The DVD HD “format war” appears to be effectively over, now that Warners has chosen to go exclusively Blu-Ray. That means that 70% of the studios have gone with Blu-Ray exclusively, and 30% with HD-DVD, who will no doubt bow to pressure and follow suit.
This seems to have been motivated by sales figures for Blu-Ray products showing them as being consistently better sellers all through 2007.
Did anyone here choose HD-DVD? What will this mean for those who gambled on the losing format?
I work in retail and have been predicting the Combo-player would eventually win out, with a chance of BluRay winning it alone. Looks like it’s still up in the air.
The porn industry has chosen streaming videos over the internet.
I note that amazon has some blu ray players for around $250. That is getting low enough in price to start thinking about getting such a device. I will probably resist the whole HDTV thing until time warner starts acting reasonable about supporting cable cards.
Yeah, I have this sneaking suspicion that this is some interim technology, like the Super CD, DVD-Audio, or the Mini-disc, and neither will emerge the winner in the general marketplace.
The porn industry hasn’t really chosen any HD - most of the companies have realised that HD seems to show more detail than they care to share, and some audiences find it kind of off-putting. I think they’ll stick with Standard Def and online streaming for a while yet.
I’ve been delaying my choice between the two as I’ve delayed my choice on a new console - 360 or PS3. This makes the choice harder (I lean towards the 360 because of the far, far better lineup in games), though.
MS and Toshiba will fight for HDDVD to the very bitter end and they’re not above buying studio support. I imagine there will continue to be shifting loyalties as various studios play the Bluray and HDDVD lobbies against each other. I certainly don’t see a clear winner emerging this year or even the year after.
FTR, I have a Samsung BDP-1200 Bluray player, but only because it came free with the purchase of my Samsung LCD HDTV. I would never have bought either of the two formats at their current price points. Despite that, I must say that “Planet Earth” is freaking amazing in HD!
Considering that I don’t think that either format is anything more than the modern equivalent of the laser disc, I’d say I’ve chosen wisely by avoiding both formats.
Actually, I agree. I’m annoyed that I will need to both buy all new equipment, and re-buy my favourite movies, to get the benefits - and yet the end result is only better image quality; No improvement in story, or acting. What’s the big deal? I need more than that to make it worth it.
I’ll wait till it’s the default standard and unavoidable. By then, though, there’ll probably be a new development, so I may end up bypassing this level of HD altogether.
The key is the consumers. If most studios are exclusively on Blu-Ray, and most consumers are choosing Blu-Ray, then HD-DVD will surely inevitably (and perhaps rapidly) die.
Of course you’re right, and that’s where the endgame will be. I’m just not sure that it’s as close as you seem to think.
By products do you mean players, discs or a combination of both? I’ve heard that Bluray’s lead in player sales has been skewed by the PS3 which, while technically a Bluray player, is not the main reason people are buying them.
Regardless, both the HDDVD and Bluray sides are deeply entrenched at this point and neither one of them are going to budge without a fight. Even if HDDVD is ultimately doomed, the death throes will be drawn out.
I bought a 360, but not for the HD-DVD support. I just want to play some games, dammit. I haven’t bothered buying any HD movies - watching movies on a console is a pain in the ass anyway.