Simon Wyndham
May 20th, 2005, 08:05 AM
WMV on a standard DVD!
Let's face it, if Xbox 360 plays HD WMV files from a standard DVD everybody wins, especially if other DVD manufacturers make HD WMV capable players. Not only will we not have to buy new and expensive burners, but it is easy for manufacturers of commercial DVDs too. After all some films already come with a HD WMV version on another disc.
If other manufacturers made more DVD players that played HD WMV the Blu-Ray vs HD-DVD race would be dead in the water, despite the two formats being capable of much higher bitrate pictures.
Now despite my hesitation regarding the speed of uptake as seen in another thread, if Xbox-360 does put its foot in the door by allowing people to view their existing Imax etc HD WMV versions on their HDTV sets, they may well demand more films this way. Such films will be much cheaper to manufacture, and much cheaper for consumers to purchase than any new HD-DVD or Blu-Ray format. Plus the Xbox 360 will be available long before any truely widespread Blu-Ray or HD-DVD players. Cheaper, more convienient, and allows people like us to make HD versions of our products without buying new burners, or requesting any new expensive replication processes at duplication houses.
As I mentioned, Blu-Ray and HD-DVD will ultimately be capable of much higher quality pictures than a WMV disc. However as we have seen from past experience the highest quality product isn't usually the one that wins out.
Do we actually need Blu-Ray or HD-DVD as the next gen HD film distribution format?
Let's face it, if Xbox 360 plays HD WMV files from a standard DVD everybody wins, especially if other DVD manufacturers make HD WMV capable players. Not only will we not have to buy new and expensive burners, but it is easy for manufacturers of commercial DVDs too. After all some films already come with a HD WMV version on another disc.
If other manufacturers made more DVD players that played HD WMV the Blu-Ray vs HD-DVD race would be dead in the water, despite the two formats being capable of much higher bitrate pictures.
Now despite my hesitation regarding the speed of uptake as seen in another thread, if Xbox-360 does put its foot in the door by allowing people to view their existing Imax etc HD WMV versions on their HDTV sets, they may well demand more films this way. Such films will be much cheaper to manufacture, and much cheaper for consumers to purchase than any new HD-DVD or Blu-Ray format. Plus the Xbox 360 will be available long before any truely widespread Blu-Ray or HD-DVD players. Cheaper, more convienient, and allows people like us to make HD versions of our products without buying new burners, or requesting any new expensive replication processes at duplication houses.
As I mentioned, Blu-Ray and HD-DVD will ultimately be capable of much higher quality pictures than a WMV disc. However as we have seen from past experience the highest quality product isn't usually the one that wins out.
Do we actually need Blu-Ray or HD-DVD as the next gen HD film distribution format?