HD DVD Demo a Disappointment 532
triso writes to tell us that the recent unveiling of the new Toshiba HD DVD production model met with a few difficulties. From the article: "It was supposed to be the grand unveiling of a new generation in home entertainment when Kevin Collins of Microsoft Corp. popped an HD DVD disc into a Toshiba production model and hit 'play.' Nothing happened. The failed product demo at this week's International Consumer Electronics Show was hardly an auspicious start for the HD DVD camp in what's promising to be a nasty format war similar to the Betamax/VHS video tape battle."
Well (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Well (Score:4, Insightful)
Shows what you know........ (Score:5, Funny)
meh (Score:2)
;)
warning: insufficient license (Score:5, Funny)
Re:warning: insufficient license (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, with a conference of like 100 people, the chances are > 5 of them are awake and coherent.
Re:Well (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Well (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Or perhaps we should boycott both. I'd prefer that; this gives us an easy way to get out of the endless upgrade-trytouse-getfucked-upgrade-trytouse-getfu
Re:Well (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't envy that guy... (Score:2)
Re:Well (Score:3, Funny)
Windows 95 was much crappier than that demo
Laugh, its funny. (Score:3)
If you cant see the humor in a failed demo, or 'take a joke', then you are in the wrong business.
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Well (Score:5, Interesting)
Not everybody 'gets' the whole HD movement.
-Why should average shopper buy a BD or HD title if they already have it on DVD?
-How many consumers already think that DVD IS Hi Def?
-With all the Hi Def ready displays out there, how many actually show HD content?
-How many times do you go into a bar or sports restaurant where they DO have an HD display with Satellite hookup and HD content STILL SHOW Standard Def channels on the screen?
-How many times do you see in a public place the aspect ratio screwed up on one of those plasma displays?
The ONLY way BD/HD will surpass DVD is when the cost of a BD/HD title is less than a standard DVD and we don't see that happening at all, ever.
Video distributors will NOT stop making DVD's if they're selling and Hollywood will not issue an order to stop producing content for it for DRM sake.
Re:Well (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Well (Score:3, Informative)
Keep in mind that ripping any CSS protected DVDs is likely to be illegal in your country.
ah, yes, the illegality of it all (Score:4, Insightful)
Point. But more a point towards "wow, these laws are sortof stupid" than any real sort of warning. Unless one seriously expects companies to start looking at the contents of peoples' computers and then sueing them for it. Welllll, okay, nevermind, that's actually not that far off. But they really should not be allowed to get away with things like that, and I think it's better to hasten the day when that issue inevitiably comes up in a big way than to wait as public opinion adapts more and more to the currently strong zeitgeist of "if you aren't doing anything wrong...."
I mean, not to bring up politics, but yaknow . . .
But hey. Weren't there legal decisions in the favour of being able to make backups with older techs? But each new technology the fight is fought again, and each time the consumer side loses a bit more. Of course there are legal justifications for it (it being illegal to break encryption, etc etc) but there are enough random laws that these cases could in theory be justified many different ways for many different results.
Honestly, that's one of the reasons I'm relatively unlikely to buy DVDs (and much less likely to buy either of the new formats). Why in the world should I pay money for something that I'm not even allowed to use how I want, simply because the companies involved are greedy in an unrealistic way (ie. the actions motivated by their greed do not actually get the results they intend anyways)? And then it pays for things like the industry lobbying for the kind of laws that make it illegal to do things like making (what really should be perfectly legitimate backups, honestly, try to argue against it from a logical point of view knowing that the guy is using them for personal viewing, just making a bit simpler what he paid to be able to do anyway). Sorry, no thanks.
Re:Well (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Well (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well (Score:3, Informative)
Damn, I guess they didn't satisfy the DRM req!? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Damn, I guess they didn't satisfy the DRM req!? (Score:2)
Re:Damn, I guess they didn't satisfy the DRM req!? (Score:2)
1/2 ;-)
Re:Damn, I guess they didn't satisfy the DRM req!? (Score:3, Funny)
No, they want his soul. Being as he works for Microsoft he already signed that over a long time ago.
Learn from Steve Jobs (Score:4, Insightful)
Two points here... (Score:5, Insightful)
First point, HD-DVD had a bad demo and Cnet has one of the Blue Ray players on their "Best Of" list. Sounds like things are going to be interesting.
Second point, another famous demo failure I will point out is the infamous "Windows 98 Blue Screen of Death" that Microsoft had back in the day trying to show it off. And after that, only a few hundred million people used the OS. What a failure.
Re:Two points here... (Score:2, Insightful)
In all fairness, millions of PCs were sold with Windows 98 preinstalled. Companies and users with the need/obligation to run Windows applications but without the time/skill/resources to replace it with another OS bought those PCs and didn't have much of a choice in what OS to use at that point.
Re:Two points here... (Score:2, Insightful)
A marketing blunder will not affect a company with a monopoly, but we're talking about two emerging technologies competing for dominance.
Re:Two points here... (Score:4, Funny)
I don't see how this demo counts as a failure as it accurately demonstrated the typical user experience with that particular product.
This thread is useless without pictures. (Score:2, Funny)
Weird, i don't get t (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean this was a production model, so either all their prodution models are broken, or they got REALLY unlucky and got a bad one..
If it were me though and I was going to showcase a new product, I would make sure that it acutally worked..
Quality Control is your friend..
Re:Weird, i don't get t (Score:2)
sabotage! (Score:2)
Agree. He should have rehearsed a bit (Score:2)
Once your scripted part is do
Re:Weird, i don't get t (Score:5, Interesting)
Timex ran the test a dozen or so times before they were supposed to go live. That watch did fine in every test. Then the golden moment came, and they were on the air. The watch took a lick'n as it was supposed to...
All those tests they had done, and the watch had finally failed for the real deal. So you can't always predict these things. Now it's always funniest when it happens to Microsoft, but if you give Murphy an inch, he'll make sure to make a fool of you every time.
Re:Weird, i don't get t (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Weird, i don't get t (Score:3, Informative)
http://ezinearticles.com/?Three-All-Time-Greatest
Live TV demos (Score:3, Interesting)
Live shows in general were always coming up with "oops" moments. Another classic was a semi-live action series called "The Avengers", which (at that
Re:Weird, i don't get t (Score:3, Insightful)
It would be different if the failure had been for the demonstration of some "advanced" feature (e.g. selecting a different language, subtitles, jumping to a different chapter, etc.). But the very basic task of just playing a di
DRM (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:DRM (Score:5, Interesting)
encode them and put them on my iPod with video.
and fuck you for implying people wanting to rip their own disks are planning to break for law. some of us happen to live in countries where businesses don't own the government so much that format shifting is illegal.
Re:DRM (Score:4, Insightful)
But is that true in the big picture? When I was a kid, I used to bootleg VHS rentals all the time because I could afford 10-20 times as many movies that way. Now that I'm an adult with more income, I've bought the vast majority of those same films on DVD.
When I was a kid, my friends and I used to trade copies of audio tapes too, so that we could get each other interested in whatever music we liked. Again, as I got older I bought all of the ones I liked on CD.
I know there is a tiny group of people out there who really do pirate everything and never buy digital media, but I doubt they even come close to making up for the people like me who end up bringing money *into* the music and film industry.
Re:DRM (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I'm 26 now and most of my friends are in their first years of work, a few have been working since they were 19 or so. Judging from my friends we buy games (PC and console), we buy DVDs... CDs? Not very often. We used to when we were younger, but not r
Re:DRM (Score:3, Interesting)
I can't really speak for this person but what I infer from what he has written is that he is using his own anecdotal evidence. That would correspond to my personal observations. It isn't unusual to know one or two individuals who have a compulsion to collect media (without buying any). It is not something that can be accurat
Re:DRM (Score:3, Insightful)
Licence agreement? What licence agreement? You buy a disc, you get a disc. There's no licence or agreement anywhere in this process.
Stop FUDing around already.
As for ethics... You making a copy of something you've bought and which is your property versus a business making sure copyright will never end, stealing what belongs to the public. Which to side with? Tough choice indeed.
demos and marketing (Score:2, Insightful)
Surely they will try to find something in the BR camp to level things out.
Format wars and free markets (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Format wars and free markets (Score:3, Insightful)
Why a format war? (Score:5, Interesting)
Highest Capacity Wins (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Highest Capacity Wins (Score:4, Interesting)
Dual-layer DVD+-R disks hold twice as much as the single-layer version, yet cost more than twice as much and haven't really taken off.
On the other hand, if all you really cared about was high capacity, why not buy a Hard Drive? For just 100 dollars you too could hold 260,000 MB in your hands.
HD-DVD's are lower capacity, but cheaper. Blu-Ray has a somewhat higher capacity, but is more expensive.
Either way we're not talking about Blu-Ray-RW yet, so how does capacity help?
Nobody expects . . . (Score:2)
Oh, and access time.
Err, and time to deterioration.
And possibly imperviousness to scratches.
I think that's it.
Re:Nobody expects . . . (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Highest Capacity Wins (Score:3, Insightful)
sale and stock up). So that's 4.5 Gigs per buck. The best HDD sales
I have seen get you something like 3 Gigs per buck so dual layer
wins.
Here's what I expect: blu-ray camp counts on playstation to penetrate
into homes. HD-DVD battles back with low prices (even announced hardware
was half the price of announced blu-ray analogs). There is a chance
that I'll be able to buy a dual layer HD disk for $2-3 within a year
or two. If so then this is likely
Re:Highest Capacity Wins (Score:5, Interesting)
I cant imagine anyone will use this crap for data storage so the capacity is a moot point. I built a nice 4tb array on raid5 that cost me around $800 (20 cents per GB which is CHEAPER than blueray/hd-dvd), or yes, a couple of 400GB drives on raid1 and your data is quite safe and you dont need >10 disks for same capacity.
Furthermore, with consumer ADSL having 2mb these days (granted asymetrical), you can afford to back up to a popular p2p network, best backup method possible and thats how I backup my legally purchased music/movies and other non private media.
Re:Highest Capacity Wins (Score:5, Insightful)
Now this would make an interesting article to read. Instead we get another cheap and easy shot at Microsoft and a new technology that won't be accepted as main stream ever.
So how about writing a story about how you built a 4TB raid array for $800 and list all the parts and trade offs. I for one would really be interested. Seriously.
Re:Highest Capacity Wins (Score:4, Informative)
In short, my part list is a gigabyte nforce4 motherboard with 8 onboard sata, an additional sata card with 4 ports that costs peanuts, a coolermaster stacker case and 12 400GB drives (4.8tb total but on 2 raid5s). If building from scratch in the US, the total would come to around $3k (2.4k for hard drives alone) which makes around 50 cents per GB so quite a different price. Still a bargain compared to the $110k 4TB IBM solutions
"Nasty format war" my foot (Score:5, Insightful)
With Betamax/VHS, there were pretty significant mechanical differences between the formats -- having a single unit that could play both types of media was essentially impossible without having two completely separate (expensive and futzy) transports. In the case of DVD, HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, they are all 12cm spinning optical discs with exactly the same physical characteristics from the transport point of view. Yes, there is a difference from the logical data formatting and laser point of view, but there is no reason that I can see (other than licensing from the respective consortiums) that a single player couldn't play CD, VCD, DVD, HD-DVD and Blu-Ray.
So fine, as a consumer, I don't give a shit. Frankly, I'm going to be buying DVDs as long as they make them, and I'm perfectly happy with that. Unless the Blu-Ray or HD-DVD consortium prevents manufacturers from making a unit that can play both types, I'm going to buy a new player that handles all of the formats, and they can jerk off as long as they want figuring out who's a winner, and I can buy pretty much whatever comes out and be able to play it.
Re:"Nasty format war" my foot (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Nasty format war" my foot (Score:2)
We're all future Nostradamuses! (Score:2, Insightful)
The demo failed, B.F.D..
Where's the movie? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not all the HD-DVD demos were bad (Score:3, Informative)
BetaNews has some screencaptures of HD-DVD running on a Windows Vista PC (playing the Bourne Supremecy).
It's mostly a profile of "iHD", which as I understand it is a mix of EMCA Script and XML for the titles and interactivity of HD-DVDs.
Re:Not all the HD-DVD demos were bad (Score:3, Informative)
BetaNews has some screencaptures of HD-DVD running on a Windows Vista PC (playing the Bourne Supremecy).
It's mostly a profile of "iHD", which as I understand it is a mix of EMCA Script and XML for the titles and interactivity of HD-DVDs.
(Oops: a link would help: http://ces.betanews.com/entry/HD_DVD_and_iHD_in_Ac tion/1136757415 [betanews.com] )
biggest failure (Score:3, Insightful)
Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, now? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, no (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, no (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, no (Score:3, Insightful)
Solution: don't buy a HDTV set or disc player.
Re:Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, no (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just why the hell do we need to replace DVD, no (Score:3, Insightful)
These were all compelling reasons to switch to CD. Note that I haven't mentioned sound quality - if you keep your records clean, vinyl and CD basically sound the same.
Format War (Score:5, Funny)
The video games point (Score:3, Interesting)
"The (video) games industry since the early 90s has had two or three incompatible formats and it hasn't slowed the adoption of game platforms,"
when i think about it, this seems like a great analogy to say 'hey, look 2 different types of disc isnt really that crazy or impractical' but i think they're missing a big point. can anybody imagine what it would be like to have a single console per generation? something within me is screaming 'that would suck, less innovation, less choice, less everything'. instinctivly i know that with video games having different consoles is definitly a good thing, i just cant seem to qualify it in writing appropiately, im sure some of you will agree.
with data storage/movies/whatever though i find it hard to accept having two potential 'standards'. we're not talking zip disks or anything here, were you know that your probably not going to be able to use it on 'every' computer you come across. yes, development of more than one type of _potential_ storage media is a good thing but for something that is so important from a cost/ease of use point of view there is, IMHO, room for -1- standard only in the end. unfortunatly some people are going to get burned when that eventual standard emerges.
Re:The video games point (Score:3, Interesting)
It will also be interesting to see if, for example, PC ga
Has Steve Jobs ever had a demo fail like that? (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyway, looking forward to Steve Job's keynote this week at MacWorld. Hopefully he will introduce something from totally out left field and blow us all a
Re:Has Steve Jobs ever had a demo fail like that? (Score:3, Funny)
Every single machine locked up and crashed just after starting playback.
Re:Has Steve Jobs ever had a demo fail like that? (Score:5, Interesting)
"People want to own their content" (Score:3, Interesting)
Studio executives argue that people want to own their content and that DVDs offer the same portability options as downloadable programs or video on demand services.
Okay, Mr. Studio Executive, perhaps now you'll explain to me just why you should be allowed to control how I use something that I own?
(The scary thing is that Joe Sixpack would probably eat up whatever bullshit the studio exec spouted in response . . .)
Call Me When The Bugs Are Out (Score:3, Interesting)
If you can measure the failure rate, it's too high. And DVD media are a nightmare to get working reliably. Only buy top-of-the-line Taiyo Yuden media and DVD drives made in Japan. Nobody else - meaning the Taiwanese - can get it to work reliably.
Call me when there are HD drives on the market and media that work together RELIABLY.
In other words, call me in two or three years.
HD discs are long overdue (Score:5, Insightful)
"DVDs are great, why do we need anything better?"
When LaserDisc was introduced in 1978, they were GREAT. They were amazing. They could push right up against the limits of the NTSC standard. LD was really over-designed because very few people had TV sets good enough to show them off properly. DVD video is basically the same thing, it's designed to hit the NTSC standard. TV sets today are many times better than those of 1978, it's the signal standard that needs to catch up now.
So. . . 27 years after the introduction of LD format, how much longer should we wait for an improvement? 50 years? 100 years? Should we just give up on the idea of progress completely, and settle for watching blurry NTSC-quality images from now on?
No. We need a pre-recorded format for ATSC -- we've needed it badly for several years, in fact. This is the one huge element that has been missing from the HDTV transition.
Now we're on the verge of a video format that can show movies in a reasonably close approximation to how they appeared in theaters. VHS can't do that, LD can't do that, DVD can't do that. HD discs will. Nobody should underestimate the importance of this, because the back catalog of movies that can benefit from this presentation goes back many decades, there are literally thousands of them. There are movies from the 1930s or possibly even earlier that will look better on HD discs than they can on DVDs.
That won't happen again. If somebody 10 years from now tries to come up with some new format to replace Blu-Ray, or replace HD-DVD, they're going to run into a big obstacle. It's because most movies in the back catalog don't contain a lot more information than ATSC can present. Most movies weren't shot in 3D, they weren't shot in IMAX. There's nothing to be gained by presenting them in a format more advanced than ATSC-HD.
We can already see a preview of that, because there have been quite a few TV series shot, or produced, on NTSC videotape, which means they won't benefit from being put on HD discs. This is why I think HD format has a lot to offer, but anything that comes after it will probably falter in much the same way that SACD and DVD-A are faltering.
Re:HD discs are long overdue (Score:3, Interesting)
Regardless, you won't have to wait 50 years. Mandatory HDTV broadcasting is only a few years away in the USA and Canada
My TV is ready
Re:HD discs are long overdue (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:HD discs are long overdue (Score:3, Insightful)
Wrong, wrong, wrong. LaserDiscs probably could have succeeded, except they were the size of an LP record (and therefore much more unwieldy than a VHS tape) and needed to be flipped in order to finish the film. DVDs, on the other ha
actually, they had to be swapped! (Score:3, Interesting)
So for most movies you had to flip once or twice and swap discs once.
Despite all of this, LD was a success. It was around for a long time. It was perhaps not a widespread success, but then again the discs cost $50 a piece or more, were huge (as you say) and so prone to warpage that renting them was an enormous risk.
As to VHS, most say VHS won because it recorded more time (4 hours initially, 6 later, Beta toppe
Re:HD discs are long overdue (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you really think the studios will release such unprofitable films? The market for films from the 1930s on HD-DVD or Blu-Ray will probably be infinitesimal. No, again, the distribution of this rare copyrighted content will have to be done by the Scene and those precious few archivists who truly care enough about our culture to break the law to preserve it [note: I do not imply the two groups a
Re:Why the worst link to this story? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why the worst link to this story? (Score:2)
Re:Blu-Ray (Score:3, Informative)
Re:lol... Any other M$ slipups come to mind? (Score:2)
Well, to be fair to MS, Windows 98 wasn't due to be released for another 8 years at that point, so they still had some testing left to do.
Re:lol... Any other M$ slipups come to mind? (Score:3, Informative)
again and again. (Score:2)
I can't think of it not happening to them.
Thanks for the link. I love the fake applause and laughter they put onto that track. It's Quality to match their software.
Re:Yeah, that's never happened before.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yeah, that's never happened before.... (Score:3, Funny)
"d00d
Re:new for microsoft? (Score:2)
Re:And the reason we're going to a new DVD format. (Score:3, Insightful)
You ask, aren't DVDs good enough? No. Personally, I don't think DVDs are good enough. They're the video equivalent of LP records. The video quality of DVD is basically the same as Laserdiscs, which have been around since 1978. For tha
Re:And the reason we're going to a new DVD format. (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree with you as HD being a dead end. There is plenty of growth left past HD content, because frankly HD content is still crap when you compare it to computer monitor resolutions and to digital still photography.
As long as people keep buying ever bigger monitors there will always be room for higher reso
Managed copy is not a backup (Score:3, Informative)
Also, Blu Ray was considering adding managed copy - I don't know where they ended up on that. Blu Ray was also considering dropping region restriions, I could find no word on if that came to pass or not...
24 FPS limitations (Score:3, Insightful)
That's down to a fundamental limitation of movies that nobody (in Hollywood or the tech world) wants to address, a real elephant in the room situation - everything's geared to shooting at 24 frames per second. Not only are movies shot on film at 24FPS, but even the new HD cameras used by people like George Lucas and Robert Rodriguez work at 24FPS as well!
N