Originally posted by: darkswordsman17
Originally posted by: HDTVMan
Originally posted by: Topweasel
Originally posted by: BenSkywalker
HDTV Man-
You might want to take a passing glance at HDTV related news once in a while-
HD-DVD (30 GB WORKING TODAY)
Paramount
Universal
HBO
New Line Cinema
Warner Home Video
Paramount has earlier stated that it will support both HD DVD and Blu-ray and wait and see what next generation optical format will come out as the winner. However it has now changed its mind will instead back up primarily Blu-ray.
Paramount.
One of the absolutely most important parts of the coming DVD-war are Hollywood's great movie studios. Both HD DVD and Blu-ray have been backed up by several studios and many of them have decided to support only one format. This was the case with both Paramount and Warner Bros. which earlier was faithful to HD DVD. Now it seems that both Paramount and Warner Bros. has switched partners to Blu-ray. There has now appeared information that points to that also Warner will make movies for the Blu-ray format, a big step back for HD DVD which now only has Universal left as a faithful HD DVD follower.
Warner Bros That includes HBO and New Line.
"We have been intrigued by the broad support of Blu-ray, especially the key advantage of including Blu-ray in PlayStation 3," said Thomas Lesinski, president of Paramount Pictures, Worldwide Home Entertainment.
Just to give you multiple sources.
That leaves Universal backing HD-DVD exclusively- everyone else has shifted to Blu-Ray. The next gen format wars are over, HD-DVD was obliterated before a single player launched and you can thank MS for handing Sony the victory. HD-DVD will go down as one of the larger losers in any format war ever- they were obliterated before they made it to market.
BLUE RAY (25 GIG WORKING, 50 JUST IN THEORY VAPORWARE)
Fox
Walt Disney
Twentieth Century Fox
Paramount
HBO
New Line Cinema
Warner Home Video
Sony Studios
/format war
If the Crap you spewed is right, then we have already lost. I say we becuase I can't understand why someone would want to go through this.
A.) Pay for Royalties to Sony for ever pressed and Blank Blu-Ray disc
B.) Wait a decade for capacities that seem great but are almost impossible to make (which garantees a type of Blu-Ray2.)
C.) Once a backup solution is found (which we are allowed) have a future DVD make those same backups not work in the exact player you tested them on before.
D.) Put the $200-$300 purchace of a player in the hands of a $20 DVD in the hopes it won't fry your firmware because it thinks that your player or the disc itself has been hacked.
I really don't understand ow any one on AT would stand for that kind of trash. Me I am going to get a Hd-DVD box. I will also get a HD-DVD burner when they are available. I will then "back up" any blu-Raydisc I have (if it does win) and burn them on to HD-DVD discs for playback in my house.
The technology already exists and technically HD-DVD and BLUE RAY are already losing the war to HD-DIVX, TS, and even though they are H264 they are losing on that front also.
IODATA linkplayer 2 is a HD Media player. It can play HD-DIVX, TS, WMV9, and h264 files streamed, on a DVD, or from a USB hard drive or other usb device. Every day hollywood sits on its rear debating next gen technology it loses. Technology is moving forward reguardless of hollywood. Hollywood is failing to move the technology forward.
How long was MP3 out before the recording industry moved toward online music downloads?
If hollywood has half a brain it would get the cheap available today technology of HD-DVD out there and get the ball rolling before they are like the music industry crying over what MP3 could do to it.
All blue ray and HD-dvd are is higher capacity DVD's. Thats all. They are nothing more than a higher capacity disc. The reality is HD-DVD is cheaper to make both the media and the players. Blue ray adds nothing more than a higher cost and lower profit lines for the movie industry. The movie industry needs to move faster because alternatives are starting to replace what hollywood is not delivering.
How can HD-DIVX be winning when its not a physical disc format but rather a software encoding format? You make no sense. They're going to have to put the data on some type of disc aren't they? What do you think Blu-Ray and HD-DVD are? Both of them support H.264 which means they'll be able to support the universal hi-def format. Sorry, but if you think DVDs are going to be enough for any software format then you're in for a big awakening. The whole point of hi-def is better quality, why would you want to compromise that with a heavy compression scheme?
I think you're buying too much into the FUD that Toshiba is spreading. Do you honestly think they're going to sell HD-DVD movies and players to consumers for less? I don't believe they will. Its cheaper for the companies but not the consumers, so why not get your money's worth? If Sony sells the PS3 for $750, that'll still be significantly cheaper than any HD-DVD player, which are expected to start at over $1000. Lets see, which will look better to consumers, a $750 Blu-Ray player that happens to also be a powerful gaming machine, or a $1000+ HD-DVD player that only plays movies? Hmm. Don't even start talking about the Xbox 360 getting an HD-DVD drive as its a long way off if it gets one, and thats if it gets one, which may never happen.
In all honesty, I don't think Toshiba even has the intention of releasing HD-DVD. They keep pushing it back for some reason or another. I think they're just using it to badger companies around. In fact, Toshiba had all but come out and said HD-DVD would only last a short while compared to DVDs even, as they're already wanting to push a different disc format that they've been working on but haven't really been able to get up and running quite yet.
As for royalties, HD-DVD is no different than Blu-Ray. Either way companies are going to be paying royalties to someone else.
As for Intel and Microsoft. Well Microsoft will support whoever wins. Them claiming to support one format means nothing, because if HD-DVD never makes it to market or gets clobbered then it would be pointless for MS not to support Blu-Ray, which they will one way or another, as Dell and HP and many other companies will be putting those drives in their computer systems. Intel all but doesn't matter as they have little to nothing to do with optical discs. Considering that most of the companies they deal with are supporting Blu-Ray, their stance on things doesn't matter.
The fact that I have been enjoying HD Media over the last 1.2 years on various formats makes me pretty much an expert to this. Since my HD DVD/stream/usb player is numbered in the tens when you still think the war hasnt started. The idea you havent a clue on HD-DIVX shows me how little you know about HD and what is going on.
All the newbs talk about is H264 because its the first they heard of an HD format. Its welcome and good format for home consumers. It needs to be released. Its pathetic the movie industry hasnt gotten to it yet. Yawn.
The idea that you didnt realize blue ray will cost much more to produce and is not backwards compatible and will require a secondary laser assembly also tells me you dont know about HD.
I dont know where you got your information from because I think you just made it up.