So I avoid being a soothsayer, but rather, an echo of what is going down on the frontier. Which brings me to today's subject - the latest format war in the VHS vs. Beta legacy, namely: Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD.
Here's a very condensed version of what is one of the dirtiest and most agitated format wars in history:
Blu-Ray, a format developed by leading company NP Infotech and co-developed by Matsushita, Pioneer, Philips, Thomson, LG Electronics, Hitachi, Sharp, Samsung, and Sony (a collective that named itself the Blu-ray Disc Association as recently as 2004 - all this to say Blu-Ray does NOT=Sony per se), aspired to be the new high-definition playback and storage format for laser-based media.
On the other side of the proverbial laser-based media universe, was Toshiba with HD-DVD.
The shakedown was that Microsoft released an HD-DVD player for the Xbox360 and Sony went with Blu-Ray for its PS3 gaming platform.
Millions of emotionally charged discussion board posts later, Wal-Mart, that proverbial lynch pin of all things mass-marketable, announced it was phasing out HD-DVD and going exclusively with Blu-Ray. Just two nights ago - Valentine's Day, 2008 I said that if Wal-Mart goes with Blu-Ray it's all over.
February 15th, 2008, Engadget, a popular technology blog, thrust itself onto the global stage by boldly announcing the end of HD-DVD based on Wal-Mart's announcement that it was going with Blu-Ray and citing reports from Reuters that Toshiba planned to stop production at its HD-DVD factories and thus the meme percolated throughout the format battleground.
None of this is absolute - however, for those who have been watching from the sidelines, wondering when they can start ordering their high-definition entertainment content from Amazon - you now know which way to hedge your bets.
Two things to ponder:
1) When a format wins, it is not necessarily because it is the superior format
2) When VHS killed Beta, there was no internet community
In the meantime, I am going to enjoy the copious bonus features on my Children of Men HD-DVD from my Xbox360 and wait for the prices of the remaining HD-DVD catalog to plummet so I can get another 350 or so titles that were released in the US for pocket change.
Disclaimer: I am not an advocate of either company or format - I have a Sony Bravia screen and I use Sony Vegas software, while I am inputting this entry on my Toshiba m300 Satellite laptop.
1 comment:
Thanks Keram, always informative and I needed this info. WAs just discussing it with roomie!
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