Dave, thanks!

v/r
 

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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Dave Crozier
Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2008 9:29 AM
To: 'ProFox Email List'
Subject: RE: [NF] HD format war is over ?


I Quote from the First link:

"The backers of the Blu-ray high definition DVD system are predicting
victory in the format wars with HD DVD.

The two rival camps have divided consumers since the two incompatible
systems were launched.

But Blu-ray supporters are touting the decision by Warner Bros to shift
allegiance as a tipping point.

Andy Parsons, of the Blu-ray Disc Association, said: "It's much clearer
to
consumers now which of the formats is going to prevail."

Speaking at the Consumer Electronics Show, in Las Vegas, he added: "We
still
have a little bit more work to do before we can say the format war is
over."

Howard Stringer, chief executive of Sony, the creators of Blu-ray, was
also
unwilling to declare outright victory.

"I never put up banners that say 'Mission Accomplished'," he said.

In North America, films on Blu-ray disc are outselling those on HD DVD
by
more than two to one.

The Bourne Supremacy on HD DVD and Superman on Blu-ray
The formats have also divided Hollywood film studios

HD DVD, which is backed by Microsoft and Toshiba, now has support from
only
Universal and Paramount among the big film studios.

No-one from the HD DVD promotion group was available for comment after
the
organisation cancelled all press interviews at the show.

"Nobody likes a format war - it's not fun, it's very time consuming and
it
confuses consumers," said Mr Parsons.

The battle between HD DVD and Blu-ray has echoes of the rivalry between
Betamax and VHS in the 1980s.

The cheaper format, VHS, prevailed while 20 years on it seems as though
Blu-ray, the more expensive system, is winning the race.

David Bishop, president of Sony Pictures Entertainment, said the
Warners'
decision was "a great message for consumers".

Mr Bishop said the Blu-ray camp would welcome any move by Universal and
Paramount to shift formats.

"We'd love to have them over and hopefully they will in the short term
so we
can act as a single industry."

Sony has been talking to retailers about the possibility of helping HD
DVD
owners who now wanted to move to Blu-ray.

"We haven't had any meaningful dialogue as yet. But it is something we
have
considered."

Kevin Tsujihara, president of Warner Bros Home Entertainment Group, said
the
decision to back Blu-ray exclusively had been driven by consumers.

He said sales of the studio's movies on Blu-ray were outselling the same
title on HD DVD by three to one.

He said that a disc unveiled by Warner last year at CES which could hold
both formats had been dropped because none of the other studios would
support it.

"As a result retailers would not stock it," he said.


Dave Crozier





[excessive quoting removed by server]

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