Disney supports 3 layer HD DVD format

All topics relating to Disney-branded content.
User avatar
TM2-Megatron
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1065
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 5:51 pm
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Post by TM2-Megatron »

deathie mouse wrote:TM2-Megatron, you sound like the HD DVD forum. Have you turned to the Darkred side? :p
I'm just willing to look at things from both sides. I'll give Blu-Ray credit for being more technologically advanced, but it's not terribly consumer-friendly.

And no, I haven't bothered purchasing either format yet, and have no plans to do so for quite a while. I may purchase a combo HD-DVD/Blu-Ray reader for my computer in the next 2 or 3 months, which would cost me around $280 CDN at the moment. Or perhaps if a combo HD-DVD reader and Blu-Ray burner has come down in price a bit by then, I'd consider that.
deathie mouse wrote:"mandatory DD+ and DTHD" indeed. Blu-ray has uncompressed lossless high-bit Linear PCM, why would "mandatory" lossy DD+ and compressed DTHD be an advantage. They can be included as options on a disc too.
Last I checked, Linear PCM took up a crapload of space, a fact to which the 150GB of uncompressed ".wav files on my hard drive can attest. And those are just 16-bit, 44.1Khz stereo. I guess Blu-Ray's gotta have alot of storage space if they're gonna be using 24/96 8-channel audio tracks. At least TrueHD is a form of lossless compression, which can free up some disc space.
deathie mouse wrote:So, if many people have "mediocre" 720p TVs, movies shouldn't be made available in a format that's more than twice better?
Of course they should be made available... I'd have argued that 720p televisions shouldn't be sold, not the other way around. However, for the tasteless people that bought into them; it was their decision (and probably in most cases in uneducated one) and their loss.
deathie mouse wrote:Full 1080p monitors start at $600 msrp, hey I have a friend that just bought a 1080p 55" SXRD for $1500 a month ago. Prices will keep falling down.
Projection? No thanks. I can see whey they're cheap, though, as I've yet to see one with a picture that impressed me. I've seen some 42"-46" 1080p flat-panels that I liked, but the price tags are closer to $2500-$3500 CDN. I'll wait 'til those come down to replace my CRT HDTV.
deathie mouse wrote:Region coding and AACS make studios feel confident in protecting their revenue so they release more. That's one good reason Disney, MGM and Fox are Blu-ray only
But why does it being mandatory matter? Whether on Blu-Ray or HD-DVD, adding AACS to their releases costs them money, and you know they'd do it no matter what.

I don't mind them using it (I've got AnyDVD HD, anyway, so I'll continue to be able to backup my purchases once I've got the appropriate computer drives), however mandatory AACS is needlessly restrictive. Any Hollywood studio that does want to use it can easily afford it... mandatory or not makes no difference to them. However, there are a whole lot of movies that don't have the financial backing for that additional investment in AACS. It's the little guys who get screwed with that kind of decision.
deathie mouse wrote:and there are already independent releases on Blu-ray
Sure, Blu-Ray will get a few "independent" movies, but only the ones that are lucky enough picked up by Fox Searchlight or a similar studio. Many more will not be released, though. Or at least until many years down the road when the cost of AACS may have come down.

And as far as the experience being better than a theatre, movie theatres are also partially about the atmosphere, the crowd (provided they're polite), and just getting your ass out of the house. I've been in high-end electronics stores which had home theatre rooms with many tens of thousands of dollars worth of equipment on display, and while impressive, I'd still rather go out with a few friends and enjoy a movie at a theatre.
User avatar
bradhig
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1109
Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 10:59 pm
Location: Olathe , Kansas

Post by bradhig »

does this mean Blue-ray is gonna die?
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

bradhig wrote:does this mean Blue-ray is gonna die?
Only if you hold a gun to its head and force it to watch the ending of Anastasia.

Scaps
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
DarthPrime
Collector's Edition
Posts: 2520
Joined: Sun Aug 28, 2005 10:55 pm

Post by DarthPrime »

bradhig wrote:does this mean Blue-ray is gonna die?
No Blu-ray and HD DVD are going to be around for awhile.
User avatar
bradhig
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1109
Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 10:59 pm
Location: Olathe , Kansas

Post by bradhig »

Is Disney gonna stop supporting blue ray?
User avatar
2099net
Signature Collection
Posts: 9421
Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2003 1:00 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Post by 2099net »

bradhig three people have answered that question with their reasoning on this very thread.
Most of my Blu-ray collection some of my UK discs aren't on their database
Helvetian
Member
Posts: 20
Joined: Wed Feb 28, 2007 2:06 am

Re: Disney supports 3 layer HD DVD format

Post by Helvetian »

First of all, everyone needs to understand a few key points about HD DVD:
  • It is the only approved format out of the DVD Forum, as the true successor format to DVD.
  • HD DVD is a finalized spec, it includes and requires mandatory elements like a second video decoder and audio decoder, for things like Picture-in-Picture video commentary. An Ethernet port, for web content and extras that can be downloaded after the disc has been sold, for example Transformers on HD DVD offers new content not available initially. The port also serves for firmware updates, both formats need them for changes but with Blu-ray you need to mail off for a free disc whereas with HD DVD you can instantly update any changes right from your living room.
  • Cost, entry levels players were as low as $100, but now average roughly $199. Blu-ray has a higher cost with players that will soon be obsolete (read on for details) for as little as $399 and up.
  • Lossless audio codec is mandatory only on HD DVD, with Dolby Digital TrueHD lossless sound. With Blu-ray, no true next-gen audio codec is mandatory.
  • Persistent Storage, memory built-in that can store your user acct for content, preferences, downloads, bookmarks, etc.
  • Combo Discs which have an HD DVD and DVD side, allowing you to watch the HD side on your HD DVD player and use the same disc on your DVD players in your bedroom, car, friends using the DVD side.
  • Both formats offer superior 1080p video quality.
Read what HDTV Magazine has to say about the formats and which is the best: http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/articles/20 ... lu-ray.php Do your own research and find out for yourself.
2099net wrote:Microsoft did not pay Paramount $150m, Toshiba did.
Actually not quite so. Paramount has already stated the reasons for dropping Blu-ray and they were not pretty. All of this talk regarding a NY Times anonymous source cited $150M is a major false flag to divert attention away from the REAL reasons. Come on, Viacom (Paramount parent company) is a huge multi-billion dollar corporation; $150M are pennies to these guys. People say Blu-ray is doing so well, so why would Viacom take pennies and dump the "very successful" format? Again $150M isn't much to these studios. So to suggest it was the sole reason for the stragey change is a bit naive.

Some of the reasons Viacom decided to dump Blu-ray are clear and make sense. Read these answers from a PC World magazine interview to ascertain a better understanding why Paramount/DreamWorks dropped Blu-ray in support of HD DVD:
PCW: Presumably, making this move wasn't something you did lightly. What led up to the decision to shift your production exclusively to HD DVD?
Paramount has been getting experience with publishing titles in both formats for the last year. We've had a hands-on ability to see how these formats work in practice. And after some hands-on analysis, we decided that HD DVD was the format we wanted to support.

PCW: Why was that?
Bell: For one thing, the lower prices of the players: It's good for consumers, it's good for our customer base.
For another thing, HD DVD came out of the DVD Forum. The DVD Forum is very experienced at developing and managing specs. [HD DVD] was launched in a very stable way, with stable specifications, and they had specified a reference player model, so all players had to be compatible with the HDi interactivity layer, and all players had to be capable of the interactivity. So when we publish titles in the future that have interactivity, we can be assured that every HD DVD player will be able to handle this content.

PCW: So, as a studio, you believe that the underlying stability of HD DVD's specs is a benefit?
Bell: When you look at what the DVD Forum has specified as required, it's a good set of advanced technologies. You can be assured that that benefit will be available to all consumers, no matter what [player] model they purchased. That speaks to the DVD Forum, that it published specs that were complete and market-ready, and that it didn't need to publish up [and change the specs], as Blu-ray has. To some degree, [such changes are] going to create some legacy issues.

For example, HD DVD players have [ethernet] connectivity built-in. If the player doesn't have that, or it's optional, you can't rely on that [as a feature].

PCW: Didn't we see the same thing with DVD players, though, where some features were mandatory and others weren't?
Bell: When you have a format, you generally have mandatory requirements on players, and you sometimes have optional features. On DVD, Dolby Digital 5.1 was mandatory, but DTS 5.1 was optional. But that meant that when you published a title, you never really knew how many customers had players that supported the feature you were adding to the disc at some cost. On HD DVD, the mandatory audio technologies are Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, and Dolby TrueHD. [For more details, see an explanation of the differences among the various Dolby technologies.]

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,13625 ... ticle.html
Keep in mind that Paramount unlike others had experience with both formats and thus knew firsthand the pros and cons of each. Subsequently they decided HD DVD was superior for their needs and more robust overall.

Now the incentives, which have not been identified as $150M but confirmed from Toshiba were marketing incentives and in-kind payments, basically so that the HD DVD Promotional Group can use DreamWorks SKG IPs in marketing campaigns. Such as the two TV adverts featuring characters from Shrek the Third. Here are the two: http://youtube.com/watch?v=NAYxYxn3iTA and http://youtube.com/watch?v=PxuJDgxIpR8
2099net wrote:And its likely most of the money was not included in the transaction but will be used in contra services (disc replication, co-branded adverts etc).
About disc replication and co-branded, Sony was heavily subsidizing or is still doing so, the high cost of BD50 which is a dual-layer 50GB disc. Also while Rupert Murdoch of Fox and Iger have chastised Paramount for taking the bribe, yet they have not made any statements to "vindicate" their studios of receiving any payments or incentives. Iger did state they did not receive money to chose Blu-ray but never ruled out any in-kind payments or deals, and never commented any further. Nor has the BDA ruled out any money, in fact all of the studios were asking for money and Sony revealed they reduced licensing and royalties for two studios to get them on board. So it's not a big surprise in the least when Hollywood studios engage in marketing deals and money is exchanged.
TM2-Megatron wrote:These new 51GB discs with their questionable compatibility are nothing more than a gimmick. I very much doubt this variant will be made use of in the home video market.
Yeah we don’t know, more than likely yes. The HD DVD Promotional Group would not press forward with a disc that would be incompatible. Of note, a Toshiba VP did mention that the discs should work on all existing hardware but testing needs to continue. We probably won’t know until CES 2008 (Consumer Electronics Show) in Vegas.

95% of movies are under two hours anyway, and HD DVD can easily handle several hours of HD 1080p video, with lossless audio 7.1 and extra content on a 30GB disc. If they need to add more extras or content, the very inexpensive 15GB disc will suffice. Besides data shows consumers see more value in two disc sets over one discs, so it's beneficial to consumers. Everyone here seems to love two disc sets and despite 50GB on Blu-ray, most big releases like Spider-Man 3 and POTC3 require two discs. So I guess it's not so bad.
Widdi wrote:This is exactly why I'm staying as far away from HD/Blu Ray as possible. The war is far from ever and anybody who thinks otherwise is nutso. Consumers supporting and investing money in either format at this point is just stupid. Why throw hundreds of dollars away on a player and discs that may be completely obsolete in a year or two? It's just bad spending.
Entry and initial costs for HD DVD are substantially lower, with players as low as $99 although more commonly $199 range. Currently Amazon.com is offering 10 free movies with an HD DVD Player for $224. Seems like a minimal cost and investment to experience HD 1080p movies rather than waiting for what analyst predict would be years of a co-existence.
deathie mouse wrote:Blu-ray (a format that's selling nearing 3:1 against HD DVD in the US and 8:1 in the rest of the planet)
Actually it’s 2:1 in US and 8:1 in Australia and I believe 6:1 in Europe. These ratios sound amazing, don’t they? Ever wonder why Sony doesn’t reveal the figures. It’s because the numbers are horribly low. For example the best selling Blu-ray disc is 300 and sold 250,000 copies to date whereas the HD DVD version sold 146,000. Compared that to 2.7 million Blu-ray capable players (includes PS3) to 750,000 dedicated HD DVD players and the numbers seem strange and outlandishly out of place. That’s because PS3 has a terrible attach rate (the number of movies sold on average per player), as Warner Bros VP Dan Silverberg stated “relying on gamers is dangerous” and it’s true. Blu-ray is banking the format on PS3, which is a game console that’s #3 in a three place race. It’s a total failure, despite repeated price drops including the new $399 SKU, it’s still not meeting predictions. PS3 is underperforming and Sony is losing billions each quarter as a result of the several hundred dollar subsidy they are providing per unit. HD DVD is focused on dedicated players, players solely intended for HD DVD movie playback and PS3 is a game machine and a Blu-ray player. However most PS3 owners don’t buy movies and the sales are indicative of this.

The entire, European market has sold 1M discs between both formats. Blu-ray has sold 630,000 more discs. Is this really that big of a deal? No, consumers have not chosen despite what some want you to believe. Far from it. In Australia just 2,200 Blu-ray players sold versus 609 HD DVD players. Total discs were 102,000 sold in Australia. Again is this truly massive? We’re not seeing big numbers here, it’s still too early.

To give more perspective, Spider-Man sold a little over 100,000 copies on Blu-ray, Die Hard 100,000 copies, Ratatouille 65,000 copies, Close Encounters 35,000, etc. Transformers on HD DVD sold 190,000 in one week, Shrek sold 70,000, and I don't have all of the numbers. The sadest example is Return to House on Haunted Hill that sold roughly 3,000 copies between both formats, giving Blu-ray the edge by just 340 discs sold more.

As you can see these numbers pale in comparison to DVD sales, and mind you the high def market encompassing both formats is just a paultry 1% of the home video market. So let's not get ahead of ourselves and pretend Blu-ray is this superior format selling millions of discs. Far from it, it is!
deathie mouse wrote:Blu-ray is supported by Disney, Lionsgate, MGM, Sony/Columbia/Tri-Star, Starz/Anchor Bay, and 20th Century Fox.
New Line/Warner are neutral and they release on both formats.

New Line just released Hairspray last week on Blu-ray first.
HD DVD is supported by Universal, and now Paramount/DreamWorks after the payoff. More than 75% of the Paramount/Dreamwork High Definition titles were released on Blu-ray. Their Spielberg titles have to be released on Blu-ray too.
Actually Blu-ray is supported by three of the Big Six which are Disney, Sony and Fox. HD DVD has two with Paramount and Universal. Warner Bros which includes New Line is neutral and currently supports both. Hairspray was released first on Blu-ray due to lack of region encoding on HD DVD, New Line is the only studio that has contractual obligations with foreign distributors to release their titles abroad and thus cannot release a region free disc that could play on players locally.

Actually Spielberg titles do not have to be released on Blu-ray. When Universal Studios went HD DVD exclusive, they did not make any exclusions unlike Paramount which stated titles directed by him were excluded but did not indicate they had to be released on Blu-ray. Spielberg has control over some of his films, but ultimately Paramount owns distribution rights and they are currently HD DVD exclusive.
deathie mouse wrote:Pirates Of The Caribbean 3 is released on Blu-ray Disc next Tuesday.
The Bourne Ultimatum is next Tuesday too. I'll be enjoying that on HD DVD.
Spottedfeather wrote:Blu-Ray is the far superior format. Why else would it be selling far, far better than HD-DVD ? Better picture, better....everything.
How is 1080p on Blu-ray better than 1080p on HD DVD? What else is better? HD DVD does things Blu-ray cannot.
2099net wrote:The whole "obsolete" argument doesn't really wash. Blu-ray will never be obsolete because its supported by the PS3.
It already is. All Blu-ray standalones sold to date are Profile 1.0, and as of 11/1/07, the new standard for Blu-ray hardware is Profile 1.1 which means a second video and audio codec. So when Resident Evil, Narnia, Finding Nemo and Sleeping Beauty come out next year, your old obsolete players won’t be able to enjoy next-gen interactive features like Picture in Picture that Disney and Sony are both boasting about that currently ALL HD DVD players can do, even the inexpensive $99 machines.

Then when Sony finally mandates Profile 2.0, which requires an Ethernet port, your 1.1 or 1.0 players won’t be able to do any of the web features. Such as the announced National Treasure web features, the Sleeping Beauty chats - you won't be able to participate using 1.1 or 1.0 hardware that is currently being sold. You will need to upgrade, 1.0 old players are $499 imagine 2.0 players, a few have been announced. Both above $899, very expensive.

Then when Profile 3.0 comes out, your 2.0 players are obsolete. So in essence you’re wrong 2099, Blu-ray is already behind and trying to catch up to features HD DVD has been delivering since day one. So yes they are already obsolete, all of these new cheap $399 Blu-ray players are a wash because they won’t and can’t support the future features planned.

Finally HD DVD offers compelling new interactive features, web content, extras and others thanks to Microsoft’s HDi technology. For more information about the amazing extras found only on HD DVD that Blu-ray is trying to replicate, visit this site: http://www.universalhidef.com/features.aspx
deathie mouse wrote:Region coding and AACS make studios feel confident in protecting their revenue so they release more. That's one good reason Disney, MGM and Fox are Blu-ray only, and there are already independent releases on Blu-ray
So now you’re advocating for companies? Since when do consumers care how a studio protects their content? Region coding is anti-consumer, why should we be bound to movies in a specific territory or region? Who besides studios, would ever praise such a closed system? As consumers we want more freedoms. Do you really want studios dictating how we use our movies, that we purchased? Let them worry about protection and safety. And FYI, Blu-ray security system is so screwed up, people couldn’t even watch Fantastic Four or Day After due to the security layer. See here http://www.crunchgear.com/2007/10/04/bd ... y-players/

HD DVD is the more pro-consumer choice, it’s region free so all of your movies play in any player anywhere. You can import foreign films and buy them abroad, etc. It also has a mandatory back-up, which legally allows you to make a back-up of the film should it become damaged, etc. Blu-ray does not. How is that pro-consumer?
Last edited by Helvetian on Thu Dec 06, 2007 5:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Flanger-Hanger
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3746
Joined: Wed Oct 11, 2006 3:59 pm
Location: S.H.I.E.L.D. Headquarters

Post by Flanger-Hanger »

where did you find this $100 HD DVD player? I just checked Best Buy and the cheapest one I found was $320 (excluding the $120 ADD ON to the already $300 or $400 XBox 360).
Image
JamesDFarrow
Gold Classic Collection
Posts: 348
Joined: Sun Aug 06, 2006 10:01 am

Post by JamesDFarrow »

And don't even mention MS's DVD-Ultra.

James :)
James D. Farrow
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
User avatar
Jack Skellington
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1230
Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 10:07 am
Location: Dubai

Post by Jack Skellington »

Actually Disney said it's going to support both hd formats eventually, so no worries.
TheMaster07
Member
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Dec 06, 2007 3:31 pm

Post by TheMaster07 »

I seriously doubt that Disney would switch, and for 3 reasons.

First and foremost, Blu-ray has constantly been outselling HD DVD 2-to-1 (it'd make no sense for Disney to purposely lose money.)

Secondly, the 3 layer HD DVD to my knowledge is still in its prototype stage

And third, there is a prototype 100GB Bluray disc, the only thing holding it back is they are trying to get a better signal strength for the disc. (This disc will work with all current blu-ray players as well)

Chance of Disney switching, I'd give it maybe 2%.

As for the person who said Paramount chose HD DVD because it is "superior" read around, they got paid for the switch, obviously not for their needs because Transformers has to come on 2 HD DVD discs instead of a single Blu-ray. And Blu-ray has better menus than HD DVD, the in-movie menu was copied from Blu-ray by HD DVD.

I don't get why people can't see that Blu-ray is far superior compared to HD DVD, Microsoft and Toshiba are just trying to confuse consumers so that they don't by a Blu-ray player or HD DVD player.
User avatar
2099net
Signature Collection
Posts: 9421
Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2003 1:00 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Post by 2099net »

TheMaster07 wrote:As for the person who said Paramount chose HD DVD because it is "superior" read around, they got paid for the switch, obviously not for their needs because Transformers has to come on 2 HD DVD discs instead of a single Blu-ray. And Blu-ray has better menus than HD DVD, the in-movie menu was copied from Blu-ray by HD DVD.
So? Spider-Man 3 comes on 2 Blu-ray discs and its a shorter film. Also the Transformers HD DVD has Picture in Picture and downloadable content including visual overlays on its first disc. Just like Spider-Man 3, all of the second disc's content is in full HD.

The only complaint you can make about Transformers is it doesn't have lossless sound. And yet, it still beat out all competition and won the award for best sound at the recent HiDefMedia awards ( http://www.highdefdigest.com/news/show/1236 ), so I guess that doesn't matter. Image wise, Transformers has also had a string of flawless reviews. So why does it matter?

And when it comes down to it, who cares if you have to switch a disc to get the other extra features? Has it ruined your life throughout the DVD era, because after 2+ hours you've had to get up off your behind and walk the short distance over to your player to switch a disc?

All this endless squabbling over each format isn't doing anything good. YOU may critisise Toshiba and Microsoft, but the most damage is being done by petty internet arguments and feuds, which distracts people from the main function of both formats: TO WATCH MOVIES. I would hope movie enthusiasts would be a little more mature than video game fanbois, but apparently they are not.

I find it amusing that ultimately it's the Blu-ray fans who claim Microsoft, Toshiba or whoever is generating confusion and buyer apathy seem to be creating more confusion and apathy, while websites, blogs and forums get stuck in ruts of circular logic. One fanatic on side isn't going to convince a fanatic on the other, and slagging off the opposing format just results in tit-for-tat arguments back, which is hardly going to make either format look attractive to a would-be buyer is it?

Each format has its pros and cons. Each format has its own exclusive titles. It's not perfect, but its not a disaster either - especially as HD DVD players are so cheap at the moment (and who knows, Blu-ray may be priced the same come Q3 2008). Purchases on neither format will suddenly stop working should one format fail. With the number of movies on both, neither format will ever be worthless.

Yes, the situation is disappointing, but life is full of disappointments. Considering the thousands upon thousands of bigger injustices in the world two High Definition Media formats is nothing.
Most of my Blu-ray collection some of my UK discs aren't on their database
TheMaster07
Member
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Dec 06, 2007 3:31 pm

Post by TheMaster07 »

Well I'm guessing you are a undercover HD DVD fanboy trying to act like the mature one.

Anyways aside from cost, Blu-ray is in fact better than HD DVD, if you read reviews from respected reviewers you will find that they all agree, and they say the if Microsoft and Toshiba weren't causing so much confusion Blu-ray would have won a long time ago.

All the features on HD DVD are available on Blu-ray, Blu-ray is usually the one coming out with the new feature and HD DVD copies, Blu-ray will always hold the capacity lead, and therefore it would be foolish to support a format who's peak is 51GB....

As for the player price, just pick up a PS3 for yourself, you get a decent priced Blu-ray player and a HD Gaming console for the price of one.
User avatar
akhenaten
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1267
Joined: Wed Oct 29, 2003 3:12 pm
Location: kuala lumpur, malaysia
Contact:

Post by akhenaten »

this is an article i found

Michael Bay Exposes Vast Microsoft Conspiracy
The dirty secret no one is talking about.

by Jeff Giles | December 07, 2007

Have you been holding off on purchasing hi-def components for your home theater because you're confused by the whole HD DVD vs. Blu-ray conundrum? Michael Bay feels your pain -- and he says it's all Microsoft's fault.

Crave's Ian Morris digs up a post from Bay's official site in which the director -- who famously threatened to withhold Transformers 2 from Paramount as retribution for the studio's exclusive HD DVD support -- tells us that he's got the format war all figured out. Dig it:

"What you don't understand is corporate politics. Microsoft wants both formats to fail so they can be heroes and make the world move to digital downloads. That is the dirty secret no one is talking about.

"That is why Microsoft is handing out $100m checks to studios just embrace the HD DVD and not the leading, and superior Blu-ray. They want confusion in the market until they perfect the digital downloads. Time will tell and you will see the truth."

See, Bay haters? You've got the man all wrong. He isn't all about explosions and unintentionally humorous dialogue. He's a consumer crusader -- the Ralph Nader of blockbuster movies!

To read Crave's analysis of Bay's comments (they don't come out and accuse Bay of wearing a tinfoil hat, but they do come close), click on the link below!

Source: Crave

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/transfo ... s/1695773/
do you still wait for me Dream Giver?
Helvetian
Member
Posts: 20
Joined: Wed Feb 28, 2007 2:06 am

Post by Helvetian »

TheMaster07 wrote:First and foremost, Blu-ray has constantly been outselling HD DVD 2-to-1 (it'd make no sense for Disney to purposely lose money.)
Already addressed above, you’re not adding anything to the discussion.
TheMaster07 wrote:Secondly, the 3 layer HD DVD to my knowledge is still in its prototype stage
Nope the final spec was approved on 11/15/07 at the 40th Steering Committee of the DVD Forum.
TheMaster07 wrote:And third, there is a prototype 100GB Bluray disc, the only thing holding it back is they are trying to get a better signal strength for the disc. (This disc will work with all current blu-ray players as well)
Hitachi said it should work, but they also do not know. Saying it will work with all players, is a fabrication and deceptive.
TheMaster07 wrote:As for the person who said Paramount chose HD DVD because it is "superior" read around, they got paid for the switch, obviously not for their needs
You must know more than Paramount’s Chief Technology Officer, Alan Bell; the person who said HD DVD is superior. $150M is chump change to Disney, Viacom and anyone in Hollywood involved to this war. So it's naive to think they dumped Blu-ray over in-kind payment and some marketing money.

Let’s say they did, then this clearly shows Blu-ray is not as profitable and successful as they want you to believe. That a studio would renounce all that profit, the 2:1, better sales for just $150M when all they had to do was stay neutral and make more money. Hmm doesn’t quite make sense.
TheMaster07 wrote:Transformers has to come on 2 HD DVD discs instead of a single Blu-ray.
Yeah because of content. Can you explain why Close Encounters, Pirates 1-3, Spider-Man 3, Blade Runner, Resident Evil and more are all two disc Blu-ray sets? Or am I missing something?
TheMaster07 wrote:And Blu-ray has better menus than HD DVD, the in-movie menu was copied from Blu-ray by HD DVD.
No HD DVD had interactive menu’s since day one, they also have PiP commentary, web features, interactive games and more. All HD DVD players can do these things, but not any of the Blu-ray can. This is because Blu-ray prematurely launched an incomplete product with promises of various profiles in the future.
TheMaster07 wrote:I don't get why people can't see that Blu-ray is far superior compared to HD DVD, Microsoft and Toshiba are just trying to confuse consumers so that they don't by a Blu-ray player or HD DVD player.
People can’t see that it’s superior, well because it’s not. Blu-ray has long argued several distinctive advantages; all of which have been destroyed. Let’s list them, shall we?

1. Studio support: for a while only Universal Studios supported HD DVD, but now studio support is relatively even. You have two for HD, three for BD and one is neutral. Mind you, only Blu-ray has ever lost studio support whereas HD DVD gained.

2. Hardware support: Sony, Panasonic, Samsung, Pioneer are all nice names. One of the big advantages of multiple hardware manufacturers is the holy grail of competition and that is price. Yet despite all of these vendors, prices remain sky high ($399+) on old outdated hardware that won’t support new features set to be found on Narnia, Sleeping Beauty, National Treasure and Finding Nemo next year. What a shame! Samsung and Sanyo are now neutral and manufacture combo players that support both formats. Again Sony lost more exclusive support.

3. The PS3 effect, aka the Trojan horse. Instead it’s turned out to be an Achilles’ Heel for Blu-ray. An expensive, over priced game console that despite being heavily subsidized by Sony and costing them billions in losses per quarter, and despite several price drops, can’t seem to climb from its perpetual #3 out of 3 spot. PS3 is a failure, an expensive one for Sony. And ironically the best selling Blu-ray player to date, yet the software figures are only at 2:1. Shouldn’t they be higher? Hmmm.

As you can see, Blu-ray is not the clear and easy choice. Don’t be fooled, because HD DVD nor Blu-ray are going away anytime soon. I wanted to make that clear, because every topic I read is someone saying Blu-ray will win and the war is over. Mind you, Sony and Co have predicted HD’s death 100x and it never comes. Both are here to stay for now and while for a long time it looked like Blu-ray would win, it’s 50:50 now. None knows who will win.

Thanks Master for your post and welcome to UD. Glad to see my post inspired you to join us and participate.
Helvetian
Member
Posts: 20
Joined: Wed Feb 28, 2007 2:06 am

Post by Helvetian »

akhenaten wrote:this is an article i found
Bay is a Sony person, most of his works are wth Blu-ray studios so his loyalties naturally lie there. He is not saying anything new, last month at a Blu-ray shindig in LA, the same rhetoric was spewed about Microsoft and they responded. Bay is just always a day late and a dollar short, and usually makes posts several weeks after the fact like now. Some quotes:
“The [Blu-ray] camp’s claims about Microsoft’s desire to have a format war are baseless,” Collins said. ”Microsoft has over 100 people working on HD DVD interactivity and we believe that HD DVD is the next-generation optical format.”
Collins said Microsoft decided to join the HD DVD format two CES shows ago because the format’s replication costs were and still are the cheapest. He said there are only three plants in the world that can produce BD-50 discs, and those are all owned by Sony. He added that Microsoft’s predictions around costs and availability almost three years ago still hold true today.
“HD DVD offers compelling features by mandating that there are three key hardware components (secondary video decoder, memory and networking),” Collins said. “These offer a lowest common denominator that allows studios like Warner Bros. to produce a title like 300 that has features that are not in the Blu-ray version.”
So take it with a grain of salt people, these people are usually spewing rhetoric left and right. Nothing is confirmed, NO one knows who will win. So anyone that says otherwise is misleading you. Blu-ray is no longer the destined winner it was once set to be, the industry has changed and HD DVD is doing well now.

If you are really paranoid, then watch from the sidelines. If you have an HDTV and want to experience high def movies in 1080p, then make a choice or go both if you can afford. Like I said $99-$199 is a minimal entry point, and you could alternatively just rent movies versus buying. Enjoy high def today, why wait? Tomorrow the world could end lol.
User avatar
2099net
Signature Collection
Posts: 9421
Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2003 1:00 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Post by 2099net »

TheMaster07 wrote:Well I'm guessing you are a undercover HD DVD fanboy trying to act like the mature one.
I'm the fanboy? What does it matter to you which format people pick? I have both thank you very much, and I couldn't care less how things play out. (At the moment I'm slightly HD DVD biased because of region encoding, but I'm also aware the door is always open for region encoding on the HD DVD format - and I think if Fox and Disney did join, it would be implemented... so really if one format "wins" they will both have the same disadvantage)
Anyways aside from cost, Blu-ray is in fact better than HD DVD, if you read reviews from respected reviewers you will find that they all agree, and they say the if Microsoft and Toshiba weren't causing so much confusion Blu-ray would have won a long time ago.

All the features on HD DVD are available on Blu-ray, Blu-ray is usually the one coming out with the new feature and HD DVD copies, Blu-ray will always hold the capacity lead, and therefore it would be foolish to support a format who's peak is 51GB....
I'm sorry but I have to disagree with "All the features on HD DVD are available on Blu-ray, Blu-ray is usually the one coming out with the new feature and HD DVD copies" - what about PiP, secondary decoder, web access, on-line shops, downloadable clips and trailers, downloadable subtitle tracks, downloadable menu skins, synchronised screening parties... are HD DVD copying ALL of those?
As for the player price, just pick up a PS3 for yourself, you get a decent priced Blu-ray player and a HD Gaming console for the price of one.
I have a PS3 and I have recommended friends get one too, and two of my friends have purchased one mainly (but not exclusively) due to my comments and enthusiasm. I'm not blind to the PS3's desirability, but neither am I blind to HD DVD's either.

Blu-ray may be better, but better hasn't always won. Which was better? The NES or the Sega Master Sytem? PAL or NTSC? PC or Mac? Plasma or LCD?

There's lots of factors to take into account. I guess because the 360 has more developer support than the PS3, people shouldn't buy a PS3 and should get a 360. See? It works both ways.
Most of my Blu-ray collection some of my UK discs aren't on their database
CampbellzSoup

Post by CampbellzSoup »

HD DVD can talk all it wants the sales show that no matter how hard they push no one is buying it.

I would never support that format with a ten foot pole
User avatar
TM2-Megatron
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1065
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 5:51 pm
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Post by TM2-Megatron »

Ugh, why can't people ever discuss this issue without resorting to fanboy-ish blanket statements and petty attacks?
HD DVD can talk all it wants the sales show that no matter how hard they push no one is buying it.
Clearly someone is buying; just not as many people as those who've bought into Sony's spin-doctoring... which at least proves they've learned a few new tricks since the Beta vs. VHS days. Like it or not, that's exactly what both camps are doing... functionally, the difference between Blu-Ray and HD-DVD is marginal at best. For the average person, the difference isn't noticeable at all in terms of quality on their screen.
User avatar
2099net
Signature Collection
Posts: 9421
Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2003 1:00 pm
Location: UK
Contact:

Post by 2099net »

CampbellzSoup wrote:HD DVD can talk all it wants the sales show that no matter how hard they push no one is buying it.

I would never support that format with a ten foot pole
So if dual-format players become the norm, which is quite possible, and both formats "win", you'd never buy or watch a Universal film? Isn't that a little childish?

I think this whole thread would promote more consumer acceptace of HiDef Media if people only concentrated on the positives. There's already enough places in the media and internet to read about the "war" (which I don't believe is a war).
Most of my Blu-ray collection some of my UK discs aren't on their database
Post Reply