Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD Not Over Yet 305
samkass writes "Here is a good summary of the latest technical wheeling-and-dealing between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray. Among things that were new to me: the addition of a "red" 9GB HD format to Blu-Ray that would make initial Blu-Ray content (that fits) even cheaper than HD-DVD. Also, more discussion about managed copy (AACS, BD Plus, and ROM Mark) and iHD (HD-DVD) vs BD-J/Java (Blu-Ray)."
Rootkit Included? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Rootkit Included? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Rootkit Included? (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Rootkit Included? (Score:3, Insightful)
No kidding. I got marked a troll the other day because I made a funny about Microsoft Windows - which is obviously a mortal sin on a site filled with fanboys of both extremes. Funny thing is I know who did it because that nice user marked me as a foe. *shrug*
Here's a hint to moderators-of-the-day: if a post can be taken one of two ways (trolling or funny) assume that you have no sense of humor, learn to chuckle,
Re:Rootkit Included? (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, they know how to work the moderation system very well.
That's why the pro-sony people will marked a post "overrated" rather than "troll". "Overrated" dodges the chance it
Format Wars! (Score:3, Funny)
My eyes glazed over on the story (Score:5, Funny)
My acronym cup runneth over...
How about something DRM-Free? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is what the fighting is about - these companies could care less about the formats, and very little about the final cost per disk, this is a fight to see who gets to provide the DRM software on your media.
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:3, Insightful)
But yes, both discs will include pretty much the same DRM. And until it is going to be cracked, I will not be able to play it. And yes, I will have the *-R version of one of those drives for backups.
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:3, Insightful)
Blu-Ray allows just as much freedom of copying (Score:5, Interesting)
Consider that Apple and Sony and HP and Dell are all in the Blu-Ray consortium, whereas over on the HD-DVD side there's Microsoft and... I'm not sure who else but not many other major tech companies. Which format do you think is going to be more able to allow copying between many different devices from different manufacturers (again all protected of course) instead of just between different Microsoft products?
If your idea of freedom is being able to buy whatever form of Microsoft box you like to play media - count me out!
I'm sure neither of course will let you play media on Linux, so to say you prefer one over the other is to proclaim allegence to only one particular brand of salt to the exclusion of all others.
More than I trust Sony (Score:4, Insightful)
Also they have no vested intrest in DRM past making the media companies happy. Microsoft owns no record labels or studios I'm aware of. They make software, not media. So it's in their intrests to make the consumers as happy as possible, while still appeasing the media companies. Happy consumers buy more Microsoft toys. Sony's intrest is in screwing consumers so they make the most money on their media.
Do you know what Sony does? (Score:3, Insightful)
Did you not even know that the Blu-Ray consortium includes Apple, Dell, and HP? I don't recall any of them making media either. Would not your same arguments apply equally to them?
Lastly remember that Microsofts interests are not making the conumer happy, they are in forcing the consumer to buy Microsoft gear.
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:3, Informative)
BLU-RAY leaves it to the content owner to decide whether or not copying will be allowed (and at what price).
Sounds the same to me ($1k per copy is about the same as no copying allowed)
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:4, Insightful)
How about focusing your sickness of the "pessimistic crap" on Sony, where the bad news originates?
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about something DRM-Free? (Score:2)
The hardware manufacturers would love to do just that (with the possible exception of Sony, who is a 7-headed Hydra). Problem is, they have the content industries leaning on them saying "We'll be damned if we entrust our content to a device that doesn't decide how, where, and in what way people watch the media we sell them."
Sure, they've made out okay over the past 30-40 years of a marketplace that has easy home duplication of music and movies, but that isn'
The real question is: (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The real question is: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The real question is: (Score:2)
Re:The real question is: (Score:2)
The internet. This isn't one of those scenarios where porn is going to make a hero out of either format.
BluRay will win says TFA (Score:3, Interesting)
XBOX360 DOES NOT SUPPORT HD-DVD (Score:5, Informative)
This keeps getting stated on here, and it is entirely untrue. People are confused because Microsoft tepidly put their backing behind HD-DVD, yet the Xbox360 actually uses neither - it is standard old school 9GB DVD.
Re:BluRay will win says TFA (Score:2)
"Schadler says he's long believed that Blu-ray held the edge due to its superior capacity and the fact that Sony's PlayStation 3 will play Blu-ray movie discs. Oh really, and MS support via the 360 for HD-DVD won't have a cancelling effect on this?"
Well, it depends. -(some number) +(some other number) != 0.
Perhaps more people will be purchasing movies t
Re:BluRay will win says TFA (Score:5, Funny)
So, they will win the platform war, but so many Sony employees will be killed in the process that it will be judged to have not been worth it?
Bold prediction there.
Re:BluRay will win says TFA (Score:2)
Maybe they meant pyric [reference.com] victory, in that Blu-ray DVD burners will be cheaper than HD-DVD burners ;)
Re:BluRay will win says TFA (Score:2)
Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers now? (Score:5, Interesting)
If it's existing DVD production, is it readable by *existing* DVD players like those in a computer. In other words can I get a codec and play it in a PC, (even if I need to update the DVD firmware to do it)?
Sure the codec means it won't immediately be playable on the DivX/MPEG4/DVD boxes, but can it play on a PC?
If they can do that, that would be a HD-DVD killer.
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:5, Informative)
Isn't it just a 2 layer DVD? (Score:4, Insightful)
They say it can be made in standard plants, so it must be damn similar to a standard format presumably?
Re:Isn't it just a 2 layer DVD? (Score:2)
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:2)
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:2)
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:2)
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:3, Insightful)
The number of people that enjoy watching DVDs on their computer is only slightly larger than the number of people with HTPCs... The bump rece
Maybe, but it would mean $50 players (Score:4, Insightful)
If its basically a DVD compatible thing that PCs can play with a codec/firmware tweak, then it is only a matter of time before the dirt cheap $50 DIVX/MPEG4/DVD players add support as a firmware change.
That market is huge, just look in an electrical store and they stack those buggers on pallets for volume sale.
That's what I'm thinking there, that this disk could become the volume market item, playing on computers and slightly more modern DVD(+mpeg4+divx) players together with PCs, and if you then go out and buy a HD TV, you get the high definition version too without upgrading your DVD's which would be another plus.
Re:Maybe, but it would mean $50 players (Score:2)
There are two problems with that:
No amount of firmware will upgrade an old Sigma or MediaTek chip to decode HD H.264. The chips are not powerful enough, period.
A licensed Blu-ray player must play every Blu-ray disc, even the blue-laser ones.
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:2)
The data structure will be different - different encryption (CSS is so thoroughly cracked that they won't use it any more) and possibly even a different track layout. It will use the red laser that the Blu-Ray drive uses to read old DVDs, that's just about the only thing that it has in common with DVDs.
Re:Can Blue Ray (Red) play on existing computers n (Score:2)
They say it's encoded in a modern codec, so that doesn't mean it *can't* play back in PCs, it may simply mean the DVD firmware needs tweaked or this 'modern codec' may be the hurdle to overcome.
Content? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Assuming equal pricing and availability of hardware"
The thing is, I don't forsee it being equal availability of hardware.. I don't know how many PS2s have been sold, or were sold within three months of release, but I'm sure it was a lot larger number than the number of early adoptors that would run out and buy a brand new HD-DVD player.
I guess my point is, if there are for sure going to be millions of Blu-ray players in houses all over the US, and there's no such assurance about HD-DVD players, I can't see places stocking shelves full of HD-DVDs.
Content is Crap. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No HD-DVD in XBOX 360 V1 (Score:2)
Yes, it is. (Score:3, Interesting)
And once that pan flashes, a few people in management are going to be revealed as dumbasses for misjudging technology.
Re:Yes, it is. (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh wait, ogg and mp3, avi and mpeg, gif and png, doc and pdf, need I go on?
And I think people will prefer tangible, transferable property in the form of discs instead of one fat harddrive.
If what you said was true, no one would have CD's or cassettes, we'd just use radio.
You ARE joking, right? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not likely. Perhaps when FIOS becomes commonplace and available to every person on the face of the planet, but there is no chance that the mainstream user will accept on-line access as the only way to gain video in the near future.
A two-hour movie in really good, MPEG-2 quality takes up approximately 7-8 GB, depending on audio options. Even with a 6 Gb cable connection, that takes roughly three hours to download. (For those who hadn't noticed, that means that it would take longer to download than to watch, so streaming at full quality is not an option.)
Now, bring in HD. About 75 minutes of HD-quality material takes roughly the same amount of space. Expand that to a 2-hour movie and you're looking at anywhere between 12-14 GB of data. That same 6 Gb cable connection would take about six hours to download that movie. In the same amount of time, I could have run to the nearest BR/HD-DVD rental store, watched the movie -- possibly twice -- and returned it. This of course assumes that your "unlimited use" ISP doesn't then knock your ass down for using up "too much" of your "unlimited use" bandwidth after downloading three or four HD movies. And don't even THINK about doing streaming HD unless you've got some enormous network pipe to your house!
Even discounting the fact that every house will NOT be connected via FIOS (or even broadband) in the coming years, thus requiring a physical medium in order to watch the video content, people want a physical medium without restrictive DRM. That has been proven time and time again. The recent Sony debacle should be proof enough of that. People are obviously buying physical discs even though the music is available on-line.
Video games are also sold on-line by a lot of different vendors for a discounted price, yet boxed media are still preferred. Why? Because there is a comfort factor in having the disc in your hands, not worrying about if your computer is connected to the Internet in order to install and play it. There's also no concern about downloading it again or having to authenticate it again (for the most part), and so on.
Ah, so then comes the argument about backing the movies or games off to another medium in the event of a recovery or for backup purposes. Oh, wait. We can't use that argument because there is no need for physical media if everything is distributed on-line! You said so yourself.
On-line definitely has its place. The success of iTunes and the recent announcements by major networks to have their shows distributed electronically is definitely a step toawrds on-line distribution. But unless you plan on every house in the world having a dedicated DS3 connection, the notion that all material - particiularly HD - will be distributed exclusively through digital means is preposterous at best and will likely not come in any of our lifetimes. I guess that you also expect people to have multi-terrabyte storage for each system as well. After all, all of that content has to be stored somewhere when it's downloaded. Or did you actually expect people to be on-line for every movie that they want to watch? Well, I guess that makes a market for automotive broadband on the newest Winnebago line, doesn't it?
Oh, and by the way -- ALL technology is "temporary" because new technology is always evolving from old technology. So, your statement about "temporary technology" alone is fallacious.
In the meantime, please let us know what it is that you have been smoking because it seems like it's some really good shit. The fact that you've been modded as "Insightful" is staggering - or else it's indicative that mod points shouldn't be handed out as much as they are.
No , it isn't. (Score:2, Insightful)
The truth is that the world can't support online distribution yet, and it will only be around when the whole HD/BluRay has been decided, and they're looking at the next gen format.
Re:Yes, it is. (Score:2)
Not for HD content. How many people have both the bandwidth and the patience to actually download 20 GB of content? Certainly not enough to win the war. That's why you see PC makers whimpering for this Managed Content-- discs are the only viable distribution device for the next decade, and if they can't get that content to the computer Vista isn't really relevant.
And of course, provider
Um. right. (Score:2)
Re:Yes, it is. (Score:2, Insightful)
You're overlooking portability. All those parents who bought minivans with DVD players in them to keep the kids quiet during the 2 hour drive to grandma's house will want their movies on a portable disc, not accessible via ethernet or intermittent Wi-Fi. Ditto for commuters on trains or cross-country airline passengers; you want the movie in a physical, portable format without being online. Thus, it wouldn't seem that online d
It's over for me no matter what anyone else does (Score:5, Insightful)
So, personally, anything using Blu-Ray will not be purchased by me.
Company wise, Blu-Ray will only be used at the express request from the customer.
Re:It's over for me no matter what anyone else doe (Score:3, Insightful)
Not that I like Sony or anything. Basically, I despise them. But, quite frankly, I despise MS a lot more. At least Sony has to actually compete, whereas MS just throws its 800 lbs around to get its way. Every single new product they put out, they burn billions of dollars in an attempt to corner the market. Year after year, they just burn cash by the billions, not even looking ahead to profitability, just intent on cornering the ent
Re:It's over for me no matter what anyone else doe (Score:2)
Re:It's over for me no matter what anyone else doe (Score:2)
Dear Sony, Toshiba, LG, Phillips etc. (Score:5, Insightful)
Just agree on a fucking format and stick with it. I won't be buying anything; either BluRay or HD-DVD, until one format is clearly ahead. That means you; every single one of you petty little bastards, will lose out. Just like you all lost on on DVD writer format wars. Do I care what the difference is between DVD-R & DVD+R? Have I ever even seen a DVD-RAM disc? Fuck no, I just want to write a DVD that can be read in other drives. How much R&D did you all waste? How much additonal design is required to acomodate all these different standards? How many sales oppurtunities have been wasted because you've confused the market?
Same thing here. Now get on with it.
Re:Dear Sony, Toshiba, LG, Phillips etc. (Score:3, Insightful)
who will win? all of the technology companies. who will lose? us poor suckers who have no choice but to buy a drive that supports all formats.
Re:Dear Sony, Toshiba, LG, Phillips etc. (Score:2)
doesnt seem like such a bad thing to me. Im not really sure this is a winners/losers zero sum game. This is competition, and the market will decide.
Re:Dear Sony, Toshiba, LG, Phillips etc. (Score:3)
Actually you are a bit off here. You see, go to the store and you will probably find a few more spaces of +R then -R. You know who might truly have won the battle, +R because they decided to implement dual-layer burning while -R decided it was unnecessary. For people who honestly believe in making perfect backup copies of their movies, +R actually did win the "war".
The only way th
Re:Dear Sony, Toshiba, LG, Phillips etc. (Score:2)
When there were two competiting standards some equipment did not include both. I agree with the GP's advice of sitting back and waiting until a clear victor emerges. It it turns out to be a DVD+-R thing, I'll at least not have any equipment that only supports one standard.
But who own in VHS vs Betamax? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not the case with HD-DVD and Blu-ray. They aren't compatible and it looks like no plans to make it so. So you need one player for one, a different one for the other. History has shown that shit won't fly. People will buy one format, not two. So there's very likely to be a winner and a loser in this format war unless dual HD-DVD/Blu-ray players come out.
Crack that firmware! (Score:3, Interesting)
One irony, though, is that the DMCA would prevent software authors from accessing the firmware to make the determination as to whether their own copyrights were being violated.
Re:Crack that firmware! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's kind of ironic that MS is wagging their finger at Sony now, because when Vista comes out, Microsoft is going to build that feature in standard (eg. in order to view a certain piece of enthralling media, you have to let some super-secret code run on your computer, with the OS doing
History Repeats itself...? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:History Repeats itself...? DATs right (Score:2)
Before it was to be used for backups, it was supposed to come out also as the digital replacement for cassette tapes. The copy protection took so long to be agreed upon that when it came out, so did CDs and CDs were better to boot.
I think that by the time this format war is over, everybody else will be using the internet to get movies. Physical formats won't matter except for data backup.
Blu-Ray will be Infected with DRM (Score:5, Funny)
You can't polish a turd, no matter how big and blue it is.
Re:Blu-Ray will be Infected with DRM (Score:2)
Re:Blu-Ray will be Infected with DRM (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Blu-Ray will be Infected with DRM (Score:2)
oh well (Score:3, Insightful)
gov't interference (Score:2)
Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD Not OVer Yet ? (Score:4, Insightful)
The Hardware will Probably Support Both Like DVDR (Score:2, Insightful)
Two ways to settle this.... (Score:2)
2. Give both formats to porn producers. Whichever one they choose wins.
Simple isn't it?
Makes no sense (Score:2)
More draconian DRM (Score:5, Interesting)
My aching head! (Score:2)
Let the n00b say this (Score:3, Funny)
Take the Blue laser or the Red laser? (Score:5, Informative)
The bottom line is which format holds more data, is cheaper and is consumer-friendly, IMHO.
From http://www.blu-ray.com/faq/#1.5 [blu-ray.com] and http://www.hddvdprg.com/hddvd/hddvd_3.html [hddvdprg.com]
---How much data can you fit on a Blu-ray disc?
A single-layer disc can fit 23.3GB, 25GB or 27GB.
A dual-layer disc can fit 46.6GB, 50GB or 54GB.
HD-DVD can hold 15, 30, 32GB
---How much video can you record on a Blu-ray disc?
Over 2 hours of high-definition television (HDTV) on a 25GB disc. About 13 hours of standard-definition television (SDTV) on a 25GB disc.
HD-DVD can hold 4hrs HDTV on 15GB disc, 8hrs HDTV on 30GB disc
---How fast can you read/write data on a Blu-ray disc?
According to the Blu-ray Disc specification, 1x speed is defined as 36Mbps.
HD-DVD speed is 36.55Mbps
Re:Take the Blue laser or the Red laser? (Score:2)
Its irrelevant (Score:4, Insightful)
These new discs only "use" at the end of the day will be for computer storage, but flash drives are about to hit 100gig, so even for that use the new generation discs will be irrelevant.
Just remember you heard it here first. These discs won't gain the type of saturation that DVD and VHS have had. These both will have market share more like beta. The true winners will be companies like Verizon and SBC who are brining fiber to everyone's door. Comcast also has a pretty sweet strategy for delivering content on demand.
I won't use anything that sony publishes.. (Score:2)
Enough about DRM, Rootkits and bad "netizenships". Sony has got to go if this how the "play ball"
HD-DVD all the way!
What is the point of either format?? (Score:3, Interesting)
The only reason that I can see for upgrading (not that we will have the choice) would be if either standard better consumer value:
No more £60 box-sets (you'd never pay that for one disc - I reckon publishers will use the excuse of high definition etc to continue using multiple discs to cover TV series)
Use some of the spare capacity on the discs to back-up the data in other areas (hopefully making them more durable / resistant to scratches - no more skipping discs!)
I'm not against Blu-Ray or HD-DVD per se, as far as I'm concerned technology progression is a great thing, I just can't help thinking that either format will fail to benefit consumers as fully as it might. Also, will either standard be available (soon) in an R/W format?
WB wants a third format? (Score:2)
we here at WB figured it would be in our best interest to produce DVD materials for you, the consumer at poor quality. We sat down, read over the specs for what HD quality MPEG-2 should be, and decided to aim low. Like bottom of the barrel.
So, no fear from us, you'll get the same first gen crap from us that you did with DVD. We feel that it's important here at WB to "test" the waters with low quality media. Better us to make you, the paying consumer, the guinea pig than produce something correctly th
Red Blu-Ray? (Score:4, Funny)
won't bother (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:won't bother (Score:2)
Hundreds of hours? Did 10 TERAbyte consumer grade harddrives become so common overnight and I've missed it? You don't seem to have any idea how much space video content takes, let alone HD video content. 1080i HDTV is 1920 × 1080, which means it is 6 times higher the resolution of DVD discs (720 × 480).
A single-layer DVD can store 4.7 Gbyte with typical data rates for DVD movies ranging from 3 to 10 Mbit/s. Can
DVD = Floppy of our time (Score:2)
From an efficiency point of view it doesn't seem to make sense to keep hauling stuff around on funny plastic discs. Perhaps in a few years from now both Blu-ray and HD-DVD will be irrelevant.
9GB red blue-ray (Score:2)
Is this really anything new? I mean, Microsoft has been putting HD content onto standard DVDs for a while now, using MPEG-4 instead of h.264.
boycott for now, there are alternatives (Score:5, Interesting)
There are several formats that can be used to create HD content on existing DVD disks.
Windows HiDef Media
Divx
Quicktime (via h.264/mpeg4)
H.264 (mpeg4)
H.264 is the future of HD broadcast and you can fit an entire 2 hour HD (720p or 1080i/p) movie on existing DVD disks with room to spare
JVC already has a player out that plays all these formats including m2t files (HDV in mpeg2 format)using existing DVD writable formats.
We should simply bypass Sony and Toshiba and finally use our PCs and home theater servers the way we want to.
And it would all be legal.
Funny thing is, for once, MS is on our side, even if it's for the wrong reasons.
here is the link to the jvc SRDVD-100U
http://pro.jvc.com/prof/Attributes/features.jsp?f
Has built in ethernet and streaming capabilities (movies, audio...). Pretty cool, but may be to expensive to some.
It simply doesn't matter... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's all about TV, right? I don't know about you, but for me, I'm watching less TV, not more. HD quality doesn't really make the material any better. Why would I care if a crappy program looks better?
My prediction? Both formats will fall on disinterested comsumers, simply because they really don't care that much about HD. When the industry shakes out to the point that HD gear is as easy to use as conventional, then maybe this stuff will get a foothold. Until then, most consumers don't want to go through the hassle of HD, even if it means that their movies look better.
Can't imagine why I think this? Consider the DVD-Audio market and you'll see the same issue. CD's are "good enough". Why mess with DVD-Audio? (Fold in some DRM nonsense, and it looks even bleaker for HD...)
What pull does HP have? (Score:3, Interesting)
While it's not much of a surprise to see HP licking Microsofts boots and demanding people use the MS menu standard, I am surprised that anyone in the Blu-Ray consortium would take them very seriously. In terms of support for the format the people that really matter are the studios as they are the ones that will be providing content compelling enough to make or break the system.
Now Warner Brothers arguing for support of the BD-9 disc - that I could see happening, and would probably help the format gain a little adoption in the short term. I think though in the long term it will slow adoption because too many studios will be tempted to put out overly-compressed releases on BD-9 and not a higher quality feed that needs the storage capacity of the larger BD-25 discs. People will not buy into HD-DVD or Blu-Ray if the benefits are perceived as marginal.
Blu-Ray still has a giant ace in the hole with the PS3 supporting the format, millions of people suddenly having Blu-Ray players will not hurt much at all! And since HD-DVD has pretty much decided to sit out this Christmas season I just can't see HD-DVD player sales ramping up fast ebough to get even close to the volume of PS3 launch day.
It doesn't matter. (Score:4, Interesting)
People are happy with DVD, and will be for a while yet. I think that this storm will blow over before people become unhappy with DVD. Many do not even realise that their DVDs that they are watching on their HD TVs aren't HD, because they are better than analogue SD.
That said, I will consider HD-DVD or Blu-Ray only when it appears that there is a clear winner, and it is compatible with my TV. Compatible means that it either puts out a 1080i analogue signal on component jacks, or that I am ready to replace my TV for some other reason.
On another front, I noticed that there is now a HD version of Divx ;-). It is capable of storing an HD movie in DVD-sized files.
Re:Capacity, not DRM (Score:2, Insightful)
The main reasons I switched from VHS to DVD were:
1) The ability to jump chapters
2) Never have to r
Durability too (Score:4, Insightful)
For me what matters is disk capacity. The more the better.
While this is usually the main desire for most people, I'd personally be just as interested in a slightly more durable material. I try to take good care of my DVDs, but invariably one will get a nick or a scratch on it, and then it's a hit-or-miss game of trying to repair it.
If you could store 100TB on a disc, only to have one scratch render half of it unreadable... that would suck.
Re:Durability too (Score:2)
Of course 10GB of data on something the size of an SD/xD card would be even better! The iPod Nano is a start
Re:Capacity, not DRM (Score:2)
Re:Capacity, not DRM (Score:2)
this comment reminds me of Bill Gates wondering why anyone would need more than 640K of RAM.
We are seeing technology demos of Hires TVs with 10x the pixel count of 1080p right now. HDTV is just an intermediate step. Maybe that is the point of diminishing returns, but coupled with a IMAX projector for your living room,
maybe not.
Re:Capacity, not DRM (Score:2)