Looks like the battle lines are drawn!
http://ces.cnet.com/8301-13855_1-984...g=2547-1_3-0-5
and now the games begin
http://www.videobusiness.com/article....html?nid=3514
A few months back micheal bay said that microsoft wanted both hd-dvd and blu-ray to fail as the worked the kinks out of DD. Buts it clear that digital distribution looks to be joining the war late. But just when you think the movie wars are getting clear, they just get more cluttered.
One thing DD has over both other formats is ease of getting. Just click dl and watch. Pretty simple. But isp speeds do play a factor in that.
http://ces.cnet.com/8301-13855_1-984...g=2547-1_3-0-5
Despite the apparent coup for Blu-ray in convincing Warner Bros. to join their side shortly before this year's CES conference, Seagate Technology CEO Bill Watkins is confident it won't have any impact on the on-going format war for HD dominance. That's not because he believes HD DVD will take the crown, but rather because he's convinced that the real winner will be electronic distribution rather than physical discs.
"People are saying Blu-ray won the war but who cares? The war is over physical distribution versus electrical distribution, and Blu-ray and HD lost that," he said during a breakfast meeting at the Consumer Electronics Show here this week. "In this, flash memory and hard drives are on the same side. The war is over and the physical guys lost."
In addition to talk of devices for storing video from different sources, which of course is a job for either flash memory or hard drives, he also mentioned that electronic distribution also creates the need for backups of all the data to be broadcast.
So what if the studios simply decide not to embrace the new distribution model? According to Watkins it will be their loss. He says that if no official Channel exists to get video to homes people will take whatever they can find on the internet. "They will watch lousy content if it is easy to do," he said.
"People are saying Blu-ray won the war but who cares? The war is over physical distribution versus electrical distribution, and Blu-ray and HD lost that," he said during a breakfast meeting at the Consumer Electronics Show here this week. "In this, flash memory and hard drives are on the same side. The war is over and the physical guys lost."
In addition to talk of devices for storing video from different sources, which of course is a job for either flash memory or hard drives, he also mentioned that electronic distribution also creates the need for backups of all the data to be broadcast.
So what if the studios simply decide not to embrace the new distribution model? According to Watkins it will be their loss. He says that if no official Channel exists to get video to homes people will take whatever they can find on the internet. "They will watch lousy content if it is easy to do," he said.
and now the games begin
VideoGiants to offer HD video downloads from Paramount
13 January 2008 1:24 by Rich "vurbal" Fiscus | 2 comments
VideoGiants to offer HD video downloads from Paramount MusicGiants, whose online music store already offers audio downloads in much higher quality than the typical web retailer has made a deal with Paramount Pictures Digital Entertainment to deliver HD video. The video oriented service, not surprisingly called VideoGiants, can deliver HD movies either one at a time by download or as entire collections on a hard drive that would be installed into a home theater server.
?Over the past several years, high-end audio consumers have come to rely on MusicGiants as the source for all of their favorite music, and we are now pleased to announce that we are going to do the same thing for films and TV shows through our VideoGiants service,? said MusicGiants CEO Scott Bahneman. ?Our company is uniquely positioned to sell the highest quality content onto premium connected homes because the MG MediaStore software is being built into so many home theater devices.?
He was referring to the fact that VideoGiants isn't intended purely for PC playback, but rather can (and will) be supported by a number of home theater media servers, including such brands as Creston, Imerge, Niveus, Russound, ReQuest, Xperinet, Cutting Edge and Inteset.
?This is the first time we have licensed our films for sale and delivery on a hard drive,? said Derek Broes, senior VP of worldwide business development at Paramount Pictures Digital Entertainment. ?What appeals to us about MusicGiants and their VideoGiants movie delivery service is that their target demographic is focused on high-end consumers with home theaters and this audience consists typically of early adopters of new technology. Therefore, we want to ensure that our films are easy to legally purchase, store and enjoy.?
13 January 2008 1:24 by Rich "vurbal" Fiscus | 2 comments
VideoGiants to offer HD video downloads from Paramount MusicGiants, whose online music store already offers audio downloads in much higher quality than the typical web retailer has made a deal with Paramount Pictures Digital Entertainment to deliver HD video. The video oriented service, not surprisingly called VideoGiants, can deliver HD movies either one at a time by download or as entire collections on a hard drive that would be installed into a home theater server.
?Over the past several years, high-end audio consumers have come to rely on MusicGiants as the source for all of their favorite music, and we are now pleased to announce that we are going to do the same thing for films and TV shows through our VideoGiants service,? said MusicGiants CEO Scott Bahneman. ?Our company is uniquely positioned to sell the highest quality content onto premium connected homes because the MG MediaStore software is being built into so many home theater devices.?
He was referring to the fact that VideoGiants isn't intended purely for PC playback, but rather can (and will) be supported by a number of home theater media servers, including such brands as Creston, Imerge, Niveus, Russound, ReQuest, Xperinet, Cutting Edge and Inteset.
?This is the first time we have licensed our films for sale and delivery on a hard drive,? said Derek Broes, senior VP of worldwide business development at Paramount Pictures Digital Entertainment. ?What appeals to us about MusicGiants and their VideoGiants movie delivery service is that their target demographic is focused on high-end consumers with home theaters and this audience consists typically of early adopters of new technology. Therefore, we want to ensure that our films are easy to legally purchase, store and enjoy.?
A few months back micheal bay said that microsoft wanted both hd-dvd and blu-ray to fail as the worked the kinks out of DD. Buts it clear that digital distribution looks to be joining the war late. But just when you think the movie wars are getting clear, they just get more cluttered.
One thing DD has over both other formats is ease of getting. Just click dl and watch. Pretty simple. But isp speeds do play a factor in that.
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