Blu-ray Coming Out On Top? 360
wh0pper writes "Some interesting information came out at at the latest Blu-ray Disc Association meeting at Twentieth Century Fox Studios. Apparently, 90 percent of the CE industry and seven movie studios now back Blu-ray Disc. And most of the IT industry (except Microsoft) also supports Blu-ray Disc. This has prompted Mr. Parsons, Senior VP of Advanced Products Development for Pioneer Electronics, to say "There's no format war looming because it's not Blu-ray vs. HD DVD. It's simply Blu-ray versus standard definition DVD... Currently, DVD has 50,000 titles presently available, and both formats will co-exist for several years to come with new BD players supporting both formats. BD players make the perfect complement to new HDTVs that are being purchased by consumers." Mr. Parsons then announced that the upcoming CES would be used to launch Blu-ray Disc."
My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm another victim of the DVD format wars.
I'm glad that the industry is standardizing the next generation media now when there are very few (any?) players on the market. It's good to have a standard, even if it is a de facto standard rather than a de jure standard.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Informative)
The point HD-DVD had going for it was that the discs and players would have been cheaper to make.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmmm, let's see... Panasonic's Blu-ray player costs $2780 with $69 for the mythical 50GB disc or $32 for the real-world 25GB disc. Nope, not there yet. Not there in 2006 at all, I think.
Personally, I think consumers are going to be hard to push from good-enough DVDs to over-hyped hi-def anyway. Add to that a ridiculous DRM that requires new TVs and monitors and prohibits copies of media that's likely to be less durable than DVD (especially Blu-ray), then I know I'm going to save a fortune by not buying any of it. Non-DRM dual-layer DVD will be my solution of choice until they offer me something truly better.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Interesting)
In a nutshell, I'd like to have large, cheap and reasonably reliable storage.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
As for archival storage, why anticipate investing in an upgrade unless it's an order of magnitude greater than what you have now? I haven't bought every storage option that came down the pike (e.g. I never owned a Zip d
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:5, Informative)
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a definite possiblity, but I've been having some interesting conversations about the whole 'forced conversion' to digital. It will be nearly impossible to make millions of people go out and purchase a new TV overnight just because the FCC says everything has to be digital. I know I'll go without TV if that's the ca
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:5, Informative)
There is very invasive DRM measures in blu-ray that make divx look like it would make Richard Stallman proud. You need to get permission every time you play a disc, and your discs are permanently mated to your player. You can't play your disc at a friends house or in another room in your house, and if your player breaks, you lose your whole DVD collection.
The studios love it but the consumers will be totally screwed over by it.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
I'm assuming the invasive DRM you refer to is not included in those technical reasons to use Blu-ray or something.?? *shrugs*
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Also, I felt compelled to respond, but I love your signature.
DRM 'manages access' in the same way that jail 'manages freedom.'
I'm going to use that sometime, I am sure you don't mind
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, current DVDs already have invasive DRM. Mandatory ads, hard to copy, etc. I guess you refuse to watch them?
Whatever the new standard will be, they're all DRMed out the wazoo. That's just not a choice, seen from the industry.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
People understand "If you buy it, and you break it, you lose it." They don't understand "If you buy it, and dont use it just how we say, you lose it."
I can't see something with over-restrictive DRM suceeding in the mainstream, unless there are equal means ava
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2, Informative)
www.slysoft.com AnyDVD.
Bye Bye DRM/ads/etc.
and the real questions is: can u trust DRM by Sony? I know I won't.
I'll wait for slysoft (or the like) to make a good bypass software like they have for DVDs.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
This uses PKI with revokable keys - the movie studios can just keep revoking keys that are hacked.
Of course that'll work until the the first popular TV model gets hacked, and they kill the TVs belonging to half a million users. That'll be one hell of a lawsuit.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:5, Insightful)
They tried region coding, and people over here in the UK just got players chipped and hacked. Everyone I know has a multiregion player so that they can watch unavailable US movies or cheaper far east versions.
Start telling people that they can't lend a movie to a mate, and they'll either boycott, or work out a way around.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Granted there's always some kind of chicken dance you have to do to switch regions (like 7 7 Enter 7 on the remote on my model) but that's acceptable for the occasional disk.
However those tricks are always undocumented (in the supplied manual). You always have to refer to the manufacturers support area on their website. Because of this a number of users seem to be
The 'hackers will find a way' argument debunked (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Insightful)
if i have the discplayer, it obviously has output channels to a tv and to a sound system.
so obviously i can rip it off from these same outputs. they can have all the drm they want, a bit divx encoding in there which loses their mighty "identification" spots that have been under discussion here somewhere, and the movies will again be out on the torrent sites. sure it will lose some quality, but i don't really think that downloaders will mind the drop of quality in such tiny amounts. (now camrips and ts's are loss of quality, a clean cablerip is as good as it can be on your tv). if you have a tv/video card with tv-in port, you're the man and the drm people are wasted.
if you really think that drm works, show me a drm that can't be just cableripped or that hasn't been cracked by software already (oh that dvd region joke never expires i guess...).
any measure they make with 3 years will be hacked with 3 months. any big secret about drm that you trust into taiwan hardware makers (hdtv producers for example) will be out soon enough & counter measured to make the whole investment in drm a total waste. and the saddest thing is that taiwan&china produce massive amount of everyday electronics already and the advanced countries can't afford to cut these out of the production system.
don't the movie/soundmakers really understand that the only bloody way to fight piracy is to lower the prices and make the content affordable ? this is the only thing that will ever decrease the piracy.
fight the bloody problem and not the results it creates.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Actually when done professionally, a camrip off your TFT-TV can be just as good as transferring it by cable. When using a good test-pattern, you can get 1:1 pixel alignment. A good engineer might also be able to rip off the electronics of a digital TV.
I'm pretty sure professional pirates (in Asia) are willing to do this, so whatever DRM the industry may try won't change a thing.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Record the upper half, lower half, left half, right half, turn the camera 90 degrees, 180 degrees, do some kind of stillframe-photo with automatic page step, take your pick... Maybe they can stop consumer camcorders pointed at a cinema screen, but in an environment outside their control it's just not going to happen.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Totally missing the point (Score:5, Informative)
The point of Blu-Ray is High Definition. So your analog video and audio outputs are not going to get you HD. You are not going to plug your HDTV to your DVD player using analog if you want HiDef.
The purpose of the DRM in Blu Ray is to block you from ripping the decrypted, compressed bitsream. If all you can do with BluRay is capture the analog, then we can already do better with regular DVD, so it would be a huge success for BluRay DRMs.
And if you know about what kind of DRM they are talking about, you would realize that its not going to be simple to permanently hack, even a software implementation.
Even if you are able to get the uncompressed HD image by hijacking your display device, watermark detection will make sure that your BluRay player keys will be revoked and wont be able to play new content.
The design of BluRay's DRMs has really been though out, and covers a lot of scenarios. Off course the implementations will have problems, bugs and exploits, but what it really comes down to is how well BluRay will keep track of compromised players, and how bad they are willing to perform key revocation.
Each player is supposed to have an unique ID, but I can see it from here: some manufacturer (cheap chinese for example) will mess up and produce 1000s of player with the same ID. When one of this player his compromised, 1000s of players will stop working with new releases if the studios revoke this key. 1000s of people will complain.
In the best case the manufacturer (contractually at fault for producing clones) will change the players.
In the worst case there will be lawsuits flying around between Studios, BluRay authorities, OEM, silicon vendors and consumers.
The good thing for the Japanese: the barrier of entry for cheap Chinese and Taiwanese manufacturer will be high. There will be the need to put in place "secure" production lines , making sure that keys are not leaked and that no clone are produced. The huge liabilities that the OEM will face if they screw up will be enough to give Pioneer, Sony etc.. time to make a buck on BluRay.
Re:Totally missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
You think a 1920x1080p transcode will look worse than a 720x480 original encode? Hint: It won't. Try looking at some of the HDTV -> Xvid/WMV rips out there. Since they are still sticking with MPEG2, reencodes would be the norm rather than the exception anyway. Ce
Re:Totally missing the point (Score:3)
This is what I don't believe. U.S. investors will be falling over themselves to be the first to build a production line to turn these things out wherever labor is cheapest. Hell, that's pretty much all we ever do now -- outsource it to China; and not just shoddy molded-plastic stuff.
The manufacturers will want to maximize profits at a given price point, and that means driving down production cost
Re:Totally missing the point (Score:3)
So, there will never be cheap BluRay players like there are cheap DVD players. That should help market penetration. I only boug
Re:Totally missing the point (Score:4, Informative)
This is in the specs. All analogue outputs will be SD only.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:5, Informative)
This would require a mandatory, permanent Internet connection for your BD player and I doubt we'll see stuff like that in consumer electronics in the next 10 years.
and your discs are permanently mated to your player. You can't play your disc at a friends house or in another room in your house, and if your player breaks, you lose your whole DVD collection.
I assume you refer to Sony's patent for such a mechanism. That patent was issued in 1999. They didn't put it in the PS2, they didn't put it in the PSP, now a few months ago it resurfaced and suddenly everyone assumes they'll use it for the PS3. IMHO Sony's too afraid of losing to MS to try something harebrained like that
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
This is absurd. Discs can't be mated to a player unless they are rewritable. The fact is that a Blu-Ray disc will play on any player.
Anyway, any regional / disc encryption they may employ is a waste of time. The image quality from these discs will be so good t
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
No you just made that up. Permission from who? Will the players have a cell phone built in and call up?
> your discs are permanently mated to your player.
Err, no! Obviously not. Otherwise when you upgrade your player, your entire collection would be written off.
> if your player breaks, you lose your whole DVD collection
*Obviously* not or they would never sell a single player. Please stop saying whatever stupid little thing pops into your head.
S
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:4, Informative)
I doubt that the content industry has forgotten about the failure of DIVX already -- they lost money on that, right along with Circuit City, for every movie on DIVX disc that sold for $2 on clearance after the product bombed.
Expect the full set of restrictions to be enabled only for Oscar screeners and things of that nature.
Re:My DVR doesn't read DVD-RAM discs anymore (Score:2)
Actually ... (Score:2)
Technology driver (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Technology driver (Score:5, Insightful)
As for dual angles: I wish they'd pick one angle and stick to it (hey, no pun intended), rather than have a movie edited to constantly switch cameras on me. Whenever it switches to bung-hole cam, I hit the alternate angle button, and by the time it actually switches (a few seconds), the movie cuts back to brown-eye-vision. If they really want to advance the technology, they should build a "hairy, bobbing man-ass" pixelizer right into the DVDs, for us more reserved porn enthusiasts.
Re:Technology driver (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you really think if the porn industry decided to go for HD-DVD while 9/10 of the major movie studios went for Bluray that HD-DVD would win out? And here's another hint: the porn industry is concerned with making money; they will go to either format that wins out.
The only reason this keeps coming up is because yea
Re:Technology driver (Score:3, Insightful)
Admit it, which ever group is the most expiremental and fastest to move and use a new media the most tends to get to choose which direction it goes, and I don't think anyone would argue against the porn indu
Re:Technology driver (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Technology driver (Score:2)
It's likely being phased out by the computer networks.
Re:Technology driver (Score:5, Insightful)
DVD will win (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to agree on this one.
Furthermore, as i see it, the only possible benefict that moving to a new format can give to the porn industry is "high definition content". This might be a real benefict for the part of the industry that concentrates on showing naked physically perfect women - aka softcore - (or maybe not if they rely on the technology to disguise the imperfections) but what value does it add to the part of the industry that concentrates on the action - aka hardcore. After all, most hardcore movies are hardly known for the grandeur of the scenarios (or the depth of the stories, or the quality of the acting of their casting)
If you think back to the change from videotapes to DVDs, you can see clear beneficts to the industry:
As i see it, none of these new technologies seems to bring any comparable beneficts for a business model such as the one from the porn industry.
Obvious beneficts for the traditional film industry, such as getting their customers to (again) buy their personal film library in another format, are hardly applicable to the porn industry - there is hardly a hot market for a new edition of "Debbie Does Dalas"
You don't watch a lot of pr0n, do you? (Score:2)
I dunno, maybe I'm accostumed with Private, but it seems to me that its movies fit the bill for:
* hardcore action
* grandeur of scenarios
* production values (including
Re:Technology driver (Score:2)
Unless you factor in the time spent with photoshop.
None of the girls you see in the magazines are real. They might as well be rendered for all the retouching that has taken place prior to publication.
If they dump their models on HD TV, you might be sorely disapointed.
Re: (Score:2)
I, for one, welcome our SONY & DRM overlords.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Screw them. I prefer indie stuff anyways.
A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2)
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2, Insightful)
Millenium 2: 1000-1999
Millenium 3: 2000-2999
It doesn't have to last a thousand years... it only has to last 10-15 for us to be "well into the 3rd millenium"
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:5, Funny)
If I'm saving up a million dollars to buy a date with Charlize Theron and I save 100 dollars, I'm not really that close, am I?
Sigh, not very close at all.
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2)
Sigh, not very close at all.
10 / 1000 =
100 / 10^6 =
Your analogy sucks - it's 10,000 out of a million, not 100.
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2)
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2)
Technically, everyone that refused to celebrate the new millennium on 1 Jan 2000 and held out for 1 Jan 2001 missed out because the ISO declared those that had already celebrated it to have been retroactively correct. Serves 'em right, I say, I celebrated both and got 2 parties
Re:A reich that will last a thousand years! (Score:2, Informative)
In the wikipedea article you link to it clearly refutes your statement...
Year 0001 corresponds to AD 1. The year before that is 0000, which corresponds to 1 BC
It further links to an article on the 20th Century [wikipedia.org] where it states...
The 20th century lasted from 1901 to 2000 in the Gregorian calendar. Common usage sometimes regards it as lasting from 1900 to 1999, but this is incorrect since counting of calendar years begun in the year 1.
Years are Ordinal Numbers (Score:2)
It appears that you are a bit hazy about the concept of ordinal number versus cardinal number and the concept of a point versus a period of elapsed time. Years are ordinal numbers describing a period of time equal to 12 months. The "First Year" is the "First Year of the Common Era" or AD 1. It describes the whole 12 months, not the single point in time at the beginning of the year and the point separa
More info.... (Score:3, Informative)
HD-DVD will win (Score:5, Funny)
But Greedo shooting first must be nice at 1080p, either way.
Re:HD-DVD will win (Score:2)
No, really.
Not decided if Blu-ray will have component video? (Score:2, Insightful)
yep. HDMI (Score:3, Insightful)
The DVD CCA won't even let you send out uprezzed DVDs over analog or unencrypted digital (if the Macrovision flag is set).
It's completely ridiculous.
DVI w/HDCP is electrically identical to HDMI I guess, so that's probably permissible.
Birds of a Feather (Score:3, Insightful)
Birds of a feather, or in this case movie studios in this chummy chummy business, flock together. Since Sony is one of theirs, well you get the picture [pun alert].
In short, this is hardly surprising. Especially considering how many households will quickly enough have one player in the kid's must-have PS3. Might have been different if XBox 360 was shipping with HD-DVD, but that's clearly not the case.
Re:Birds of a Feather (Score:3, Interesting)
It appears that most people here on slashdot hate Blue-Ray. I understand, but look at the alternative. A Microsoft backed system that will also have the copy protection crap in it.
So for once it looks like a technology that Microsoft hates it going to be the "standard".
It isn't like we have a totally open spec on one side and a DRM closed solution on the other. We the consumers (people that will actually buy a device), have a choice of one evil player or the other. It
This is great (Score:4, Funny)
One question I have (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:One question I have (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:One question I have (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you have any link about that?
What about HD-DVD? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What about HD-DVD? (Score:2, Insightful)
Apparently... (Score:2, Funny)
Both will fail (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Both will fail (Score:2)
Re:Both will fail (Score:2)
This is going to be messy. VERY messy!
Personall though Im loo
Nope, people will love it (Score:3, Insightful)
The PS3 (Score:4, Insightful)
A Sony format winning in the marketplace... (Score:3, Funny)
(Analog) HDTV... I will need HDMI?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, this is fine if I had a new TV... but instead I have a beautiful 3 year old rear projection HDTV that uses analog component inputs. This is currently connected to a HD DirecTV reciever and my DVD player. The DVD player is of course 480p but I do get as high as 1080i with some of the DirecTV channels.
So now what am I going to do when BluRay or HDDVD comes out and I want to view the full resolution siginal? What are the odds Sony will sell me new electronics to add HDCP digital to my TV? Will I have to use an illegal device to convert the digital stream to component for my TV?
Re:(Analog) HDTV... I will need HDMI?? (Score:2)
Most likely. I bought a Sony PS2 as a DVD player because of Datel's DVD Region X. Most big companies simply have no idea how much of their sales are due to grey-market (or even black-market) products. Heck, the original Sony Playstation was so popular because you could so easily get cheap copies of the games.
Now, however, Sony is dead to me. I was already moving away from big brands like that anyway. In fact, my
Re:(Analog) HDTV... I will need HDMI?? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing is set until the devices start hitting the stores, until then there is still hope.
When DVD first came out... (Score:2)
Now don't get me wrong, I'll buy one... but then I'm finding it increasingly more difficult to li
Re:When DVD first came out... (Score:3, Funny)
Consumers will return them (Score:4, Insightful)
You think I'm kidding but I'm not. I deal with people who hook their DVD into the VHS machine and then wonder why they can't see the DVD's play -- because the VHS machine is still set to "tuner", when it needs to be changed to "Aux" or "line in".
Believe me. People will return these things like mad when they don't get the same quality of image they saw in the store. They are not being told that they have to buy new DVDs and New TVs as well as the new player. It's like saying "This new stereo requires that you throw away your old speakers and buy new speakers too, plus, you can't play your old CD's in it either!"
I predict phantom warehouses of returned merchandise to keep it off the books so the stocks don't tumble.
Trust me on this. People are stupid.
Re:Consumers will return them (Score:3, Interesting)
No, he'll say "Wow I can't believe how amazing this looks" and he'll tell his family he got some brand new blu ray player for $500 and show them and they'll say "Wow it looks great!" and then he'll show a real videophile and they'll say "What the hell is wrong
Always knew Blu-Ray would win (Score:2)
Obligitory /. comment (Score:3, Funny)
BluRay not really 54gb (Score:3, Insightful)
HD-DVD will use VC1 or Mpeg4 which will give the same quality picture and using a lot less space. So even though on paper, BluRay has better specs, in real life HD-DVD will allow more stuff on a disc.
D
Re:BluRay not really 54gb (Score:3, Interesting)
WTF are you smoking?
http://www.tdk-europe.presscentre.com/corp/Release s/release.asp?ReleaseID=2355&NID=Press%20Releases [presscentre.com]
13 December 2005
TDK Starts Shipping "Bare" Type Mass-Production Blu-ray Disc Samples
TDK's Blu-ray Discs achieve a high capacity of 25GB on a single-layer and 50GB on a dual-layer at 2x recording speed and are protected by TDK's DURABIS 2 hard coating technology
TDK today announces t
Re:BluRay not really 54gb (Score:3, Interesting)
http://videobusiness.com/article/CA6288668.html [videobusiness.com]
D
Re:BluRay not really 54gb (Score:3, Interesting)
D
What's in it for me? (Score:5, Insightful)
Somewhat higher capacity but not as much as initially promised
New and Improved Onerous DRM
Ancient encoding schema
Macrovision
Region encoding
Prohibited user operations
Language & subtitle choices which are limited to region
Can someone remind me why we want this?
Re:Blu Ray is lame technology (Score:5, Funny)
* wolv looks at spindle of 100 DVD-R
* wolv looks at 5-pack of 100GB discs
Yes... damn them and they better not give us those lame 100 GB discs.
Re:Skip Blu-Ray - Go To 300GB Holographic Discs (Score:4, Insightful)
It took DVDs years to be accepted by the market. They'll have to offer much more with the movies to get the public to want to buy new copies of what they have. With DVD, it was all the extras and the supposedly non-degrading format. Since the consumer already has that with DVD, Blu-ray can't push that so they'll have to push the higher resolution but the general public doesn't really understand that much so it's something really abstract to them. Are they going to sell their soul (DRM) and empty their pocket book to replace their current movies? I doubt it.
Re:Skip Blu-Ray - Go To 300GB Holographic Discs (Score:2)
Oh the general public understands HD very well alright. They really just don't care, and at current prices, honestly counldn't be bothered with it.
Re:Skip Blu-Ray - Go To 300GB Holographic Discs (Score:2)
Tech is always moving at a rather extreme speed.
Re:Skip Blu-Ray - Go To 300GB Holographic Discs (Score:2)
Re:Skip Blu-Ray - Go To 300GB Holographic Discs (Score:2)
You know both that DRM will be a problem on all BD-ROM discs and it won't be on holodiscs... how?
you're right... (Score:2)
and i agree with you in principle.
however, i see Blu-ray as an excellt technological achievement. not all Blu-ray discs will have DRM. this is especially the case when single-layer Blu-ray writer drives hit the market in force. who doesn't want to store 25+GiB on a single disc?
i'm behind this format because it's technically very good. i'm against the DRM it mandates for movies, but there is little we can do about that short of a boycott.
my plan: buy a Blu-ray writer when they become affordable and h
Re:Yet no mention of the DRM (Score:2)
And the decision will be "Awesome, the new season Lost/Desperate Housewives/, all on one disk! But it's only on this new format, no DVD... Ah well, time to get a new player!"
Welcome to the world of sheep. Sheep may not like to be sheered, but you can either force them into the corral by siccing the dogs on them (lawsuits and court rulings, bribed FCC officials), or you can tempt them in with some hay (see above).