Bring Out Yer Dead?
Feb
14
Written by:
Jeremy Glowacki
2/14/2008 4:00 PM
After CES, where a Warner Brothers
announcement
had put Blu-ray supporters in the catbird seat, it seemed that the HD
DVD camp was like the not-dead character in Monty Python and the Holy
Grail. "I'm Not Dead!" HD DVD supporters like Toshiba seemed to be
saying as they lowered retail prices and spent big bucks on a Super Bowl
commercial promoting the technology that seemed already doomed. Now an official
press release from Toshiba says that the manufacturer is pulling the plug on the technology. This news comes on the heels of
announcements from Netflix, Blockbuster, and Wal-Mart that they were throwing their support behind the format.
As
Michael Heiss wrote this month in
Residential Systems magazine, format battles in the
consumer electronics business don't always end up with a clear-cut
winner, but this one will. Blu-ray looks like Mohammed Ali to
HD-DVD's Sonny Liston. I think it will be Blu-ray lighting the torch at
Olympic games of the future, while HD DVD finds itself greeting
Milwaukee tourists at Caesar's Palace's front door.
I've always believed that competition is a good thing in any market. For instance, the missile race, I mean,
customer
race between XM and Sirius satellite radio only led to better deals for
consumers and bigger paychecks for on-air celebrities. Eventually those
two camps will be combined into one, but I'm sure my brothers will
continue to receive the service for free because they were lost in the
shuffle of a "format" war. In the case of HD DVD vs. Blu-ray, however,
I don't think the attraction is quite as high for the basic
"blue-laser" technology in the first place. Most consumers still don't
understand the difference between HD and Digital, so will be uninspired
by the prospect of another expensive disk format. A format war will
only dilute what would be a modest sales opporunity anyway.
Face it, average consumers love their DVD libraries, and probably don't
want to start another collection with boxes that don't match the size
of the ones they already own. On the high-end that the custom
installation channel serves, Blu-ray will do quite well, because
professional integrators will promote it. Wealthy consumers always want
the best, and that will be Blu-ray.
While I'm quite happy with the way my 2.35:1 DVDs look upscaled through my amazing 1080p
Runco
1100 RS Ultra with AutoScope, I know they will never look as good as
they could in their native aspect ratio via a Blu-ray player. The
average consumer, on the other hand, doesn't really get it and probably
never will.
The Toshiba decision is a huge victory for the Blu-ray camp and likely
the final nail in the coffin for HD-DVD, but it remains to be seen if
it makes that big of an impact in the consumer world, relatively
speaking.