, we have watched both companies deliver shoddy, unready products at high prices. Very poorly organized, ineffective marketing, Blu-Ray has licensing and pricing restrictions on authorized hardware, some of which are actually illegal and are being contested. In other words, it's still just business as usually in the consumer electronics industry.
Personally, I'm not in favor of either HD-DVD or BluRay. I think each one sucks just as bad as the other. I just someone out there would grow some cajones and make a serious, decisive move to end the format "war". Or perhaps the studios could quit bickering and all decide on one format.
Jeff Kilgroe
07-30-2007, 04:31 PM
I know one of MS' long term goals with HD-DVD was to provide legal copying to a windows media server (now known as Windows Home Server). I hope they follow through with that.
The ability to legally copy a movie disc over to a media server is called "Managed Copy" and is supported by both HD-DVD and BD+ enabled Blu-Ray discs. The function must be enabled on the disc and currently no HD-DVD or BD titles on the market allow this, but that's due to change real soon now. The final release of WHS supports Managed Copy for both HD-DVD and BluRay media. It's up to the studios to offer it, so when you go to buy a new movie, if you want to put it on your media server, you need to make sure it supports the Managed Copy ability.
Sony is also planning to release a new VAIO media center PC to replace their current models with the 300-disc DVD changer. It will have an external RAID instead of the changer and will allow for loading of CD, DVD and MC-enabled Blu-Ray media. I don't know an ETA, but they were showing demo vids of it at CES, no actual product was present.
Oh, the PS3 can also act as a remote player for these systems, just as the XBOX 360 can with Microsoft's offerings.
Tom Lowe
07-30-2007, 05:59 PM
The real trick in the coming decade, IMO, is delivering HD and game content over the internet. Right now, netflix has shown some promise with their Watch Now feature (which I use and enjoy), but to me, MS is in the prime position with their Windows Media Center, which I also use and enjoy. Once they pipe content into that thing and set up in-home networks between bedrooms and living room TVs, that's the ideal situation for everyone.
Of course, this has been an elusive goal thus far, for everyone.
This is why I say that MS doesn't really care about discs anymore for content, because they want you to buy XBox games and movies over the net via their Windows Media Center, straight onto harddrives.
Anders Holck
07-30-2007, 06:14 PM
Have you seen the Netflix silverlight demo?
http://download.microsoft.com/download/e/d/d/edd7b135-d2a9-4499-a3ca-a6c8a0ab5716/Netflix_2MB_mix.wmv
Pretty cool features. (Just skip the first 1/3, just marketing talk)
Tom Lowe
07-30-2007, 06:36 PM
Have you seen the Netflix silverlight demo?
http://download.microsoft.com/download/e/d/d/edd7b135-d2a9-4499-a3ca-a6c8a0ab5716/Netflix_2MB_mix.wmv
Pretty cool features. (Just skip the first 1/3, just marketing talk)
That is very slick. MS better watch out or netflix is gonna eat their lunch on content delivery.
deepfreezevideo
07-31-2007, 01:04 AM
The reason why HD-DVD is still poised to be a player has more to do with it's archival abilities.
Let's look at:
PRICE
EASE OF USE
CAPACITY
BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY
It's cheaper than BD.
It's red laser based and therefore less of a tech rewrite/redesign.
One single side HD-DVD disc is approx 15 GB.
One mini-DV cassette stores approx. 13 GB of DV-AVI or
MPEG HDV. That leaves roughly two GB of overhead for
LUT's
production notes
secondary audio
Production stills
other metadata
project files.
HD-DVD has a better path to being an ideal archival medium than BD.
JeffH in Occupied TX
Anders Holck
07-31-2007, 01:54 AM
HD DVD is blue laser, just like BD
Jeff Kilgroe
07-31-2007, 07:17 AM
As Anders said, HD-DVD is blue-laser based, just like Blu-Ray. In fact, it uses the exact same laser diode systems. Blue-Ray uses a higher density on a thinner substrate (to allow more layers in the future, maybe).
Joe Carney
07-31-2007, 10:42 AM
The ability to legally copy a movie disc over to a media server is called "Managed Copy" and is supported by both HD-DVD and BD+ enabled Blu-Ray discs. The function must be enabled on the disc and currently no HD-DVD or BD titles on the market allow this, but that's due to change real soon now. The final release of WHS supports Managed Copy for both HD-DVD and BluRay media. It's up to the studios to offer it, so when you go to buy a new movie, if you want to put it on your media server, you need to make sure it supports the Managed Copy ability.
Sony is also planning to release a new VAIO media center PC to replace their current models with the 300-disc DVD changer. It will have an external RAID instead of the changer and will allow for loading of CD, DVD and MC-enabled Blu-Ray media. I don't know an ETA, but they were showing demo vids of it at CES, no actual product was present.
Oh, the PS3 can also act as a remote player for these systems, just as the XBOX 360 can with Microsoft's offerings.
Thats good to know. IF only they actually deliver. I'm hoping someone can come up with a low coast HD DVD/BD non disk player that would read directly off of the server into my AV receiver. And I'm not talking about converting a standard PC either.
Anders Holck
07-31-2007, 10:45 AM
No managed copy will be available before is goes through the approval at AACS and there seems to be a lot of resistance currently...
Dan Blanchett
07-31-2007, 03:12 PM
I bought a Toshiba HD DVD player and may get a PS3 if the price drops one more time... then I'll be covered. But I DON'T plan to invest a movie library of either format. At least not yet. It's rentals only for me.