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Piracy Restrictions Could Stall Next-Gen DVD
by , 3:15 PM EST, March 27th, 2006
The Blu-ray and HD-DVD next-generation DVD formats will start arriving in stores over the next three months, but, in addition to incompatibility between the two, both will require a rare connector, called HDMI, to display the image in full high-definition quality. Movie studios made the move to restrict piracy of their content.
BusinessWeek reporter Cliff Edwards quoted an analyst at the research firm Envisioneering as saying: "It's crazy. The sticker on your new player promises the equivalent of a high-performance car, but the fine print says you may be buying an Edsel instead." Mr. Edwards noted that only 1 in 20 HDTV sets sold over the past few years has an HDMI port, and only 15% of the sets sold this year will have it.
While Sony, 20th Century Fox, Disney, Universal and Paramount won't use the copy protection on movies sold this year, Mr. Edwards referred to sources within Warner Bros. who said that studio will include it on "at least some" of the 20 releases it has scheduled for next month. With the word out among early adopters and consumers in general already confused by the format war, however, Blu-ray and HD-DVD may have to wait and see if the next-generation videogame consoles provide enough incentive to boost the new formats.
Observer Comments
About that 15% number. TMO missed an important detail. The article says only 15% will have HDMI AND be able to display full 1080 resolution. Almost all current HDTV models have HDMI, so the 15% number really doesn't relate to that at all. The 15% comes from the set having a resolution of 1920x1080. This is only now becoming available in a handful of sets. In other words, the author was intentionally being crafty and trying to confuse people into thinking that HDMI is not widely available, whereas it actually has been for at least 2-3 years now.
Of course I don't know how the resolution of the set you bought is the fault of the movie studios. If you buy a 720p set, there isn't much the movie studios can do short of altering the laws of physics to get 1080 vertical pixels on that screen. You don't need a 1080p TV to have HDMI. Thats a pretty basic concept. Does he not understand that (despite the fact that he wrote an article on it) or is he just trying to manipulate his readers into boycotting next-gen DVDs? I wonder what his motivation is. Intentionally trying to trick people isn't a very responsible approach to journalism.
Tue Mar 28, 2006 12:37 am Subject: Re: HDMI: pay more, get less
QuoteHDMI is more complex and less useful than what it replaces.
You've got that exactly wrong--HDMI is simpler than a DVI connection and provides more functionality.
HDMI carries both video and audio in a single cable, unlike a DVI-based connection that requires audio to be carried separately.
http://hdmi.org/consumer/why_hdmi.asp
If you're shopping for any kind of HDTV or home theater equipment, demand HDMI connectivity.
Wed Mar 29, 2006 5:46 am Subject: Agree: HD will fail
My experience is that most people connect their DVD players to their sets using the antenna input, even when composite and S-Video ports are available. I even see this in electronics stores. Only a small number of tech savvy people like us actually understand why this is important. Even when this HDMI connection is available, most people won't know to use it.
I can't imagine trying to teach my mom and dad how to use an HDTV. Just changing the channel is harder. The transition to DTV is going to leave a sizable number of people behind, (maybe 20% of the current viewers) not because they can't afford it, but because it is just too much of a pain to get the thing working.
People watch TV to relax. HD makes TV so complicated that it becomes like a job in itself.
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