http://www.thedigitalbits.com/#bnpWell... here's a surprise weekend development. Paramount Home Entertainment announced on Sunday morning that it will support Blu-ray Disc in addition to its already announced support for HD-DVD. This makes Paramount the first major Hollywood studio to support BOTH of the rival high-definition disc formats expected to launch in early 2006. You can read more at these links at Video Business and Home Media Retailing. Blu-ray's support in the Sony PS3 was apparently a factor in this decision.
In addition to Paramount's announcement today, there seems to be a feeling in the industry that Warner and Universal may soon follow Paramount's lead in supporting both formats. The move almost certainly gives Blu-ray Disc an advantage in the format war, particularly if Warner and Universal do follow suit.
Paramount (and Warner) to Support Blu-ray AND HD-DVD...
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Paramount (and Warner) to Support Blu-ray AND HD-DVD...
Found this over at The Digital Bits (posted yesterday) and didn't see anything about it yet:
Last edited by Spanky The Dolphin on 2005-10-07 02:54pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Good news to me, as I am on the Blu-ray side, simply because the PS3 (when it comes out) will support that format. Good for me that the PS3
(should I get one) does this because there is no way I am going to buy another DVD player. Shoot, I still have a handful of old VHS tapes, still waiting for the material to come out on DVD. (mostly old tv shows I liked but have not come out on DVD yet, and a few classic wrestling shows)
So there is no way I was getting drawn into the upcoming 'format war' glad to see that it may not come to a war as most studios may put out both sides.
(should I get one) does this because there is no way I am going to buy another DVD player. Shoot, I still have a handful of old VHS tapes, still waiting for the material to come out on DVD. (mostly old tv shows I liked but have not come out on DVD yet, and a few classic wrestling shows)
So there is no way I was getting drawn into the upcoming 'format war' glad to see that it may not come to a war as most studios may put out both sides.
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If most studios and distributors end up supporting both formats, then the issue goes over to the retailers, who with limited physical shelf space, might not stand for such.
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Not until companies start producing multi-platform players that support both Blue-Ray and HD-DVD and old type DVD's.Spanky The Dolphin wrote:If most studios and distributors end up supporting both formats, then the issue goes over to the retailers, who with limited physical shelf space, might not stand for such.
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I'm fairly sure that Blu isn't going to make it. M$ desires to conquer sony in the console market, and part of that includes throwing it's weight into HD-DVD, that plus so many other organizations are going HD-DVD instead of blu suggest to me that HD-DVD is going to win. It really wasn't hard to predict, it's cheaper, but still better than the old stuff. All signs point to HD-DVD.
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HD-DVD: 15 GB per layer
Blu-ray: 25 GB per layer
HD-DVD goes to quad layer (60 GB), Blu-Ray is also at quad layer (100 GB) but is projected to go to eight layers (200 GB) eventually.
The HD-DVD hybrids are what I find interesting. Two HD-DVD layers and one DVD layer. Put it in a DVD player and it reads the DVD layer; put it in a HD-DVD player and it is a HD-DVD.
Blu-ray: 25 GB per layer
HD-DVD goes to quad layer (60 GB), Blu-Ray is also at quad layer (100 GB) but is projected to go to eight layers (200 GB) eventually.
The HD-DVD hybrids are what I find interesting. Two HD-DVD layers and one DVD layer. Put it in a DVD player and it reads the DVD layer; put it in a HD-DVD player and it is a HD-DVD.
Some turds said they only adopted BR. Load of shit.
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MS and Intel recently threw their support for HD-DVD they made some claims about why they chose it over BD, here's two that I found interesting:
Though I'm more in favor of the outcome DigitalBits wants:
Maintaining low production costs is a critical factor, which has been a key HD DVD talking point in light of current revelations about factory upgrade costs for Blu-ray. "For a long time, we actually thought that the Blu-ray Group had the upper hand in costs," Ribas said, mainly because of the involvement in Blu-ray of most of the major Japanese CE manufacturers - Sony, Matsushita (Panasonic), Pioneer, and Sharp - as well as Philips. Here is where recent events played a critical role: In a development that was brought to light only this morning, two of the world's leading China-based DVD player production facilities announced their support for HD DVD over Blu-ray. In press statements, these companies cited the relative openness of the DVD Forum compared to the Blu-ray Disc Association. "Now that we see China embracing HD DVD," said Ribas, "we actually see that on the cost side, HD DVD will have an advantage, because the Chinese have been the ones who have lowered the prices, via the competition, for HD DVD players." As much as 75 percent of DVD players sold in America today come from China, he added.
Later Dell and HP called bullshit on most of the claims MS said. Though I've yet to hear anyone from the BD group address the point about Chinese firms favoring HD-DVD.The surprise entry in Microsoft's and Intel's list of failures is disc storage capacity. On paper, Blu-ray appears to have the advantage. But the two companies looked beneath the paper: Capacity, said Ribas, "used to be the biggest advantage of Blu-ray, and we believed it. We thought, they'll get 50 GByte BD-ROM discs working, but it's not happening, and it's nowhere in sight. There are not even pilots. It's only in the lab that they are building these discs." With regard to demonstrated capacity, he told us, HD DVD-ROM actually leads BD-ROM by a score of 30 GByte to 25 GByte.
Though I'm more in favor of the outcome DigitalBits wants:
You know, I really hope that retailers just come out and say, "We aren't carrying either of these formats until you guys get your crap together."
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Loner wrote:Later Dell and HP called bullshit on most of the claims MS said. Though I've yet to hear anyone from the BD group address the point about Chinese firms favoring HD-DVD.The surprise entry in Microsoft's and Intel's list of failures is disc storage capacity. On paper, Blu-ray appears to have the advantage. But the two companies looked beneath the paper: Capacity, said Ribas, "used to be the biggest advantage of Blu-ray, and we believed it. We thought, they'll get 50 GByte BD-ROM discs working, but it's not happening, and it's nowhere in sight. There are not even pilots. It's only in the lab that they are building these discs." With regard to demonstrated capacity, he told us, HD DVD-ROM actually leads BD-ROM by a score of 30 GByte to 25 GByte.
Wha-at? Last I heard they had demos at quad-layer Blu-ray (100 GB) and HD-DVD was at tri-layer, not dual and single.
Google reveals:
http://www.thetechzone.com/?m=show&id=374
Sony has Blu-ray all keyed up for the Playstation 3 (Microsoft just endorsed HD DVD for the Xbox 360), and Blu-ray offers 25GB per layer. HD DVD offers 15GB per layer but reads and writes data at the same depth as DVDs, enabling possibly better backward compatibility. Recently, Toshiba demonstrated a 45GB triple-layer HD DVD. TDK showed a 100GB quad-layer Blu-ray. JVC demonstrated a 33.5GB disc with a 25GB Blu-ray layer combined with 8.5GB DL DVD layers. It's nothing but a blue mess!
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The difference, I think, is that the tri-layer HD-DVD and quad layer BRD have been demonstrated, but without any plans to produce them any time soon and no idea how much they would cost or whether they could be made in high volume. The only ones that are definitely going to be produced within the next year are the 2 layer HD-DVD and the 1 layer BRD. That's just going by the MS claims, which could be completely wrong, for all I know.
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Title change and a bump to reflect news that Warner has decided to go the non-exclusive route and support both formats as well, and that Universal might announce the same in time:
http://www.asahi.com/english/Herald-asa ... 70201.htmlWarner Bros. indicates it will use both Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats
10/07/2005
The Asahi Shimbun
Hollywood dealt another blow to Toshiba Corp. and NEC Corp. in the DVD format war.
Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., which had been supporting the HD-DVD format promoted by Toshiba and NEC, will also likely release its movies in the Blu-ray format led by Sony Corp. and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., company sources told The Asahi Shimbun.
Another Hollywood giant, Paramount Pictures Corp., made a similar decision earlier this month.
The two movie companies' decisions could give the Blu-ray camp an almost certain grip on most Hollywood studios.
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., The Walt Disney Co., Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. and other U.S. studios already support the Blu-ray format. It is unclear if they also plan to release their movies in the HD-DVD format.
Universal Studios Inc. still officially backs HD-DVD, but industry experts speculate the company will probably follow the moves of Paramount and Warner Brothers and also release its movies for Blu-ray formatted DVD players.A senior Toshiba official
downplayed the latest moves in Hollywood.
"Warner Brothers and Paramount Pictures will still release their software in the HD-DVD format," the official said.
The HD-DVD camp is certainly not out of the race. It gained momentum late last month when it received strong support from two information technology giants, Microsoft Corp. and Intel Corp.
However, Toshiba still decided to postpone full-scale sales of its HD-DVD players until next spring.(IHT/Asahi: October 7,2005)
Sorry, I should have been clear; I mean it won't be an issue for retailers space, if some manufacturer makes a dual compatible system - which upon further reading of this thread has raised doubts in my mind as happening, as I assumed it would be some cheap Chinese brand that would do it first.Spanky The Dolphin wrote:The compatability of current DVDs won't be an issue, because (IIRC) manufacturers have said in the past that players for either format will also support DVDs.
Although I don't really get how your statement really fits with mine. I'm having an idiot moment, I guess.
EDIT :: Just read your last post; how long until you think Hollywood will ditch DVD's for either Blu-Ray or HD-DVD's? Because that's the point I'll decide which to go for - my sister just bought my parents a DVD player, I can't see us updating that for at least 5 years so ...
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Samsung announced some time ago they'll release a player that can read both formats. So I wouldn't rule a Chinese firm making one(Hopefully one that won't be affected by bullshit DRM and HDCP standards Sony is whoring out for ther MPAA).
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