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More Hints of Blu-ray Playback for Xbox 360

More Rumors of Blu-ray Add-On for Xbox 360

In the early days of the format wars between Blu-ray and HD-DVD, Microsoft seemed to be hedging its bets. It supported HD DVD by releasing an optional add-on for the Xbox 360. By not building the format into the game console it seemed to be saying "We like you, but we just want to be friends." It's possible that lack of commitment helped tip the battle to end the way it did, but since then everyone has been wondering one thing: when will MS offer a Blu-ray add-on for the Xbox 360? If a new bit of info from the always reliable "inside sources" is to be believed, it could be sometime this year.

The rumors about a Blu-ray drive for the Xbox 360 started right after Toshiba ducked out of the competition. Microsoft issued a denial, but it just seems like a matter of time before something is released. The difference about this rumor is that it doesn't point to an external add-on, similar to what MS released for HD DVD, instead for a wholly new version of the 360 that has a built-in Blu-ray player. This version is supposedly currently under development for a release sometime in the latter-half of the year.

True info, bogus rumor, or someone just predicting the inevitable? One thing is for sure: we'll find out sometime within the next eight months!

From Engadget

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Is VMD the Next Blu-ray?

VMDs Want to Challenge Blu-Ray's Dominance
Just when you thought the format wars were over, along comes an upstart called New Medium Enterprises (NME) with its Versatile Multilayer Disc, or VMD. VMDs were originally set to debut in 2006, but for currently unknown reasons are only now making their debut.

The discs and players are much cheaper to produce than either Blu-ray or HD-DVD because it uses the same red lasers that standard DVD players use. Red lasers are cheaper and easier to produce than the blue lasers used in the other high-def disc formats.

According to an article in today's New York Times, VMD players are sold directly through the NME Web site and will be available on Amazon in about five weeks for about $200, though Michael Jay Solomon, the chairman of New Medium, seems to think prices could quickly drop to $90 a player.

Low prices, however, didn't save HD-DVD, and with the lackluster selection of VMD movies (only 17 titles available stateside), the upstart disc format is going to have a tough time even carving out a small niche for itself.

Whatever. All these next-gen disc formats are doomed, since HD-downloading on devices such as Apple TV and Vudu are only going to grow.

From the New York Times

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Netflix Not Stocking Enough Blu-ray Discs?


Excited to see all the Academy Award winners you missed over the last year? Want to see them on your new Blu-Ray payer? Psyched to check out all the new releases in high-definition? Sure you are, so you hit up Netflix to add them to your queue and wait for them to arrive. The only problem? It seems Netflix isn't stocking enough Blu-Ray discs, and your queue looks something like the one above.

We've been aching to say something about this apparent Netflix Blu-Ray shortage for a while, but before we went off on some wild accusatory tangent, we decided to wait for a couple weeks to see if the death of HD-DVD would get Netflix to stock more Blu-Ray discs. You know, to be fair to Netflix. It seems the problem hasn't let up, however.

The above picture is what our queue has looked like for the past couple weeks. See all those "Short Wait, Long Wait, and "Very Long Wait" messages? Those mean those discs are not in stock at Netflix, they're not sure when they will be, and we'll just have to wait for other customers to return their discs. And in the afterglow of the Academy Awards, we're not confident the problem will let up any time soon.

Isn't it time for Netflix to stock more Blu-Ray discs? With the rising popularity of the format, the end of HD-DVD as we know it, and the oncoming rise in Blu-Ray releases (just take a look at the Blu-Ray association's web site that lists upcoming releases), we think it's time for Netflix to stop treating Blu-Ray like a niche product and let us have the HD goodness we're (apparently) waiting for.

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It's Official: Toshiba Ducks Out of Format War - R.I.P. HD DVD

Toshiba Ducks Out of Format War - R.I.P. HD DVDIt's official. After plenty of rumors and speculation Toshiba itself has indeed confirmed that it will cease production of HD DVD players and recorders sometime next month. That means the high-definition format war is over and Sony, having lost so many of these battles in the past (Betamax, MiniDisc, UMD, etc. etc.), has finally got winner on its hands.

Or does it? Having offed HD-DVD on the high-def front, Sony's format now must face off against two even stronger competitors: Downloadable films such as those offered by Netflix and iTunes, and the humble DVD, which is still selling like hotcakes even among owners of high-definition televisions. But, now that there is a clear choice, the landscape may change quickly.

Industry reaction is, for the most part, a big sense of relief that this format war didn't drag on any longer. Forbes is saying that the real winners are the retailers, who can now tell consumers without a doubt which high-def format they should put their money on. For its part, Microsoft, which early-on threw its support behind HD-DVD -- both with an add-on for its Xbox 360 and also by providing some of the technology used within the encoding of the discs -- is saying that the death of the format will do little to impact the success of its console. Hedging its bets by not building an HD-DVD drive into the console itself is finally looking like a smart move, and many industry pundits are now wondering just how long it'll be before there's a Blu-ray add-on for the Xbox 360.

We're inclined to think it'll be awhile before we see that, but anything is possible.

From Toshiba, Forbes, and BetaNews

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Final Blow to HD-DVD From Toshiba?



The chips are down for Toshiba and its HD-DVD format, the competitor to Sony's Blu-ray that has been on the receiving end of some serious knocks lately. Netflix said it's dropping the format, and Best Buy indicated it's beginning the process of doing the same. Blu-ray player sales are way up and things are looking so bad that Toshiba's response to all this sounds half-hearted at best. No wonder, then, that rumors are swirling of Toshiba's plans to drop the format entirely.

The always ambiguous "reliable sources" are indicating that Toshiba will stop production of HD-DVD players within the next few weeks, the final result of the fallout caused by Warner's surprise January CES announcement that it was jumping ship and going Blu-ray-exclusive.

It's clearly game over for the format, a disappointing reality for many early adopters. But hey, look on the bright side: Some great deals are ahead for those looking to extend their HD-DVD collections while they still can.

From The Hollywood Reporter

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HD DVD Responds to Bad Press Day

HD DVD Responds to Bad Press Day Yesterday was a bad day for HD DVD. We've already declared HD DVD dead in the water, but not everyone has come around just yet. Yesterday both Best Buy and Netflix helped bury the Toshiba-backed HD DVD coalition. Netflix announced that it would begin exclusively carrying Blu-Ray discs, and Best Buy will continue to carry HD DVDs and HD DVD players, but will "recommend" BluRay to customers.

The HD DVD Promotional Group released a press statement in response to the two major setbacks:

"We have long held the belief that HD DVD is the best format for consumers based on quality and value, and with more than 1 million HD DVD players on the market, it's unfortunate to see Netflix make the decision to only stock Blu-ray titles going forward. While the Best Buy announcement says they will recommend Blu-ray, at least they will continue to carry HD DVD and offer consumers a choice at retail."

Obviously, some of the spark and fight has left the group when the best they can come up with is Blu-Ray hasn't pushed us off the shelves yet.

From Engadget

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HD-DVD Going the Distance With $2.7 Million Super Bowl Spot



Rocky always refused to go down, even if his face got beaten into Hamburger Helper. Despite looking like Rocky sans the steadfastly loyal fan base, the folks behind HD-DVD are trying to get that cinematic comeback-when-the-chips-are-down win... or at least some sort of moral victory.

Wired reports that Toshiba, one of the companies that's backing HD-DVD, has paid $2.7 million for a 30-second commercial airtime spot during this Sunday's Super Bowl. This is very strange news indeed, considering most people -- including consumers in January -- have already decided that HD-DVD is dead.

Perhaps this is Toshiba's way of saying that it's going the distance, no matter the facts. Maybe the HD-DVD player manufacturers are determined to carve some sort of new niche as the cheaper, downmarket alternative to Blu-ray's pricey and flashy product. Time to cue the inspirational soundtrack...

From Wired

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Audio/Video, Columns, TV, CES 2008

HD-DVD's Long Walk Back to the Locker Room of Shame

Now that everyone has declared BluRay the winner in the high-def war, what with Warner's announcement and Sony finally allowing adult films to be published on the format, I think it's important to take a look at HD-DVD's long walk back to the locker room after a game well-played.

It would be a mistake to say that HD-DVD will cease to exist tomorrow. In fact, expect to see just the opposite of that. HD-DVD continue on as an underground favorite format, much like Betamax did in the 70s and laser discs did in the 90s. Remember laser discs, the giant optical discs that came before DVD, the stuff of early home theater buffs who could tell you a thing or two about digital mastering way before half of Hollywood was even Bar Mitzvah'd? No? How about beta, the superior tape format that Sony wanted you to buy instead of VHS?

I originally thought HD-DVD was completely done for before the Consumer Electronics Show. Warner's Blu-Ray-exclusive announcement and the HD-DVD group's decision to back out of their keynote made it sound like they would go away with a whimper. On the final day of the conference, however, I took one last walk by the HD-DVD booth just to see what was up. After all, I'm a sucker for a good heartbreak story.

"So I looked on bestbuy.com this morning," began the booth attendant, speaking to three half-asleep attendees who, by my estimation, were there more for the chair rest than the presentation. "You can now buy an HD-DVD drive for $179. That also comes with ten free discs. Ten free discs! That easily makes HD-DVD the best deal in high definition."

The guy had a point. Think about it -- for $179, you can get a high-end HD-DVD player that will also upscale your regular DVDs to high-definition resolution. It will also play your Super-Audio CDs. You also get ten free HD-DVD discs. Go try to buy ten new regular-definition DVDs for $179 -- I dare you. That evening I was ordering an HD-DVD drive from bestbuy.com. Call me a vulture if you will, but I'll be enjoying this winter in high-def heaven. Heck - I might even cancel my Netflix account for a few months and save another $50 or so.

That closing value on the HD-DVD format really is hard to beat. Even if another HD-DVD title never comes out, the closing cost of the format -- along with its hardware -- is easily worth the cost to anyone with a high-definition television. Is it an investment for the far future? Not so much, but most of us who already have home theaters and high-definition televisions aren't exactly known for our electronics long-term investment acumen -- we'll all have new TVs, receivers, and speakers in a few years anyway.

Anyway, with Apple's new iTunes Movie Rentals and NetFlix opening up the "View It Now" service to unlimited views, disc-based movies' days are numbered.

Enjoy the fire sale. I know I will.

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Audio/Video

High-Def Adult Movies Coming to Blu-ray

Adult Movies Coming to Blu-ray

If we've learned anything in the past week it's that pollsters get it wrong sometimes -- way wrong. So, despite most people calling the high-definition format war for Blu-ray (including ourselves) some still had hope for the underdog format thanks to one thing: porn. Now that advantage seems to be going away, with a few major adult studios pledging to support both formats equally.

It's long been held that Sony didn't want adult filth polluting its pristine Blu-ray format, and for that reason the adult film industry embraced the HD-DVD format early on. This reminded many of the VHS vs. Betamax format wars in the 80's, where Sony didn't want porn on its format then either, leaving many nudie aficionados with nowhere to turn but VHS. The rest is history.

However, Sony seems to be easing its moral misgivings this time, with Digital Playground and Hustler announcing they will be releasing films in both formats. Yes, the majority of high-def porn is still on HD-DVD (or direct for download online), but surely more will be coming to Sony's format in the very near future, leaving HD-DVD's future looking that much more bleak.

From www.t3.com

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LG Claims New Hybrid HD Disc Player is Out (But Shelves Are Empty)

The LG Super Blu Player BH200

LG Electronics announced it is putting its second-generation hybrid high definition disc player on retail shelves, making good on a promise made in September at the CEDIA trade show to have the new devices ready for the holidays.

The LG Super Blu Player, officially known as the BH200, will carry a $999 price tag and is capable of reading high-definition discs in the two competing formats currently on the market, Blu-ray and HD-DVD. (Blu-ray is supported primarily by Sony and Panasonic while HD-DVD is the darling of Toshiba and Microsoft.) The player also works with standard DVDs.

Until the consumer electronics industry can settle on a single high definition format for discs -- something we don't expect to happen anytime soon -- a dual format player is the only solution for movie aficionados who just have to have the latest movie in HD.

While Samsung has announced its new hybrid player will be out soon for $200 less, during a visit to LG's headquarters in scenic Palisades, N.J., marketing vice president Allan Jason pointedly explained the value in LG's offering. "It's one thing to say you have a better price on a product. It's another to actually have product on store shelves," he said. LG says the BH200 is available at retailers nationwide, however a quick check of Best Buy's Web site shows product is sold out there and at its stores across the country -- even in Minneapolis, Best Buy's home town. Same goes for Circuit City online and at its retail locations, even in its Richmond, Va., backyard.

Kudos to LG for having a popular product. Too bad for those of us not fast enough to the store to grab one.

From BetaNews.


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HD-DVD Players Drop to Sub-$200 Price Tag


While next-gen disc format Blu-ray languishes in the overpriced gadget ghetto, competing format HD-DVD and the players that play it are breaking free by dropping in price to a popular holiday gift level. ar. Hot on the heels of the release of the Toshiba HD-A3 HD-DVD player, retailers across the country are dropping the price of the previous-generation HD-A2 below the all important $200 mark.

At $198 in Wal-Mart and $197.99 in Circuit City, the HD-A2 is the first high-definition video player to approach commodity pricing. The only down side of the HD-A2 is that it falls short of "full HD" resolution or 1080p, topping out at 1080i, but it's the kind of thing that no one notices when sitting more than a seven or eight feet away from a TV set, or on any screen 42-inches or smaller.

Your turn Sony/Blu-ray camp.

From Ars Technica

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Headaches for Blu-ray Owners

Headaches for Blu-ray Owners
With each camp constantly trying to upstage the other with endless freebies and shouts of victory, the battle between Blu-ray and HD DVD over our hi-def movie hearts is never a dull one. Today's news from the front is a blow for Sony. After its Blu-ray format seemed to be taking a definitive lead, it's now suffering a series of setbacks due to widespread issues with new movies freezing up older players.

Many of the latest Blu-ray releases, including 'Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer' and 'The Day After Tomorrow,' are reportedly choking during playback. Many players are simply not playing the discs at all, while others crap out about 30 minutes into the movie. Even the PS3's Blu-ray player isn't free from problems, though many users have seen the playback issues resolved with the latest firmware update for the console.

Currently, Fox is suspected to be the source of the problems thanks to a couple of its new technologies for copy-protection and for adding extra interactive features. Fox has acknowledged the issue, but is blaming the hardware manufacturers, which, according to AVS Forum users, include LG and Samsung. For its part, Samsung has said it has no timetable for delivering a fix.

This has consumers asking, "Now that we've spent tons of money on these things and chosen our side in the war, is it too much to ask that they simply work?"

From BetaNews

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More Free Blu-ray and HD DVD Movies!

More Free Blu-ray and HD DVD Discs!

Amazon.com is sweetening the pot for anyone who's been thinking about purchasing a high-def disc player. Unfortunately, it hasn't made the decision over which format to go with any easier. As we all know, Sony's Blu-ray format is locked in a knock-down drag- out war with Toshiba's competing HD DVD format, with every week that passes bringing news of one format gaining a lead on the other. In an attempt to win over converts, both camps have recently offered five free movies with the purchase of certain players.

Now, Amazon.com is throwing three more freebies on the pile. From now until September 23, the purchase of a 60GB PS3 gets you three free Blu-ray movies on top of the five Sony is already offering. Go with one of a few select Toshiba HD DVD players instead, and Amazon gifts you three HD DVD discs on top of the five you already get from Toshiba.

As one HD DVD fan exclaimed on a messageboard, it's almost as if they're paying you to buy one of these players. But, like we said, the gettin' is only good until September 23, so consult our guide to Blu-ray and HD DVD, then hurry and make up your mind!

From i4U and Engadget

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'Transformers' and Other Paramount Movies Won't Make It to Blu-ray

Paramount Ditches Blu-ray: Michael Bay None Too Happy

If you're trying to decide between Blu-ray or HD-DVD as your high-definition disc format of choice, you'll have to table that decision a big longer. Just when it seemed as if Blu-ray had HD DVD cornered, along comes this news: Paramount plans to support the HD-DVD format exclusively. This means blockbusters such as 'Transformers' and 'Shrek the Third,' as well as anything from Nikelodeon and MTV (The Hills, for example). will only be playable by those who own HD-DVD players or PCs and Xbox 360s with HD-DVD drives.

Speaking to movie site Ainitcoolnews.com, Paramount gave a host of explanations, including the common cost factor. Not only are HD-DVD players less expensive to consumers, but the format's discs also cost less to make. Converting a standard DVD manufacturing line to produce HD-DVDs is a much simpler undertaking than converting the same line to Blu-ray because HD-DVDs and regular DVDs share the same basic technology (whereas Blu-ray discs are slightly different).

The only exception to the Paramount/HD-DVD exclusivity deal is Steven Spielberg. The man is, and always has been, a huge fan of Blu-ray, so his movies will continue to be released on both formats (because when you're Steven Spielberg you can do anything you want).

Meanwhile, 'Transformers'-director Michael Bay has been vocal about his opposition to the decision and seems to be hoping to score a deal similar to Spielberg's. Bay, who also directed 'Bad Boys,' 'Armageddon,' and 'Pearl Harbor,' among other action-packed movies, posted on his personal blog some not so friendly words for his employer. In the post, titled 'Paramount Pisses Me Off,' Bay lashes out and threatens the studio's pocket books -- "No Transformers 2 for me!"

Every time you think one camp has this thing locked up, everything gets even more interesting.

If you want to know more about these competing formats, check out the brief Switched guide to the pros and cons of HD-DVD and Blu-ray.

From AOL News

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Audio/Video

Target Selling Blu-Ray Instead of HD-DVD

Target Sells Blu-Ray
Still waiting to figure out what high-def DVD format you want to buy? Confused by all the rhetoric? Well, Target just made things a lot easier for you, as they decided to only sell Blu-Ray players in their stores. That's right, you will no longer be able to buy HD-DVD players at Target retail locations. The retail giant will still sell HD-DVD players online and will still carry HD-DVD discs in its stores, but you're out of luck if you want an actual stand-alone HD-DVD player.

Is this a big win for Blu-Ray? Surely it sends a message to shoppers. Couple that with Blockbuster's recent announcement that they will only carry Blu-Ray discs, and you have two huge consumer-facing companies making the choice for you, like it or not.

UPDATE: Seems this was a bit of a miscommunication. Target is still selling HD-DVD after all.

From Engadget

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