Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Hardware

Next Gen DVD Standard Fuels Format War

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Next Gen DVD Standard Fuels Format War

"We have met with nearly all the format developers to convey the importance of content protection in these new formats," Motion Picture Association spokesperson Matthew Grossman told TechNewsWorld. "But we don't have a public position on one format over another."


Is Your Website Killing Customer Confidence?
Your Website's privacy policy can be a key factor in a customer's decision to do business with you, and it is vital to ensuring you don't run afoul of your online legal and regulatory responsibilities. Need more reasons? Read on.

An industry group has approved a standard for the next generation of DVD players, but the move could be just the first skirmish in a future format war.

The Tokyo-based DVD Forum has given its nod to a design for "blue laser" DVD players proposed by Toshiba and NEC (Nasdaq: NIPNY). Blue-laser players use DVDs that store five times the data of current DVD discs. That allows them to store up to three hours of high-definition video, which will be important as more HD TVs begin appearing in homes in the next five years.

Sony Group Shunned

The Forum had previously announced that it would only approve one blue-laser standard so it appears that the group has rejected the "Blu-Ray" standard submitted to it by a consortium that includes Sony (NYSE: SNE), Matsushita and Philips (NYSE: PHG).

That rejection could light the fuse to a format war similar to the one that created the existing multiple-format DVD market with R/RW, +R/+RW and RAM all competing for adherents. During that war, the Forum, a group of some 220 electronics and media companies, came down on the side of R/RW, which didn't seem to put a kink into +R/+RW sales.

"I don't think it matters," said Jerry Brown, a spokesperson for the +RW Alliance in Denver, said of Forum approval. "It's like Honda not approving of Ford cars."

What is important, he continued, is having major players behind your format. In the +R/+RW case, those players were Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) and HP-Compaq, which represent about one third of all PC sales Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse in the world.

Consumers Will Decide

Marketing muscle alone, however, won't determine the survivor in a standards war. "The real decision gets made by what consumers will buy," he told TechNewsWorld.

But when it comes to DVD players, there's another element that's very influential in determining what consumers will buy, and that's the movie industry. Whatever standard is backed by Hollywood is sure to be the winner in a format shootout, and, according to analysts, the film industry will be backing only one standard and avoiding the consumer horror show that resulted during the VHS-Beta era.

Content Protection

Right now, though, the movie business is less concerned about what standard is adopted than it is about what will be included in any standard advocated by anyone.

"We have met with nearly all the format developers to convey the importance of content protection in these new formats," Motion Picture Association spokesperson Matthew Grossman told TechNewsWorld. "But we don't have a public position on one format over another."

What's at stake for manufacturers if format strife erupts is how much licensing revenue they will garner during the next wave of DVD development. Always known as a low-margin industry, licensing has been used by consumer electronics companies to boost thin margins. Philips, for instance, expects to double its 2 to 2.5 percent margins with licensing income.

Chinese Wild Card

While licensing income might bring smiles to companies collecting it, it's another story for those paying those fees. In China, royalty fees can add as much as $10 to the cost of a DVD unit, which might be why that country has elected to become a wild card in the DVD format saga.

Late last month, a group of Chinese companies and government agencies announced their own high-definition DVD standard for domestic consumption: Enhanced Versatile Disc (EVD). The technology, which uses a red rather than blue laser pickup, is seen by some as a direct challenge to the work done by the Forum and the Blu-Ray consortium.

While several Hollywood studio executives were reportedly at the unveiling of EVD at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, they remained mum on the industry's high-definition direction.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by John P. Mello Jr.


Talkback: Join the Discussion.
Re: Next Gen DVD Standard Fuels Format War
fedrive
Posted 2003-12-02
No mention of UV/Blue Atomic Holographic Storage ...

More by John P. Mello Jr.

Learning the Way of the Snow Leopard
November 23, 2009
When confronted with a new piece of technology, some users will jump right in, but others may want to learn from an expert how to get the most out of it. Class On Demand puts 13 lessons onto a DVD that Mac greenhorns can use straight from their new computers. However, as many vendors operating in the Apple universe have found, one of their biggest rivals may turn out to be Apple itself.
VMware Fuses Performance With Convenience
November 16, 2009
Fusion 3.0, the latest virtualization app from VMware that lets Mac users run Windows alongside OS X, puts an emphasis on performance. VMware built it specifically to leverage the 64-bit capabilities of Snow Leopard with a new 64-bit native engine. Its Migration Assistant for Windows lets Mac switchers recreate their old Windows PC inside a Mac, file by file.
Mouse Meets Multi-Touch
November 09, 2009
Apple's latest peripheral, the Magic Mouse, takes the concept of multi-touch that the iPhone and iPod touch popularized and merges it with a button-free mouse. As one's mouse is a direct point of contact between human and machine, any changes made to it can be a divisive issue. Some users love the new abilities Magic Mouse brings to the table; others just can't stand the thing.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network