Technology Lifestyle
Warner Bros to release ‘Total HD’ disc that works in both Blu-ray and HD DVD players | Warner Bros to release ‘Total HD’ disc that works in both Blu-ray and HD DVD players |
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| by Alex Zaharov-Reutt | |
| Thursday, 04 January 2007 | |
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The New York Times reports that Warner Bros is set to release a high-def disc that works in both types of next-gen players, potentially solving the problem of which player to buy. But in the short term it ads yet another disc for retailers to stock. Is it the solution?
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But now Warner Bros, a division of Time Warner, will launch a disc called ‘Total HD’ at the CES, according to CNET and the New York Times. There’s no word on pricing, nor is there any word if the disc is simply two discs cleverly sandwiched together, with one format on the A side, and another format on the B side. This is what happens with those combo CD/DVD discs we’ve often read about and only rarely seen.
It’s also possible that the disc simply has many different layers, with the Blu-ray information in the upper layers near the surface of the disc, as Blu-ray was designed, and the HD DVD players deeper in the disc, as is currently the case with DVD and HD DVD discs. But besides price, and the short term problem of retailers have four different formats in store for a single movie, those being DVD, Blu-ray, HD DVD and the Total HD disc, the other big problem is the studios that are firm Blu-ray backers. If they procrastinate on the topic of putting out Total HD discs, thus releasing movies in both formats, the format war will continue for longer, and will put HD DVD at a disadvantage. Companies like Disney and Fox are firm Blu-ray backers that consider the non-release of HD DVD content to be good for helping the industry decide on Blu-ray as the winning format. So, we’ve got LG and potentially other companies about to release dual-deck players at CES, and a new Total HD disc that could also solve the problem, if only everyone co-operates. Of course, if we had this co-operation to begin with, mother wouldn’t have needed all of this necessity to come up with inventions that solve the problems the manufacturers couldn’t solve in the first place.
The farce that is two competing movie formats at war may well be over by the end of 2007. We can only hope! |
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