| 32-bit Vista support for Blu-ray, HD DVD still unclear |
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| by Stan Beer | |
| Friday, 25 August 2006 | |
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The statement made by senior program manager Steve Riley at Tech.Ed 2006 basically said that high definition video playback requires Microsoft-approved signed drivers, which are mandatory in 64-bit Vista but not in 32-bit Vista. According to Microsoft, however, Riley was wrong and the decision to allow high definition play back on 32-bit Vista lays with third party software vendors who decide whether content will play on a particular platform. The bottom line, however, appears to be that commercial studios will not allow their movies and other video content to play on 32-bit Vista in order to ensure that content protection is enforced. On 32-bit Vista, with unsigned drivers, there is no way way to enforce content protection. The majority of PCs are still powered by 32-bit processors. Intel has just released the 64-bit Core 2 Duo processor in the past month. So if commercial studios will not allow high definition movies to run on 32-bit Vista, which will be running on the majority of PCs with 32-bit processors for the next year or two, what other high definition content on Vista will there be to watch? {moscomment} |
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