borghe said:ok.. this is really annoying.
I just posted you the minutes of DVD Forum Steering Committee Meeting for 9/22/04.
It was the 27th meeting of the committee.
In it it said stuff like
HD-DVD is being drafted and created by the DVD-Forum. The same members, AS EVIDENCED BY THE MEETING MINUTES (if you would read them) are working on HD-DVD as worked on DVD. It is one and the same.
This is true, and even if every output on every part of the system is digital, and protected, there will always be an analogue version to rip at the end of the line somewhere.borghe said:DRM will be meaningless on either format..
if you have ROM media in your possession that can't be altered, it can have DRM stripped from it and turned into home media. there hasn't been a drm created yet that hasn't been hacked.
DRM will be meaningless on either format..
if you have ROM media in your possession that can't be altered, it can have DRM stripped from it and turned into home media. there hasn't been a drm created yet that hasn't been hacked.
HD-DVD is being drafted and created by the DVD Forum and its members. Blue-ray, which is NOT HD-DVD, is being drafted and created by the Blue-ray Group and its members.sonycowboy said:So, are these members working on HD-DVD (the opponent of Blu-Ray, not the next generation "generic" High Definition DVD)?
Hitachi, Ltd.
LG Electronics Inc.
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.
Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
Pioneer Corporation
Royal Philips Electronics
Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
Sharp Corporation
Sony Corporation
TDK Corporation
Thomson Multimedia
We're probably splitting hairs here, but I think you're confusing the role of the DVD forum with the role of the technology presenters. They are both using the term "HD DVD" but they aren't talking about the same thing. If Blu-Ray is accepted, it would also be referred to as "HD DVD" by many.
one only has to look at history.... the only copy protection that has ever worked was the record LP. because their was physically no way to copy it until tape recorders became affordable decades later.gollumsluvslave said:if DRM was meaningless, studios and companies wouldn't be putting so much research dollars into it. It will hold sway with the studios, who will look at the idea that average joe bloggs, who might normally 'copy' a CD, will not find it worth the hassle of getting by strong DRM.
Obviously hacker groups that release movies and such will get past it eventually, but it's still a factor. The vast majority of piracy is still done by the average consumer. (P2P figures still only average under 12% penetration - UK was 7% last year)
Of course due to AACS LA - http://www.aacsla.com it's entirely possible that HD-DVD and Blu-ray will utilise the same DRM - it's looking increasingly likely that this will happen.
DRM is pointless.. it will only protect the media in the early adopter days.. but once it hits mass market unquestionably the DRM will already be broken by then and copying the movies will be as trivial as copying DVDs is now.
borghe said:Macrovision = hacked
CSS = hacked
iTunes = hacked
MS DRM = hacked
PSX/PS2 = hacked
XBox = hacked
GCN = hacked
8/16-bit consoles = hacked
DVDAudio = hacked
see where I am going.. it might not be hacked at launch (DVD wasn't), but within a relatively short time, it will be hacked. no matter how many millions of dollars companies sink into this stuff, it just can't compete with the billions of relative dollars in time that hackers are willing or able to sink into it.
and I remember when DeCSS first hit.. man.. what a pain. First you would have to run DeCSS to break CSS and copy the files down, and by that time most movies were RDSL meaning you would have to strip special features and/or recompress the movie, and then burn it off to a $400 burner with $5 media.. all when you could just pick the movie up on first week for $18.
and then what happened. people started creating programs where you click a button and it does everything I just wrote.. and media dropped to 40¢ a disc.
DRM is pointless.. it will only protect the media in the early adopter days.. but once it hits mass market unquestionably the DRM will already be broken by then and copying the movies will be as trivial as copying DVDs is now.
Doesn't matter if you think DRM is pointless, borghe. Studios want it and its partially driving the move towards a next gen format.
garrickk said:Don't PS2 discs have something like this? I would think for next generation media it would be the bare minimum required - at least at launch.
Agent Icebeezy said:I've always thought Sony kinda left it alone for installed base. PS1 or PS2 disc can be copied with any program. Stick an Xbox disc in your PC drive and you see a few Jpegs or TXT files, depending on the game
Oh dear. 1080p is precisely twice the resolution of 1080i. It has twice the number of dots per field. 1920x1080, 60 times per second. 1080i is 1920x540, 60 times per second.1080p is effectively the same picture as 1080i only without interlace artifacts.
yes and no.. it is twice the resolution in an individual field, but the human eye is only capable of a detecting a temporal resolution of about 15-20 flashes per second. anything beyond that is perceived as solid light. this comes into play with interlaced vs. progressive that basically we see a 1080i picture as 1920x1080, not 1920x540, because the screen is updating both fields at a rate faster than our eyes can register. So we see a 1080i frame as 1920x1080 and a 1080p frame as 1920x1080, where is the dramatic resolution increase? Look up temporal resolution, visual acuity, etc.mrklaw said:Oh dear. 1080p is precisely twice the resolution of 1080i. It has twice the number of dots per field. 1920x1080, 60 times per second. 1080i is 1920x540, 60 times per second.
is it possible to agree with something 1000%? if it is, that's how much I agree with this.. and I bag on sony so much because this is now the second time they have done this... they have a perfect example sitting in front of them on what segmenting the market can do for a new format, and here they are at it again... thanks sony. first you killed of high-res audio, and now you are killing off HD home video... :\mrklaw said:If they carry on like this, it'll be SACD Vs DVD-Audio all over again. Result? - noone gives a shit about either format.
jedimike said:For development needs, Blu-Ray and HD-DVD are overkill. DVD9 would still be medium of choice to put games on. The only reason to have Blu-Ray or HD-DVD is strictly for movie playback. Since they are backwards compatable, that wouldn't be an issue.
garrickk said:borghe, you make a lot of great points. And, we would have a new high-resolution format sooner if everyone was on the same page.
That said, I'm very happy that there are two competing formats. I consider format competition every bit as important as content competition.
They'll compete (or already did) on everything from codecs supported, manufacturing efficiencey, possibly lower licensing fees (to the hardware manufacturers most importantly than media manufacturers), packaging, data storage techniques, minimum data transfer speeds, maybe pushing re-writeable media for PC's sooner, menu/media control standards, customer DRM flexibility, etc.
Let them fight it all out. Customers may have to wait longer, or may get screwed in the process, or have to buy multiple players. But, I'll always take my chances with at least SOME competition anyway.
Then, if one format is losing very badly, maybe it will be cracked wide open and becomes as easy to manipulate and generate my own content for as DVD. Should be interesting.
mrklaw said:And I personally think hidef audio failed mostly due to lack of interest from a public happy with CDs. They already deliver all the convenience, and enough quality for most people.
Blue-Ray will end up with Sony and MGM on it, and that's it.
1995, actually, and it specifically says in the forum's mission and charter that "Forum Members are not required to support the DVD Format to the exclusion of other formats."borghe said:The DVD Forum was formed, I believe, 11 years ago (1993). It was created to standardize on a then next-generation format to deliver pre-recorded audio and video to the home. Sony was a part of this forum and was a part of the development of the technology and standards.
The act of pursuing a separate format is not in and of itself the cause of either format's failure. We all know that Sony has been at the losing end of format wars before, failing to take the competing format down with them. Sony didn't sabotage DVD-Audio, the rest of the forum failed to make the case for DVD-A to consumers and the rest of the industry.So the DVD Forum gets DVD-Video and DVD-ROM out the door and moves on to their next project.. DVD-Audio. Well, Sony comes along and develops SACD DESPITE the fact that the DVD Forum had already begun work on DVD-Audio slightly before Sony went to work on SACD.
Source? From what I've seen, Sony and partners have work on blue-laser media dating back at least to 1999 and I'm pretty sure the DVD Forum's working group for blue-laser (WG-11) wasn't formed until 2002.And it is the same thing here. Sony is going ahead and working on Blue-ray despite the fact that the DVD Forum had begun drafting HD-DVD since before Blue-ray was on the drawing boards.
You make it sound like the DVD Forum is just Sony's plaything, helpless and impotent to stop Sony from having their way, in which case I think you have explanation as to why Sony stays on the ForumMy question is, why is Sony even on the DVD Forum anymore? All they do is either get their partners from SACD or Blue-ray to vote no or abstain from votes on most resolutions, they contribute absolutely nothing to the progress of the various technologies, and go ahead and work on creating the own technology.
No, I asked why you weren't like this with Toshiba and NEC, who opted to create a seperate blue laser disc format rather than work with the BRD founders, thus setting the stage for segmentation.So you ask why am I not like this with the DVD Forum?
I'll believe the HDTV hype when I see it. HDTV has been much ballyhooed since before the PS2 launched. It's still got jackshit for a userbase. 10-15M HDTVs? Fucking pipedream IMO. But even then, that's nothing, nothing at all. There were that many DVD players on the market before the PS2 hit, and it's not like DVD had officially taken off yet, right? HDTV's so much more expensive, and has so much ground to make up that it'll be a nonfactor for some time. The prices really haven't dropped yet, and I'd like to believe you need more than 10-15M before you start to see devices hitting mass market prices. But then, I've been skeptical of HDTV since the consortium decided to ignore Microsoft's demands for convergence with the PC market. IIRC, MS had some interesting suggestions that would have allowed PC and TV display technology to merge for the next gen, but they got shot down on most of it. Hence, 1080i. Damned interlacing needs to go.borghe said:HDTV has hit the mass market.. there will be more HDTVs sold this year than the past 3 years combined. It is expected that there will be more HDTVs sold in December and January than were sold in total last year. Some 10-15 million people will own HDTVs by the time the Superbowl airs, and thanks to inroads in cable and cheaper satellite STBs, the majority of those 10-15 million TVs will be used to view HDTV signals from local and cable channels.
That being said, HDTV has finally gotten here. In May of next year all stations will have their STAs altered and will be required to transmit at at least 50% power and cover their entire grade A contour (instead of their current requirement which is just city of license) and at least 50% of their grade b contour. top that off with the february/march deadline of being required to properly map channels to their analog station numbers (looking at you weigel) AND send out guide data over PSIP, and HDTV will be here big time next year.
MY point with that is, people will want HDTV, and DVD manufacturers and sales associates have been very careful to NOT call pro-scan DVD players HD... People know that the only way to watch HDTV right now is over cable/satellite/local. They WILL want a video format to take advantage of their new TVs.. They are ready for HD-DVD/BR
Unfortunately I still think it will lead to confusion. Like I said, the only way I see myself as being wrong is if CE manufacturers work OUT OF THE GATE at building universal players and at the end of the day it won't matter which format you pickup. That would prevent confusion. But by releasing two different formats and requiring two different players, and with presumably some studios not supporting some formats (Warner != BR, Sony/MGM != HD-DVD) it will polarize the market even worse.
Like I said, I don't hate Sony or Blue-ray.. I just wish that the BRD members would have worked harder with the DVD Forum to develop ONE next-gen video standard... because history indicates that two simultaneous standards will just confuse and ultimately obstruct acceptance.
Except for the fact that we are already there.. The rest will be filled out between now and the superbowl.. and those are conservative analysis.Pimpwerx said:I'll believe the HDTV hype when I see it. HDTV has been much ballyhooed since before the PS2 launched. It's still got jackshit for a userbase. 10-15M HDTVs? Fucking pipedream IMO.
3,725,206 And DVD was qualified as a roaring success since mid-1998.But even then, that's nothing, nothing at all. There were that many DVD players on the market before the PS2 hit, and it's not like DVD had officially taken off yet, right?
You can get an RPTV HDTV for under $999, and you can get a direct view HDTV for under $600. HDTV prices are now as low as regular TV prices were 3-5 years ago.HDTV's so much more expensive, and has so much ground to make up that it'll be a nonfactor for some time. The prices really haven't dropped yet,
Well, apparently you are wrong, because you can pick up a 42" HDTV for $999 and a 30" one for $699.and I'd like to believe you need more than 10-15M before you start to see devices hitting mass market prices.
Have you seen pricing on 1080p displays? Even now pricing still remains usually $4000+ on these displays, and that is 7 years after the first HDTV sets went on sale. 1080i allows for better compression in the limited 6MHz spectrum and allows for manufacturers to only have to create displays with 540 active scanlines while still giving an effective 2megapixel image.But then, I've been skeptical of HDTV since the consortium decided to ignore Microsoft's demands for convergence with the PC market. IIRC, MS had some interesting suggestions that would have allowed PC and TV display technology to merge for the next gen, but they got shot down on most of it. Hence, 1080i. Damned interlacing needs to go.PEACE.
According to stats from DVD Exclusive, Sony and MGM had a combined 19% of the DVD market through October, while Par, U and WB accounted for 41%