September 30th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Sure, sure, the format war is over, but we never expected HD DVD to just disappear overnight, and it looks like the combination of deeply-discounted hardware, cheap media, and a weak economy are keeping Red alive even as Toshiba pretends no one really wants true HD anyway. Players are going for as little as $60 with movies available for $10, and retailers like Buy.com say that “sales are still very strong.” Of course, eventually all this stock has to run out, so we doubt this’ll be a long-lasting phenomenon, but hey — stranger things have happened.
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July 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
CBHD, née CH-DVD — the Chinese version of the now-deceased HD DVD format — is in production, gearing up for a fourth quarter launch. DigiTimes cites reports from enorth.com.cn that Shanghai United Optical Disc has laid out the first production line, although Taiwanese disc makers (already burned by HD DVD) aren’t as confident it can take on Blu-ray, even with considerably lower royalty fees and hardware costs for disc replicators. Coming alongside news that Chinese-built Blu-ray players based on increasingly affordable hardware is on the way, plus a decided lack of studio support, it’s not hard to see how this one will turn out (again.) Not to underrate China’s national pride, but unless it can gain an unexpected foothold among DVD pirates, CBHD will probably be on the high definition scrap heap alongside HD DVD, EVD and the rest before long.
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Posted in Blu-ray, china, chinese, format war, FormatWar, cbhd, ch-dvd | No Comments »
July 4th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Buried under predictions that 2012 will bring dominance for Blu-ray over DVD and breaking news that the PS3 just may have had a hand in winning the format war the Entertainment Merchant’s Association 2008 Annual Report on the Home Entertainment Industry holds survey results showing 87% of PS3 owners reported they watch Blu-ray movies on their console. That’s a stark contrast to last year’s NPD survey indicating 60% of owners didn’t even know it played them. We don’t know what’s behind the jump, be it better marketing/consumer education, or something wrong with how one the surveys were conducted. You can mull that one over during the fast money round while also peeping results that say 22% of HDTV owners think they’re watching HD programming, but in fact are not — not like we haven’t heard that before.
[Via PS3 Fanboy]
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Posted in playstation 3, Playstation3, ps3, sony, survey, Blu-ray, format war, FormatWar, analyst, 2012, 87 | No Comments »
April 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
We won’t have to wait long to find out Universal’s plans for Blu-ray, Reuters just noted that later today the studio will announce plans to release about 40 movies on the format in the second half of the year, including Doomsday. The only studio to support solely HD DVD from the beginning will come out with all three of its Mummy films: The Mummy, The Mummy Returns, and The Scorpion King (sounds like someone’s bitter about HD DVD and taking it out on Blu-ray owners to us), with catalog releases jumping over from red like Miami Vice, Knocked Up, American Gangster and others before the year is out. Keep an eye out for specifics later on, like whether those U-Control and community features from the HD DVD versions will make the jump intact.
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Posted in breaking news, BreakingNews, universal, Blu-ray, format war, FormatWar, schedule, u-control | No Comments »
April 2nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, HDTV, Home Entertainment
If you’re suddenly overcome with a feeling akin to déjà vu, go ahead and kill that speed dial to your physician. For the second time in a month, Microsoft has actually come forward to squash a Blu-ray Xbox 360 rumor. This go ’round, an alleged statement from Redmond states quite outrightly that “Lite-On is not manufacturing Blu-ray drives for Xbox 360,” and it continues on by noting that “customers who want a premium movie experience [can check out the] library of on-demand HD content” available to console owners. Still, we’ve grown accustomed to these denials by now, and while you’d think that having a pair of rumors on the matter smashed would put the issue to rest, we’ve all ideas this one isn’t quite dead and buried just yet.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Posted in Microsoft, xbox 360, Xbox360, Blu-ray, rumor, xbox, format war, FormatWar, lite-on, xblm | No Comments »
March 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Well, it’s no surprise that it was going to happen, but the HD DVD Promotion Group officially dissolved today, leaving behind nothing but this terse message directing us to individual “selling agencies.” And so, with literally nothing left of HD DVD, we formally close the sad chapter of consumer electronics history known as the HD Format War, remembering those times when HD DVD rode high, with low prices, more features and less restrictive rights management as its rallying cries, and the rantings of Michael Bay still only the delusional fantasies of a fool. May the resistance live on, and our PS3s always be reminded of a time when their ascension was not guaranteed. Red’s dead, baby.
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Posted in hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar | No Comments »
March 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Best Buy is following Future Shop, Circuit City and others in reaching out to casualties of the format war. In this case, anyone who bought an HD DVD player from Best Buy before February 23, 2008 can request a complimentary $50 gift card for each player. For those too traumatized to even look at their discontinued hardware and software, Best Buy also announced it’s adding HD DVD players and media to its Trade-In Center program, starting March 21. No word on how much a player can net you, but once its updated, check BestBuyTradeIn.com to get an estimate and decide how much holding onto the past is worth.
[Thanks, Harmin C.]
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Posted in best buy, BestBuy, hd dvd, HdDvd, gift card, GiftCard, format war, FormatWar, trade in, TradeIn | No Comments »
March 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Best Buy is following Future Shop, Circuit City and others in reaching out to casualties of the format war. In this case, anyone who bought an HD DVD player from Best Buy before February 23, 2008 can request a complimentary $50 gift card for each player. For those too traumatized to even look at their discontinued hardware and software, Best Buy also announced it’s adding HD DVD players and media to its Trade-In Center program, starting March 21. No word on how much a player can net you, but once its updated, check BestBuyTradeIn.com to get an estimate and decide how much holding onto the past is worth.
[Thanks, Harmin C.]
Update: Best Buy just issued a press release with additional information about the more than $10 million in gift cards it plans to distribute, and details on how to make sure you get yours, check out the full PR after the break.
Continue reading Best Buy offers HD DVD owners $10 million in gift cards, trade in, shoulder to cry on
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Posted in breaking news, BreakingNews, best buy, BestBuy, hd dvd, HdDvd, gift card, GiftCard, format war, FormatWar, trade in, TradeIn | No Comments »
March 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
While entering a format war is still worthy of a cautionary tale or two — Sony, you may have been on a winning side this time, but we remember Betamax — Toshiba appears to have escaped the fall of HD DVD a bit more intact than expected. Its official forecast for the financial year shows a loss of 65 billion yen ($669 million U.S.), a bit less than the ¥100b/ $1b U.S. figure anticipated last week. Unfortunately, the company as a whole is expecting slightly lower profits, so former red campers may not want to light cigars just yet.
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Posted in toshiba, hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar | No Comments »
March 12th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
There are spicy meatballs, and there are spicy meatballs — and now there’s a figure that will be tossed around for decades to come, one which will instantly represent the caution companies should take when embarking on another format war: a billion dollars. At least that’s what Nikkei is reporting that Toshiba’s losses on HD DVD totaled in 2007 alone: a ¥100b, or about $982m USD. It won’t drive Toshiba under or anything, but you seriously have to ask yourself, was it really all worth it? [Warning: subscription req’d]
[Via Reuters]
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March 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
Slowly but surely, we’re seeing retailer after retailer conjure up its own trade-in / exchange program to deal with the finality of the format war. Canada’s Future Shop, however, has certainly put an interesting twist on things. First off, it’ll accept standalone HD DVD players purchased from anywhere until April 3rd. In exchange, you’ll receive $100 off the purchase of an LG or Samsung Blu-ray / HD DVD combo player, but not a standalone Blu-ray player of any kind. Unfortunately, that means your options are pretty limited, but we can certainly understand the retailer’s desire to wash its hands of anything with an HD DVD logo on it. Better still, Future Shop will be donating all of the returned HD DVD players to the Boys and Girls Clubs of Canada “for use in their after-school and evening programs.” Now if that’s not a reason to trade-up, we don’t know what is.
[Thanks, Josh]
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Posted in Blu-ray, hd dvd, HdDvd, canada, trade-in, format war, FormatWar, exchange, offer, future shop, FutureShop, trade | No Comments »
March 3rd, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
We had an inkling that the format war was soon to be over when Warner announced it was going Blu-ray just before CES and HD DVD canceled its press conference, but we didn’t realize how quickly things would come to an abrupt end. It looks like Toshiba CEO Atsutoshi Nishida was decisive in ending the battle, telling the Wall Street Journal that HD DVD didn’t stand a chance after Warner left, and that if HD DVD wasn’t “going to win then we had to pull out, especially since consumers were already asking for a single standard.” That’s interesting, especially since Toshiba issued all those jilted-lover press releases as former partners defected and continued to waffle for another month or so and even air a Super Bowl ad, but we suppose PR people can’t go running around saying things like “One has to take calculated risks in business, but it’s also important to switch gears immediately if you think your decision was wrong,” like the CEO can. Of course, the CEO probably shouldn’t be saying Toshiba’s upconverting DVD players are so good “consumers won’t be able to tell the difference from HD DVD images” either, but give the man a break — he’s still in mourning.
[Thanks, ogscorpion]
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Posted in toshiba, hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar, Atsutoshi Nishida, AtsutoshiNishida | No Comments »
February 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment
Just when the members of the Blu-ray Disc Association were settling down to enjoy the fruits of victory, another challenger has entered the ring — oh wait, it’s just NME, makers of VMD, so it’s really more like “remained in the ring and basically ignored.” The company just issued a press release saying “All indications are that VMD can fill the void left by HD DVD,” and that “The way is now clear for VMD to be embraced by the industry.” We suppose that’s true — the Asian bootlegging industry really hasn’t weighed in with a format choice yet, has it? In any event, VMD players have apparently been shipping to the US for a month now, so all you HD DVD fans out there looking to back yet another losing horse can probably find one — start at the shadiest retailer you can think of, and then move downwards.
[Thanks, Chris]
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Posted in New Medium Enterprises, NewMediumEnterprises, NME, format war, FormatWar, vmd | No Comments »
February 29th, 2008 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment
Just when the members of the Blu-ray Disc Association were settling down to enjoy the fruits of victory, another challenger has entered the ring — oh wait, it’s just NME, makers of VMD, so it’s really more like “remained in the ring and basically ignored.” The company just issued a press release saying “All indications are that VMD can fill the void left by HD DVD,” and that “The way is now clear for VMD to be embraced by the industry.” We suppose that’s true — the Asian bootlegging industry really hasn’t weighed in with a format choice yet, has it? In any event, VMD players have apparently been shipping to the US for a month now, so all you HD DVD fans out there looking to back yet another losing horse can probably find one — start at the shadiest retailer you can think of, and then move downwards.
[Thanks, Chris]
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Posted in New Medium Enterprises, NewMediumEnterprises, NME, format war, FormatWar, vmd | No Comments »
February 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
We don’t know if Jeffrey Katzenberg got a text message, fax, e-mail or smoke signal indicating the format war was over, but Video Business has confirmed Paramount and Dreamworks Animation will (rather abruptly) to stop releasing HD DVDs after next week. If you were looking forward to Bee Movie on March 11, Sweeney Todd on April 1 or the just announced There Will Be Blood, those are cancelled. Into the Wild and the appropriately-named Things We Lost in the Fire will be Paramount’s last reminders of its exclusive agreement. Not specifically mentioned was Star Trek: TOS Season 2, but don’t hold your breath. Blu-ray release plans are still up in the air but we wouldn’t be surprised to hear something soon. As far as HD DVD movies still scheduled, that leaves two from Universal (for now) and twelve from Warner Bros, who may have been the first to leave red, but will apparently be the last major studio out the door.
Read - Video Business
Read - High-Def Digest
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Posted in breaking news, BreakingNews, Blu-ray, hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar, cancelled, paramount, dreamworks, dreamworks animation, DreamworksAnimation, bee movie, BeeMovie | No Comments »
February 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment
While even the most steadfast red fans have accepted things are over for HD DVD, it appears Dreamworks Animation isn’t able to let the format war go. Even though Paramount seems to have found a way out from under its exclusivity deal, Dreamworks CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg told Reuters he still needs to hear from Toshiba what to do with the truckloads of money HD DVD gave them about its agreement before making any Blu-ray release plans. He seems (to be the only one) worried about the upcoming DVD release of Bee Movie and what will happen there. An analyst quoted said they should certainly have this taken care of by the holiday season, which would only be six to eight months after HD DVD manufacturing has ceased to be. We have a feeling it won’t take that long long to turn Shrek Blu.
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Posted in Blu-ray, hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar, dreamworks, dreamworks animation, DreamworksAnimation, katzenberg, shrek | No Comments »
February 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Features, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment.
When Sony included a DVD drive on its PlayStation 2, it was clear which technology was helping sell which product. After just avoiding being a victim of a format war itself, DVD was on its way to enticing consumers with many of the same benefits that had turned the compact disc into a huge success — high-fidelity, portability, durability and the end of rewinding. The PS2 may well have been a success without DVD, but DVD did not need the PS2.
For the PlayStation 3, the issue was a lot murkier. While US sales of standalone — that is to say, excluding PS3 — players for Blu-ray and HD DVD were almost dead even in 2007, Blu-ray titles consistently outsold HD DVD titles. Part of this may have been due to Toshiba’s heavy bundling of titles with HD DVD players, but PlayStation 3 owners seem to have bought Blu-ray movies in droves. While Sony consistently promoted Blu-ray’s game and movie capacity as a PS3 selling point, the PS3 — specifically its owners’ embrace of Blu-ray movies — was the major consumer factor in swinging the fate of the high-definition video disc for Blu-ray.
Yet the fight was fought at least as much by corporations as by consumers. Out of the gate, Blu-ray had more studio support and a Murderers’ Row of consumer electronics companies — Sony, Samsung, Panasonic, Philips, LG, Sharp, and Pioneer — backing the format. Not only did these companies account for the vast majority of DVD player sales in the US, they also accounted for most of the large-screen TVs, paving the way for bundles and other promotions that are sure to accelerate now that there is more security in buying Blu-ray.
Continue reading Switched On: Blu-ray had friends in high def places
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February 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment, Laptops
While many stores are slashing down HD DVD player prices as much as management will allow, it seems that one diehard supporter is casting a blind eye to the whole format war meltdown. Rock — which tooted its own horn after making HD DVD standard on many of its laptops — hasn’t changed its approach one iota. Even now, the firm is still offering up internal HD DVD drives (and writers) in a plethora of its machines, and curiously enough, there’s not even an option to select a Blu-ray or combo player. C’mon Rock, we know you’re just trying to clear out inventory, but at least give prospective buyers a choice in the matter, would ya?
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Read - Xtreme SL Pro
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Posted in hd dvd, HdDvd, rock, standard, support, format war, FormatWar, xtreme sl8, XtremeSl8 | No Comments »
February 23rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Well scratch that rumor about a dramatic price drop: according to Microsoft’s Gamerscore blog, Microsoft and Toshiba are discontinuing the Xbox 360 HD DVD drive. So long friend, we’ll see you in the next life (or in the bargain bin at Good Will soon enough).
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Posted in Microsoft, toshiba, breaking news, BreakingNews, hd dvd, HdDvd, format war, FormatWar | No Comments »
February 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Features, HDTV, Home Entertainment
Look, we’re not out to whip the proverbial dead horse, but after taking a long, critical look at how the format war played out from day one, it’s just too inviting to not take a step back and ponder how things could’ve been different. Looking back, we noticed numerous scenarios where it truly looked as if HD DVD had this whole thing wrapped up, and while analysts galore boasted that this grueling war would go on for eons, now we’re staring the other camp in the face as the victor. Believe it or not, folks voluntarily caught up in all of this are quite passionate — shocking, we know — and we’ve all ideas players from both sides would have liked to see a few different moves made along the way.
From the get-go, Toshiba proudly proclaimed that its format wasn’t a work-in-progress, and while Profile changes left early Blu-ray owners out of luck when trying to access more advanced features, sales numbers just seemed to always fall in Blu’s favor. Truth be told, we know many of you simply wish the two would’ve nailed down a pact from day one and cranked out a single next-generation format, but being that said scenario didn’t exactly pan out, how would you have done things to change the outcome of the format war? Would you have tweaked the approach of either side to get this mess over with months ago? Do you feel the “best” camp won out? And would you have bit the bullet and offered up a combo drive in the Xbox 360 if you flew the flag in Redmond? We’ve all ideas this one’s going to get raucous in no time flat, but for everyone’s sake, try to think more with your mind and less with your heart, cool?
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Posted in sony, toshiba, Blu-ray, how would you change, HowWouldYouChange, hd dvd, HdDvd, hwyc, format war, FormatWar | No Comments »
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