Other shoe drops: Warner joins Blu-ray Disc Association
As expected, Warner Bros. yesterday announced they were going to release movies not only on HD-DVD as they had previously stated, but also on the Blu-ray format. This being so far after it was originally announced it's sort of anti-climactic, but there were a couple interesting things. In this article from VideoBusiness, in one section it mentions in one section that Warner was holding out for safeguards against unauthorized copying, then at the end of the piece states that Warner wanted the BDA to move in the direction suggested by HP, as far as adopting managed copy and iHD. My question is, what exactly was Warner asking for, some unknown set of copy protection above and beyond what has already been listed, the same thing HP is now pursuing, or what?
Were their demands even met, whatever they were, or will they be? I guess we will see in the coming weeks and months.
Another quote mentioned from an unnamed studio exec says Sony won't be able to deliver on what it has promised for another two years regarding Blu-ray. Is this in reference to their PS3 launch, which is a big part of their Blu-ray push? Or is this alluding to the same thing Microsoft claimed, that Blu-ray's 50gb capacity is not ready for prime time?
As usual, things keep getting murkier.
[Via HDBlog and Engadget]




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Henning Hoffmann @ Oct 21st 2005 9:00AM
The two biggest pieces of FUD Microsoft has been promoting lately are a 2007 European PS3 launch and the lack of 50GB Blu-ray. The former may actually end up happening, but there is no evidence for it (ie, Microsoft made it up). The latter, well Sony and others have said that dual layer Blu-ray will be part of the format's launch (ie, Microsoft made it up). So Sony'd look pretty stupid if they launched with 25GB, especially compared to HD-DVD's 30GB.
Richard Lawler @ Oct 21st 2005 12:14PM
The only thing is, PS3 really doesn't fit the profile laid out by the unnamed executive. Of course there are other things like price, or amount of production, but it's a decent bit of intrigue.