Fri Jan 4, 2008 9:11PM EST
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Today Warner Bros. became the latest (and final) studio to pick a side in the high-def DVD battle. Until now, it was the only major studio left that was producing discs using both HD DVD and Blu-ray technology.
Warner Home Entertainment president Kevin Tsujihara spoke to a handful of us tech bloggers today to further explain why WB made the decision it did.
In a nutshell, Tsujihara said that WB had been "monitoring the [high-def] situation closely" and felt it was time to pick a side. The big problem? "Consumer confusion was beginning to happen even with standard-definition DVD," he said. "Both formats were having an impact that caused consumers to say, let's wait a bit to buy anything, even a standard-definition DVD. We were starting to see the worst of all worlds: No one was buying high-def and not buying standard-def either."
The argument that confusion between HD DVD and Blu-ray was causing people not to buy either high-def format has been with us for a while, but this is the first time I've heard anyone make the connection to declining regular DVD sales. It makes sense, though. If you, as a consumer, feel a (real) move to a new standard is imminent, you're not going to buy the old one. Industry-wide, total DVD sales fell 4.5 percent last year, a huge decline that has some insiders nervous.
Tsujihara said that, not including WB's blockbuster "Planet Earth" release, the company had already been selling 60 percent of its high-def titles in Blu-ray format in the U.S. But that figure was 70-plus percent in Europe and 90-plus percent in Japan.
In addressing the oft-rumored "marketing compensation" paid to studios for switching high-def sides (aka payola), Tsujihara laughed and joked that he had heard these rumors too and was anxious to see such a check. "It's not a bidding war," he said. "It's all about what's best strategically for us." That said, he curiously didn't outright state that no payment had been received by Warner for dumping HD DVD. Not that it matters, I suppose. All's fair in love and home video.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Another loss for consumers as the war that has driven down prices comes to a premature end, leaving the industry in the hands of the company that brought us the "triumphs" of the minidisc and UMD, handed the portable music market over to Apple with barely a whimper, bricked a whole lotta computers for the crime of trying to rip their legally purchased CDs and dumped backwards compatibility on low-end PS3's in an effort to force consumers to stop buying PS2 games. Nice.
It may not be immediately apparent to a consumer, but the HD-DVD format is a far better medium for home video programming. It has reached a higher level of maturity, compared to BD, has better support in the development world, and ultimately, has a way better future. Some HD-DVD discs can do SO much more than any BD. BDJ promises to bring more, but I think the current issues need to be ironed out first! We have about seven set top players (all above $350), and they all have major BD compatibility issues! I think BD was the wrong side to pick. The consumer doesn't know what he/she wants - because they can never see the entire picture.
Here we go again. BetaMax vs well-you-know ... Great stuff
This is true. I almost bought a Blu Ray player for Christmas. Decided to wait and glad I did. I don't know if I'll ever feel confident enough to pick a side. Furthermore, I too, am also not buying any std. def dvd's either. I want to get Pirates 2 and 3, but why buy them in std def? Hopefully in the near future this will be ironed out. I can't afford to have both players in my cabinet. We consumers are definetly losing.
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1 Posted by jirojas on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse
That's right Paramount/Dreamworks received incentives for dumping Blu. Now Blu strikes back. If only Universal would jump, then Paramount/DW would be all by itself.