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Gates Predicts DVD Obsolete In 10 Years 668

An anonymous reader writes "Not to say that Mr. Gates has been wrong before (sarcasm), but now he is claiming that DVDs will be obsolete in 10 years. As this post claims, I would have to disagree with the world's richest man and say that compact disk media is here to stay for a while because there is just no substitute for a media that cost cents." (And since SMH is going registration only, thanks to the anonymous reader who points out two non-registration sites -- FlexBeta and Yahoo! -- to read the same wire story, and for the observation that not all of Gates' predictions pan out.)
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Gates Predicts DVD Obsolete In 10 Years

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  • Video on demand? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jawtheshark ( 198669 ) * <slashdot@nosPAm.jawtheshark.com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:20AM (#9695871) Homepage Journal
    It's nearly what he describes, well that plus a few automations (like the system knows what you like etc...) Uhm, I have news for Mr Gates: Video on demand has been the "next big thing" for at least the last 10 years.

    I still don't have it... The first question I think you should ask yourself is "Is there demand for such a technology", if not, ask yourself the following question "Can I create demand for such a technology". If both questions can be answered with a "No", which I think is the case for video on demand, then trash the idea... Nobody seems to want video on demand, and nobody managed to create a market for it.

    • Re:Video on demand? (Score:5, Informative)

      by krisp ( 59093 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:26AM (#9695941) Homepage
      Actually video on demand is everywhere digital cable or DirecTV or Dish Network is. With Time Warner I just surf to channel 600, buy a showing of some movie, and there it is, on demand, on my tv screen. No, this isn't done over the internet, but it does exist.
      • Re:Video on demand? (Score:3, Informative)

        by LetterJ ( 3524 )
        But that's not really on demand (despite the marketing). On Dish (what I've got), those channels are just restricted channels that show the same movie 24 hours a day. You still have to start watching them at the time they start. Granted, it's fairly convenient that the same movie starts every half hour or so on one or more channels, but it's still not on demand.

        Real video on demand is the ability to choose any movie from a library like Netflix has and start watching it at the exact moment I want to. Or, fo
        • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:56AM (#9696264)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:Video on demand? (Score:3, Interesting)

          by kantai ( 719870 )
          "On Demand" with Comcast Digital Cable works that way. Most of the stuff is free too. Only problem is that it is a compressed digital video, and the pixels are easily recognizable ( probably as good looking as normal cable, but not as good as most digital or HD )
        • Re:Video on demand? (Score:5, Informative)

          by That's Unpossible! ( 722232 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:09AM (#9696412)
          But that's not really on demand (despite the marketing).

          Yes, it is. I've got this technology as well with BrightHouse (aka Time Warner in Orlando).

          They have channels that are actually interactive, and you scroll through a list of movies, start the movie, and you have 12-24 hours to watch it, pause it, rewind it, etc. very cool. I'm a geek, and I still wonder how the hell they have the bandwidth to do all these channels, plus all the HD channels they have, plus my fast cable modem (3.5mbps down).
        • Re:Video on demand? (Score:5, Informative)

          by macthulhu ( 603399 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:20AM (#9696510)
          I should start by saying that I work for the Deathstar... err... Time Warner Cable. I can't really speak about the competitors' products, but our VOD is not like the traditional pay-per-view. We still have a pile of channels with the same movie all day that start at half hour intervals, but that isn't VOD. For VOD, we add a few movies a week, you can start them at any time, fast forward/rewind, and you can watch it as many times as you like in a 24 hour period. Believe me, nobody thinks less of the service we provide than I do, but the VOD rollout has worked exactly as advertised. There are two additional "features" that don't make it into the marketing materials... One, VOD movies don't seem to freeze up or pixelate as often as the normal digital channels. And two, the catalog of movies only grows. It started with maybe a dozen movies, and everything that's been added since we launched it is still there. It's still not the volume you'd find at CockBuster, but it's growing. And, surprisingly, it's not all huge megabudget movies, there are quite few foreign films and indies, plus older movies available for a cheaper price than the new releases. The older movies seem to be added according to theme or actor... 80's "classics", or additional movies starring somebody who's in one of the new releases, etc. Between cable prices, Roadrunner prices/performance, network programming, etc... It's the only service we offer that I don't hear too many people bitching about. The OnDemand channels from HBO, Showtime, TMC, and Skinemax are great for catching things that are in the current lineup, particularly any of their original stuff... But I agree that the volume is somewhat limited. Personally, I wish we would ditch the VOIP effort and worry about making the stuff we already sell better... But, I'm just the brooding graphics guy that sits in the dimly lit cave with loud scary music... so I doubt they'll be asking me what I think any time soon.
          • Re:Video on demand? (Score:5, Interesting)

            by peragrin ( 659227 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:36AM (#9696661)
            Sorry gonna have to correct you.

            Time Warner's Library is increasing in size, but not all movies that have been in the system are still there.

            Time Warner's system gets bigger, but not all movies are around. There have been movies that I wanted to watch but was to lat and they were pulled.

            On the other hand, Time Warner does always have a large selection of movies you could watch, including old classics for 1.95(Blazing Saddles anyone?)
        • by tomhudson ( 43916 )
          You're right - what the companies sell you (video on demand) is limited to what they want to show you.

          but we already have what was said in the story:

          Gates' vision of television of the future was: "TV that will simply show what we want to see, when we want to see it.
          It just goes under another name ... bittorrent. That's my video-on-demand.
      • Re:Video on demand? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by RetiredMidn ( 441788 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:36AM (#9696668) Homepage
        Given his position (as opposed to his actual track record), I would expect better ideas from Bill.

        Yeah, video on demand is here, but IMHO, it's a step down. I'm using Comcast's service; the choice is limited, and the interface is clumsy (few features, not very responsive.

        To me, the math is simple: local storage will always have an advantage over real-time transmission from a central repository, especially as the demand on bandwidth grows. The notion of the network delivering increasingly high-quality content in real time to every possible endpoint is absurd; the cost of the infrastructure to support the bandwidth will be prohibitive.

        Which is not to say that Blockbuster and/or Netflix are the last words in media delivery.

        Here's my proposal: blend DVR's with near-real-time delivery. Very little media has to be delivered in real time: sporting events, breaking news, maybe (God help us) those final climactic moments on reality shows. Almost everything else could be moved to a subscription model.

        Watch "Star Trek" or "24"? Subscribe to the series, and new episodes are delivered to and stored on your set-top as they become available; maybe you get a discount if you're willing to receive the content some time after it's initially available. That's pretty much what I do with my DVR now; I rarely watch a show in real-time, even if I choose to watch it the same day it's broadcast.

        Want to watch a movie? Is it such an inconvenience to decide that you're going to want to see a movie this weekend, and queue it up slightly in advance? For those willing to plan ahead, the content providers can balance the load (think Bit Torrent with DRM [sorry]) and preserve bandwidth. The latency doesn't even have to be the total download time; we can already start to view content (streaming media or DVR'd television) before the transmission is complete.

        For the really impulsive, the system can be designed to (try to) meet your needs immediately, but genuine "on demand" consumption of a lot of bandwidth is likely to come at additional cost.

        It's really the end of the network model (i.e., it would be possible to subscribe to a TV series (or a movie, or a concert, etc.) directly from the producer, without suffering the whims of network schedulers), but that handwriting has been on the wall for a while now.

        Oh, getting back on topic: there is a place in all this for those silver discs (or their 2014 equivalent) to save stuff we really care about and free up the hard drive space (or its 2014 equivalent) inside the DVR (or its 2014 equivalent).

        Bill has never been one to think outside the box, but I think his box is getting smaller lately...

        • Re:Video on demand? (Score:3, Interesting)

          by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

          You need about 1.2MB/sec peak to deliver the content on a DVD. With a ~15MBps connection you could just stream from the VOBs. You'd need a little bit of buffering, but not very much, assuming you had a good solid connection. 1.5Mbps is the standard and many people have 3Mbps or more (in my area, comcast cable is 4Mbps, and I've actually had speeds which max that out in real life, too, when downloading from multiple sites.)

          Delivering a lower-bitrate stream at a lower resolution, like say SVCD resolution,

          • I appreciate that high bandwidth is becoming available at a pretty good clip; I enjoy a 3Mbps connection from Comcast right now. But I question whether they have what it takes to deliver a sustained 3Mbps for two hours now. I'm working at home today, browsing my employer's internal Wiki through a VPN connection, and it's great. OTOH, my connection dropped about an hour ago, and it took me 5-10 minutes to notice because the connection was idle while I read downloaded content.

            10Mbps for $100/month sounds

    • I don't know the average video on demand prices, but I'd say once VoD starts pushing HD sources, assuming it's still cheaper than a rental, and further assuming HD has actually taken off by then, it will have a market. Until then, renting a DVD may require you to go into the big bad outdoors and drive to the local rental chain, but realistically it's not that big of a hassle, and this doesn't even take things like NetFlix into account, which is either far cheaper or more expensive depending on how quickly
      • by poptones ( 653660 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:11AM (#9696437) Journal
        I live WAY out in the sticks and even then the rental outlet has ass for selection. But right now I have "in the pipe" the Russian arthouse film "The Russian Ark," part of season 1 of "Space:1999" and "Solaris" (the original Russian version, not the fucked up hollywood remake). My subscription is 22 bucks a month and everything is delivered right to my door on DVD.

        But this really has little to do with the topic, which is about DVDs becoming obsolete. Consider this: 802.11x in my area is nearly useless as a community service because there are so many trees and such high humidity. And we STILL have no cable and likely never will, and even if they put a dslam in the local phone box most of the "town" is still too far away to make use of it. But the FCC is plodding ahead with plans to usurp the vhf analog tv band and are talking very seriously about giving some of that bandwidth over to local wireless services. That means even out here in nowhereland wireless media distribution becomes practical. All we need are devices to make VOD as easy to sue as the present day tv remotes and most of the community will never worry about those oddball services like netflix (which will evolve their marketing to providing quality rather than just selection) - because everyone will have "on demand" braindead action movies and tv sitcoms and all the crap they have now. Granted it'll be compressed to hell but, given the zeal of directv viewers who insist their picture is "just as good as dvd," most don't seem to have a problem with that now.

        I would say that, if the FCC moves ahead with providing more lower frequency bandwidth to "wireless broadband" then predictions of DVD obsolescence are pretty much spot-on. In ten years "DVDs" won't be "DVDs" anymore they'll probably be some god forsaken "Windows Media" formatted disc (aka "WMDs") and most of us will have available to our homes "VOD" of the (shit) quality now enjoyed by all those digital cable and directv subscribers.

  • Not Quite. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    No maybe if Billy G said 20 years I would have taken him more seriously. By that time advances in storage due to nanotechnology should be widely available. I'd expect to see low cost devices similar today's USB Memory Keys, but with terabytes of storage. An advance like that will start to displace DVDs/CDs.
  • Nah! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Tomahawk ( 1343 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:20AM (#9695874) Homepage
    DVDs will be as obselete as PlaystationOne games are now, in that the PS2 will still play the PS1 games, and you can still purchase a PS1 to play these games.

    There will be new formats available, so I'm sure in 10 years time we'll all be watching HDVD, or some other similar but greatly enhanced format, but the players will still play DVDs (in the same way that DVD players today still play VideoCD).

    The physical format won't change (210mm diameter, 21mm diameter hole, 2.1mm thick), but what can be held on a disk that size will change. DVD is 2 layers, but we have already seen that someone has managed to get 15 layers, and that was 2 years ago.

    So, we will have something better, but we will still be able to use our DVDs for a long time yet.

    T.
    • Re:Nah! (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Gates predicts the DVD will be obsolete because:

      It currently uses a stupid type of DRM that was easily broken. The new Microsoft DVD standard will come with Trusted Computing pay-per-view encryption up the arse. They won't make the same mistake again.

    • Re:Nah! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Schrambo ( 737251 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:40AM (#9696097) Homepage
      So true. Its the same thing with Audio CDs. There are numerous other formats of audio media avalable such as MiniDisc, DVDA, SACD yet the same ol classic 44.1khz sampling late 70's technology still exists to be the primal choice of audio medium. This also could be the same thing with DVD till HDTV actually becomes mainstream and affordable enough for people who wish keep their two kidneys.

      VHS is still alive and kicking, sales may be down against DVD but the demand for VCRs and its cassets are still profitable enough to produce.
    • No kidding.... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SerpentMage ( 13390 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:53AM (#9696238)
      I read the article and it seemed to me the quotes of a man who has lost contact to reality.

      Sure if I have a billion dollars in the bank can I have information whenever, where ever I want it. However, I am about a billion dollars short and as such have to stick to cheaper things. Namely DVD's on special or the Movie Channels.

      Also what Mr Gates is forgetting YET AGAIN, is that I like to own my own data or movies.

      I am also amazed at his prediction that TV's and computer's will know what I want to see. Especially since often I have no idea what I want to watch and make a habit of channel surfing.

      An individual who has too much money and time on his hands....
    • The physical format WILL change! As Im sure there are plenty of moro^?^?^?^?people out there that go out and buy DVD's and try to play them in their car's cd player or old home stereo deck and wonder why it doesnt work. Keeping the same size media for another video format will only confuse people more. "Is the disc Im holding a CD, DVD, HDVD, BlueRay DVD, playstation/PS2 disc, XBox disc? Can my CD/DVD/8track play it?".

      Seriously though, as for what it will be, I forsee a return to the Laserdisc format! Ima

  • by garcia ( 6573 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:21AM (#9695878)
    From this [theinquirer.net] article:
    Here the crystal ball clouded over due to a blue screen of death. Bill's predictions and his crystal balls can be a little inaccurate. He once said that there was no future in that little networking novelty called the Internet.

    Yeah, and he also said we wouldn't need more than 640k but in this case I believe he is at least partially correct. It may not be in 10 years or less but scratchable media needs to go away. We need something that can handle a large amount of data and remain nearly indestructible.

    I have probably screwed up 90% of my CD collection over the years. I now just keep most of the music that I really want to save as SHN's on my computer. At least that way I can recreate the CDs as necessary. While I take very good care of my DVD collection (burned or otherwise) I can still see problems occurring due to drops, accidental scratching, etc. I moved most of my music collection to CD in the late 90s and gave away my tape entire tape collection in 2002. What happens when that media goes south (and we have had how many stories predicting that it won't last forever)? I'm screwed basically.

    Gates' idea, while nice for corporations that would control the media, wouldn't be so great for the consumers. The RIAA/MPAA would just LOVE to control and watch how many times you watch/listen to something and charge you accordingly. I don't think that the people would though. While he might be talking about a more local storage location I doubt it. Sad but true...

    Let's try and develop nearly indestructible media and keep the storage local and out of corporation control. When he says the "TV" will be able to tell if we can watch the content or not I am fearful that he is less concerned with our children's virgin eyes and more concerned with whether our bank accounts can afford it.
    • by Phisbut ( 761268 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:42AM (#9696118)
      It may not be in 10 years or less but scratchable media needs to go away

      Personally, I have well over a hundred CD's and about half that many DVD's (commercial that is, I'm not counting all the stuff I burn myself), and over the past 10 years, I've had more hard drive failures than scratched CDs/DVDs.

      So knowing that everything will be on my computer in 10 years kinda scares me, since a hard drive is no more reliable than silver discs.

    • Yeah, and he also said we wouldn't need more than 640k

      Bill Gates claimed he never said that [wired.com] and, since then, no good evidence has sufaced that disproves this.

      but in this case I believe he is at least partially correct.

      I think you're right too. If you replace "DVD" with "CD" in his quote you can see that we are starting (albeit slowly) to move away from carrying around a bag full of CD's to a hard disk player than contains many more than we could possibly hold.

      DVDs would be the next logical thing and

  • of course he does (Score:3, Insightful)

    by havaloc ( 50551 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:22AM (#9695892) Homepage
    He envisons a Microsoft DRM WMA future with Janus and its ilk. That's what he wants anyway, but he won't get it.
    • by nekoniku ( 183821 ) <justicek&infosource,info> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:46AM (#9696164) Homepage
      Frank Zappa said, "Communism will never work because people like to own stuff."

      I think DRM for popular media like CDs, DVDs, etc. will eventually fail for the same reason: people like to own stuff.
      nn
    • Why not? He wanted the majority of the world to use his operating system on their desktops, and despite stability, security and interface issues, he got it.

      If Microsoft's proven anything, it's that people will gladly pay to be inconvenienced by software if it enables them in the slightest bit.

      If Janus suddenly permits Windows users to do something no Linux or Mac user can do -- say, access an inexpensive VOD service with tens of thousands of titles at better-than-DVD quality -- people will not give a fly
    • Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by tgd ( 2822 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:11AM (#9696434)
      Okay, I'm risking burning some karma here, but I had a post modded +5 funny this morning, so I have a bit to burn. ;-)

      Have you ever considered that they couldn't care less about DRM on the media?

      What possible reason would Microsoft, or more personally Bill Gates care about it? Seriously. They don't produce movies. They don't produce music.

      The demand for it comes from the producers of content. They're a business and provide it. If they push to have their DRM standardized in commercial media systems, thats what they have to do... to provide that service to the content producers, it necessarily has to be pervasive.

      If you want to Microsoft bash, I'm sure there'll be an IE security hole article today, but this doesn't seem like a supportable reason to.
      • Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by poot_rootbeer ( 188613 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @12:06PM (#9697548)
        What possible reason would Microsoft [...] care about it [DRM]? Seriously. They don't produce movies. They don't produce music.

        No, but they would like to establish themselves as a distribution channel for movies and music. If MSN promises the movie studios and record labels that their content can't get copied and redistributed if it's served through them, then the studios and labels are going to choose MSN for their online distribution efforts (that's the theory, anyway).

        The content producers want DRM to get money from you. Microsoft wants DRM to get money from the content producers.
      • Re:Huh? (Score:4, Informative)

        by virtual_mps ( 62997 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @12:57PM (#9698137)
        Have you ever considered that they couldn't care less about DRM on the media?


        What possible reason would Microsoft, or more personally Bill Gates care about it? Seriously. They don't produce movies. They don't produce music.

        Where's "-1 Just Plain Wrong" when you need it?

        Microsoft & Gates have invested billions of dollars in content distribution (e.g., cable/broadband) and digital rights to a wide variety of works of art, etc. BillG stands to make a(nother) mint if he can get a working DRM and collect a toll every time someone watches a movie.
  • 640 DVDs (Score:5, Funny)

    by circletimessquare ( 444983 ) <circletimessquar ... m minus language> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:22AM (#9695895) Homepage Journal
    640 DVDs ought to be good enough for anyone
  • Huh? Are you just disagreeing with him just for the sake of going against Gates? DVDs as we know it will be obsolete in 10 years from now. Why wouldn't they be? Alot can happen in 10 years. Look at how fast we got exceeded CDs in computing.
    • Re:Why is this news? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by smallfries ( 601545 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:50AM (#9696207) Homepage
      Its not really a question of DVD's. Of course DVD's will be obsolete but if you read the article he's actually claiming that the idea of local portable storage will be dead. That everything will be networked and centralised. He makes the point that why would we carry around some fragile copy of the data when we can just have it delivered across the network to whichever device requires it. This is the microsoft vision now, computers+network access in everything. It's an interesting idea but local portable media has so many uses that I doubt it will disappear. Especially given that it is so cheap to make that it is disposible. Already blank DVD prices are cheap enough to make DVD's disposable and Sony et al are talking about making discs out of cardboard.
      • Re:Why is this news? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by metamatic ( 202216 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:06AM (#9696376) Homepage Journal
        He makes the point that why would we carry around some fragile copy of the data when we can just have it delivered across the network to whichever device requires it.

        Because setting up a suitable server and network connection is beyond the capabilities of the average person, and will still be so in ten years; and because the smart early adopter knows better than to trust his entire digital life to a single corporation.

        I've seen multiple ISPs go under, and they would have taken my e-mail with them if I'd been dumb enough to trust that my mail would always be available to be delivered across the network from their servers. Joe Sixpack is starting to learn that lesson with his "free web mail" service that seemed like such a good idea at the time. Think he wants to put his entire music, movie and book collections on the same system?

  • There are a few DVDs [imdb.com] I'd like to obsolete a little faster than others, if that's at all possible, Bill.
  • by kmak ( 692406 )
    It doesn't matter what technology comes along.. even if the DVD was perfect, I'm sure all the movie companies, all the music companies, etc would move to another media to generate outcome. Sure, the VCR Cassette tape to DVD was a big step, and I had to rebuy everything in another format..
  • by aquabat ( 724032 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:25AM (#9695925) Journal
    What I'd like to know is what Distro he will be running.
  • It took this long... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by enigmax01 ( 785835 )
    It took this long, and there are still people without DVD players, both in thier computers and for thier TVs. Games and other applications that require multiple cds still do not use DVD technology mainstream. I doubt that DVD will die untill its replacment is competative in every way. It is difficult to get the world to change to a new way of doing things.
  • by Mork29 ( 682855 ) * <keith@yelnick.us@army@mil> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:27AM (#9695963) Journal
    compact disk media is here to stay for a while because there is just no substitute for a media that cost cents.

    That's not completely true. Higher quality will make another format more popular with users, and something that can't be copied easily will be popular with the MPAA. With DVD burners (even dual-layer and blu-ray) becoming available to the home user, DVDs are to easy to copy from the MPAA's view, and average consumers who don't burn dvd's and get told that a new format will look better on their new expensive HDTV will be tempted to switch over. I read a recent artical about a company that created a new video recording format that hold about 1GB/layer and can be layered 100 deep. It was some sort of "holographic" alternative that wrote the data onto what looked like a 1" square piece of glass. It even had it's own custom reader out that was rather small. Supposedly it's near impossible for a user to make a pirated copy of this movie, and something that small that can hold that much data would provide some incredible picture quality. Anything that can provide high image quality or is difficult to copy will catch on. Remember, the MPAA can shape the market, and if they like a new technology, they can put on the neccessary preasure to replace DVDs before their time. Of course such a move would motivate users to pirate movies online at the same scale they do music (which is becoming more possible with bigger HDs and highly available broadband). Well, in the end, nobody can predict the death of a technology, espeically somebody with a track record like Bill Gates.
    Ok, I think I'm done now...
    • Higher quality will make another format more popular with users

      It hasn't worked for any of the CD replacement formats that have come and gone. The point is, CD quality is good enough for the average listener. And I believe that DVD quality is good enough for the average viewer. Sure, I'd love to see a 1600x900 pixel 50fps progressive video format come along, but I think most people will look at it and say -- so what? The image is a bit sharper than a DVD, but why should I spend the money to upgrade?
  • This from the man who once said:

    "I believe
    OS/2 is destined to be the most important operating system,
    and possibly program, of all time
    . As the successor to DOS, which has over
    10,000,000 systems in use, it creates incredible opportunities for
    everyone involved with PCs."
    -- Bill Gates, from "OS/2 Programmer's Guide" (forward by Bill Gates) [antioffline.com]
  • by jridley ( 9305 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:29AM (#9695980)
    It will know what we want to watch

    That's funny, usually I don't even know what I want to watch. If I feel like watching something, I like to flip open the DVD binder and start browsing.

    DVDs/CDs won't go away until there is ubiquitous broadband, including in the mountains, in the car, out on a boat, and everyone has terabytes of crash-protected (RAID or whatever) storage (I don't want $8000 worth of movie purchases depending on a hard drive not crashing).

    Heck, broadband isn't even available everywhere in major cities right now, contrary to what the pundits say, let alone in your car where the kids want to watch a movie. Sure there are a few mobile broadband pilots starting out, but how long will it be before Verizon/whoever can take 100,000 peole simultaneously streaming movies from their home server to the back seat of their minivans in the middle of the drive across Kansas, and do it for pennies an hour?
    • by dasmegabyte ( 267018 ) <das@OHNOWHATSTHISdasmegabyte.org> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:15AM (#9696465) Homepage Journal
      Have you seen this [apple.com]?

      It's the modern equivalent of flipping through the CD binder, only much more convenient. As soon as I got it, I got RID of my CD binders.

      When somebody invents an inexpensive video on demand system with an easy interface like that, I guarantee you'll be using it more often than your DVD binder. Even, occasionally, to watch movies you have on DVD! Shit, I watched the birdcage on TV last week, and I've owned that movie for 5 years!

      As for broadband availability: do you think there's a chance that, over the next ten years, speed and availability issues might clear up? I mean, let's see: I got my RR line in a beta program in 1995, that's only 9 years ago. Twenty years ago, I was using a 300 baud coupler modem and the average cat didn't know what a modem was. Computers generally didn't have operating systems, they had bootstrap loaders and BASIC interpretters. It's called progress.
  • by GreatDrok ( 684119 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:29AM (#9695982) Journal
    For once I agree with Gates. Who wants to muck about with discs? I am already making plans to build a large disc array to store my entire DVD collection.

    On the other hand, as a delivery medium DVD is pretty cheap and efficient, I just think that DVDs should be like other software, you buy the disc and then install it on your movie server and put the disc away as your backup.

    As for video on demand, TiVo certainly shows the possibilities and I think that going to a situation where we can select video material from an enormous library where we pay for each piece of material and don't have to sit through adverts and other crap, well, that would be heaven frankly
  • I recently got myself a DVD drive for my computer, primarily for the CD writer. Uptil now, I thought DVDs were overrated and hyped by the studios just to push copyprotection technology (and ofcourse I was and still am in the process of boycotting MPAA/RIAA and figured a %age of my money would go to them as a DVD license).

    It turns out I was right (I couldn't play a SouthPark (longer, uncut) DVD on Windows because of weird/annoying "unauthorized" and a variety of other messages about a legal copy (Blockbus

  • ... I predict Windows will be obsolete in 10 months. Even being nobody have the same possibilities than B.G to be right.
  • Is he saying that DVDs as a format will be obsolete? Then I'd say yes. Obviously there is going to be some changes. with DVD-HD, and blu-ray disks. But as with CDs, I'm sure we'll see backwards compatibility.

    If he thinks we're all going to give up our 5" silver disks, he's crazy. Unless there's a major technological breakthrough (like who knows, holographic cubes or something) they're going to stay around for a while. People still use punch-cards for Christ sake!

    It took decades for CDs to overta
  • Gates is not richest (Score:4, Informative)

    by MochaMan ( 30021 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:29AM (#9695989) Homepage
    Ingvar Kamprad, the founder of IKEA, is the world's richest man. [www.cbc.ca]
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • article from the Inquirer [theinquirer.net] this morning...

    "He said the concept of carrying around film and music on little silver discs to stick them into a computer was ridiculous. He moaned that DVDs could get scratched or get lost."
  • I take this less as a prediction and more as marketing rhetoric to try and push MS products like Windows Media Center edition and jazz like that. We all know Mr. Gates has made stupid claims before, and often times they just aren't based on reality or technologically feasable. Facial recognition? In average people's homes? In ten years? I have a hard time swallowing that one...
  • I would have to disagree with the world's richest man and say that compact disk media is here to stay for a while because there is just no substitute for a media that cost cents.

    In 10 years, a lot can change. New forms of storage that today might not be cost-effective may become so, and the data requirements of consumers may well bypass the capabilities of CD/DVD's. Don't you remember when 1.44 Mb seemed like a massive amount of storage?

  • with blue laser discs around the corner, we can get hd-dvd with the h264 codec. i just think that people will make dvd and hd-dvd players for many years to come once they are released, so unlike vhs, you don't have to worry about re-buying all your movies. the switch will be much easier now than going from an analog to digital player. i don't see why people are worried.

    plus i'm also looking forward to 20gig burnable cds.
  • People are making the 640k connection a few times so far in the comments I have read so far. How about something a little bit closer to today?

    Bill Gates published "The Road Ahead" [starvingmind.net] in 1996. The Intenet was not mentioned.

    Will DVD's still be for sale/popular in 10 years? Maybe not. That being said, a prediction from Bill should not be given much weight on it's own.

    -Pete
  • Vested interest (Score:4, Informative)

    by IGnatius T Foobar ( 4328 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:34AM (#9696033) Homepage Journal
    Gates wants the current DVD system to become obsolete because Windows Media 9 is one of the encoder formats used in the new HD-DVD format which is currently in the works. (One more reason to support the competing Blu-Ray format ... no MS!)
    • Re:Vested interest (Score:3, Interesting)

      by athorshak ( 652273 )
      Its relatively likely that Blu-Ray will end up supporting the corona codec (WM9) for the final pre-recorded disc spec. The current spec only supports MPEG2 which is VASTLY less efficient for encoding HD video. You can get similar picture quality with WM9 at around a third of the bandwidth of an MPEG2 stream.

      Last I heard, BDF (Blu-ray disc forum) was going to start evaluating WM9and H.264 for possible inclusion into the spec. I think its very likely at least one will be approved, otherwise HD-DVD has
  • Mmm... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by 0x0d0a ( 568518 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:34AM (#9696035) Journal
    I dunno if I agree with Gates on this one. First, there is an awful lot of deployed hardware to handle DVDs. Second, media companies are pretty happy with the model of being able to sell a physical object. Microsoft, on the other hand, would love to become a service provider that everyone subscribes to. Third, the consumer benefits that Gates lists are pretty, well, unimpressive. The facial recognition is just fluff. The fragility of DVDs is true, but even an object that needs to be handled carefully is more substantial (and in my experience, trustworthy) than 100% reliable service. Having a personalized electronic video index instead of one general one might be somewhat nice, but it's not all that exciting. "Keeping the kids out" hasn't sold much of anything thus far, and I don't see it likely to start, especially not migrating everyone to a new format. The "know what we want to watch" thing was tried with the Tivo, and I expect that it will eventually be an interesting feature, but it's not a feature that neccessitates a format change -- an existing DVD player with some way of grabbing the latest "similar associations" database or phoning home could do it -- you don't need to blow away the entire DVD format for it.

    No, if Gates is right, it will be for other reasons. If we can really get the bandwidth for it, video-on-demand is a neat idea. You pay a subscription fee, and get to watch all the movies you want, and the ones of your choice. There will probably be some kind of add-ins that publishers will come up with that don't exist on DVDs, and demand for the add-ins might produce enough consumer interest.

    Other than that, I see DVD staying around for a while.
  • I bought a VCR 20 years ago. I still have tapes that I bought then. Just last week, I picked up some new DVD's. I'm planning on still having them in 20 years as well. After that, I'll probably be dead, so any new technology will have to be adapted by you kids. Now, get off my porch.
  • by mactari ( 220786 ) <rufwork AT gmail DOT com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:37AM (#9696081) Homepage
    Admittedly the 5.25" is gone, but seriously, installed user base and legacy uses make ubiquitous media types hard to get rid of. The day Dell stops selling new towers with floppy drives and Blockbuster stops renting VHS is the day that, well, we've probably only got another decade before the CD-ROM gives out. I imagine DVDs will continue just a little while after that.

    To sum: "Gates is likely off by at least five years," says the 200,000,000th richest man in the world.
  • I've had this argument with an ardent tech evalgelist before. He argued that DVD,CDs and HDD are ridiculous, not only because they can be damaged easily, but beacause they are essentially mechanical devices. 5 microseconds was too slow for him. Radial latency was too much of a hang.

    He figured that in 10 years time we'll all be using flash memory based devices capable of holding Gigabytes of data, instead of mechanical media.

    I argued that while flash memory type devices would emerge, you can already get 1-2GB USB memory sticks, the CD/DVD format would also increase apace. Although I'd have to say DVD is lagging behind, but probobly only because, unlike USB flash, it required better hardware to use the higher storage. Blu-Ray discs should give us 50GB of portable storage, and Rockstar at least expects them for the next format of console.

    I figured that in 10 years time 50GB DVDs will be the norm and perhaps as much as 200GB DVDs will be readily available. While at the same time flash memory might only get up to 10GB at an afforadble price. That was another argument I had in favour of DVD. Price. DVDs can be as cheap as $2, but even a 128MB USB stick will cost $50.

    We will always have portable, hard media,(read only?) storage, simply because it will always be bigger cheaper but still slower than the alternatives. Having movies on HDD is nice, but how can we bring them over to a friends or with us on holidays? It's nice to have something you can hold in your hand and say, that's mine, rather than something 'somewhere' on hard disc that might expire, or delete itself by tomorrow.
  • by ajp ( 192328 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:41AM (#9696111)
    Isn't it obvious that DVDs won't be the primary distribution medium in 2014? Gates isn't saying we'll all have tablet PC's (or flying cars). He's saying that the CD format, now widely available for 20+ years, won't last another 10.

    Of course he's wrong on this point: true OSS fanatics will still be using Linux on bootable DVDs on their obsolete hardware. And I still have some cassette tapes floating around.

    But really, who cares? Gates isn't in the business of making predictions. And the people who are in that business, like Cringely [pbs.org] make equally stupid predictions such as "IPv6 will be popular" and "Wal-Mart will take over the online music market". Who cares?
  • by SlashDread ( 38969 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:45AM (#9696149)
    people like Gates think users do not want control. He thinks we just want to "work" or "have fun".

    It is the primary reason why Windows sucks too: its all good and well to abstract the machine from the user using eye-candy and whatnot. It is a stupendously Big Mistake to abstract the machine from the -admins-.

    He reminds me of that IBM guy: all the world needs is 5 computers...

    And its true, at that time, 5 * IBM-CPU was enough for all computational requirements of the time.

    However, the PC revolution was so succesful, because people -want- control, not just "work" or "fun", people want -information-, especially the dangerous kind, so we can avoid -being- in danger.

    Thats also why fire's, and car-wrecks fascinate us. We like to avoid becoming one, it is a good strategy to survive as a human.

    "/Dread"
  • by jbarr ( 2233 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:56AM (#9696266) Homepage
    I doubt DVD's will become obsolete, but they will probably not be the medium of choice in the future. I could easily see in 10 years more emphasis on things like Video On Demand in the form of and legal, controlled online storefronts. With broadband pipes becoming more prolific and bandwidth speeds ever increasing, the availability of immediadly selectable, downloadable, and viewable content from a variety of sources seems very likely and doable.

    In addition, we're soon approaching a point where specific media types could become a moot point. As things like memory cards and various portable and online storage capabilities become cheaper and have significantly larger capacities, the very notion of a specific media type will fade. As long as you can store, access, and transfer the content, the medium really will become irrelevent. And there's really no reason that this could not be done (reletivly) securely in a way that could probably satisfy the various "media organizations". It just requires some innovation to make the "playing" of the content controllable.
  • A Fair Point (Score:5, Interesting)

    by diagnosis ( 38691 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @09:59AM (#9696294) Homepage
    I'm sure Mr. Gates' point is that since high-bandwidth network connectivity will be ubiquitous, there will be no point in *any* physical media. I mean, in normal circumstances, you wouldn't even think of saving a web site to a disk to show it to someone on another computer with internet access. So, assuming that network storage is fast and 'net access pervasive in 10 years, isn't it reasonable to assume that people will choose the path of least resistance, and store their items in such a way that they can be accessed from anywhere? This is certainly an idea that people have been talking about forever, and that we are starting to see now.

    For example:
    http://del.icio.us/ is a site dedicated to storing bookmarks
    and there is iDisk, and all sorts of photo sites.

    I don't think the article says anything new, the author just tries to make it sound controversial.

    ---------------------
    Freedom or Evil: Freevil.net [freevil.net]
    G. W. Bush says, "You decide!"
  • by lpangelrob2 ( 721920 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:03AM (#9696344) Journal
    In other news... Storage companies say Bill Gates will be obsolete in 10 years.

    And in a twist of fate, Microsoft announces Longhorn will release in 2014 on 6 DVDs!

  • Maybe (Score:5, Interesting)

    by t_allardyce ( 48447 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:08AM (#9696402) Journal
    Of course, it makes perfect sense, they built a timer into all the DVD players that expires in about 10 years! The scary thing is i wouldnt put it past them to do that. He might not be too far off on this one. He could be talking about two things: DRM or internet storage. DVD used to be a locked down format, but thanks to some people who risked their own freedom to get us some, we have a pretty free format. Obviously this cant be allowed to continue so DVD must be retired and replaced with something more DRM'd.

    On the other hand an hour ago I was about to get a big pack of CDRs and was thinking about a DVD burner and then it struck me, why not just by a new hard-drive? its not that much more expensive per GB, its more reliable (aslong as its not an IBM) and much faster especially considering you dont have to look for a disk. I used to burn lots of CDs just to carry work around, but these days i just store things online, CDs have replaced floppies but now they're starting to seem just as crap (with some going bad after just a year or two) DVDs are still not a perfect CD replacement because there are plenty of computers at uni's and work places etc that are stuck with CD drives and with fast internet access getting more popular i can just email myself files or leave my PC running and ftp to it from anywhere. We're going towards everything being networked and online, I havnt used a computer that wasnt on the net for some time now.

  • Tablet (Score:4, Insightful)

    by m00nun1t ( 588082 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:09AM (#9696416) Homepage
    Isn't the link in the article presuming the tablet PC was a failed prediction a little premature? Maybe Mr.Gates just has a longer time horizon than you. The thing only launched a year or two ago. Linux has been around... what... 10 years? OH NO! Linux on the desktop is a failure!

    Patience.
  • The opening two sentences to the foreword of "Inside OS/2", a book I saved from the trash because its foreword is by the Bill himself:

    "OS/2 is destined to be a very important piece of software.
    During the next 10 years, millions of programmers and users will utilize this system."

    Inside OS/2
    by Gordon Letwin
    foreword by Bill Gates
    Microsoft Press
    ISBN 1-55615-117-9 (c) 1988

  • by tacocat ( 527354 ) <tallison1&twmi,rr,com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:13AM (#9696455)

    Sorry, but I have to agree with him. DVD's are too delicate to survive for any period of time. Especially when you consider Rentals.

    Every time I rent a DVD I have to visually inspect it for damage and typically have to clean it before it will work. Compare that with the VHS tapes that you could toss at the dog and still play.

    DVD disks are for shit. People don't know how to handle them and one stupid mistake renders the disk useless. I've already watched a lot of Music CD's die because they were mishandled or dropped and again, these don't compare well to the audio tapes of yester-decade.

    They sell us stuff that's supposed to sound better, but you can't tell over the traffic noise anyways. Now you have a disk you drop on the floor and it's dead plastic from that point forward. But you can't record it only an audio tape, backup CD, MP3 file to play in the harsher environments. So you have a bunch of music CD's you get to stress about.

    DVD's and CD's are the same media. Same problems will prevail. Keep an eye on vehicles. When you get the DVD player in the car, you will have to worry about damaging those Barney and Wiggles DVD's in the back seat. And you won't be able to record those onto any back-up media for use in these harsher environments either.

    Get a book. They don't crash.

  • DRM Cracked (Score:5, Insightful)

    by buckhead_buddy ( 186384 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:15AM (#9696479)
    With the DVD's copy protection / region monopoly features so thoroughly cracked, the makers are anxiously looking for a replacement.

    The replacement may have the exact same physical characteristics but be incompatible with exiting DVD standards. Once something catches on there's no benefit to maintaining DVD as as standard (even a backwards compatible one).

    I'd be suprised if it in fact takes 10 years for this to happen with as much consolidation as there has been among the media companies.
  • by Inebrius ( 715009 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:28AM (#9696588)
    Since it has been done before, it can easily be done again.

    Phase I - Introduce new technology. Market it as superior. Include DRM with better images, features, etc. This will be too expensive for most people. But it will be touted as the next thing you wish you could have.

    Phase II - Cut prices. Offer deals with the new hardware. When CDs came out, you could often get deals for 6-10 CDs with purchase of a CD player. Taking that into account, CD players seemed reasonable.

    Phase III - Force old media out of the market. No longer agree to buy back unsold media from retailers (except with the new format). Most retailers will not take the chance on unsold merchandise, and will start cutting back their catalog in the old format.

    This is how CDs were brought to the market in such a short time and why LPs lost favor. Once that critical market mass is reached, the old technology will be obsolete (in retail). Video casettes are dead - not in the sense that you cannot find them anywhere - but in the sense that they are becoming much harder to find since retailers are dropping it as a format.
  • Gates is right (Score:3, Interesting)

    by caudron ( 466327 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:32AM (#9696619) Homepage
    I blogged about the same inevitable trend myself just a month ago.

    The format wars are going to fall at the feet of the codec wars. It is obvious, given the cost savings, that the consumer will migrate to the easiest to maintain and cheapest to upgrade system he can get.

    If the consumer can drop his receiver, dvd player, dvr, cd player, tape deck, laser disc player, hdvcr player and all the rest of the mess current taking up a wall in his home theater and replace it all with one box that does everything, and is software upgradable (remember that THIS IS SOMETHING WE HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY TO ROLL OUT TOMORROW!) he will do so.

    The new hub will be a media PC, esentially (though not really like the ones you see now). Give people this option, and they will go for it in a heartbeat.

    The problem is that we have competing standards for streaming/downloading media. That needs to change, but doesn't look like it will for a while.

    The real question isn't "Is Bill Gates right?" but rather "How can we get Linux to fill a niche in this new media economy?"

    So, do you know any open source groups pushing for a standardization of the online media purchasing commerce? If not, we need to ask ourselves why not? This is gonna be HUGE, and it would sure be nice if I didn't need to have specific hardware or software to buy somthing from iTunes, for example. There should be a standard client protocol that I can connect to any standards compliant eStore with and browse/purchase media.
  • backup (Score:3, Funny)

    by feelyoda ( 622366 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:35AM (#9696654) Homepage
    so with my 2TB drive, i'm expeced to backup at max 20GB at a time?

    do you know how long it'll take to backup all my porn at that rate?!!
  • by Junior J. Junior III ( 192702 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:38AM (#9696684) Homepage
    1980's

    Bill G: 640k ought to be enough for anybody.

    2004:

    Bill G: In 10 years, 4.7 GB won't be enough for anybody.

    Thing is, this time around I think he's more likely to be right.
    • Every slashdot post that mentions Gates and his predictions or opinions on technologies always has someone quoting the "640K ought to be enough for anybody." He never said that. When will people learn?
  • He's right. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by SuiteSisterMary ( 123932 ) <slebrunNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:39AM (#9696703) Journal

    DVD will be obsolete in two or three years, not ten. CD's been obsolete for at least ten; they're still in use. 3.5 inch 1.44 meg floppies have been obsolete for twenty, but they're still on there. Hell, damn near every technology in a computer is 'obsolete;' doesn't mean they're not still in use.

  • by Sandman1971 ( 516283 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:44AM (#9696732) Homepage Journal
    DVDs (in one format or another) aren't gonna go away anytime soon.

    Not everyone has or can get broadband. There's no chance of broadband at the summer cottage. There's no broadband available in my car as I'm driving cross country. Yet, at the cottage, I can have a TV and DVD player, and in the car I can get an LCD/DVD player to occupy the kids as I'm driving.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) * on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @10:50AM (#9696784)
    He may be right that we see the death of DVD in ten years. I can see it too:

    * Studios shift all home video to super-protected HDTV DVD.

    * Consumers dislike restrictions placed on HDTV DVD's, format tanks.

    * As there are no new movies on DVD - DVD is dead.

    But not in a good way....

    On the other hand people seem to have lived with DVD restrictions, so perhaps they'll be fine with future limitations. Though stuff like HDCP might make some people rather angry as older expensive stuff fails to work with the new standard.
  • A different take (Score:3, Insightful)

    by j-turkey ( 187775 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @11:10AM (#9696989) Homepage

    VoD may be the next great thing, and this seems to be what Mr. Gates was hinting at. I cannot speak for the direction the VoD market is going. However, I think that regardless of the state of VoD, DVD's (we we know them) will be going the way of the VHS tape well within 10 years.

    When DVD's were introduced, they were lightyears ahead of any other consumer-level media. However, the CRT TV's had changed little in 50 years -- adding color to the mainstream market in the early 60's and introducing incremental changes in quality throughout, such as Sony's Trinitron technology. Still, none of these incremental quality boosts were earth-shattering. Consumer-level CRT's were inherently limited in visual quality.

    With the (post-DVD) advent of consumer-land LCD's and Plasma displays, the visual limitations of DVD's are becoming more apparent. High-quality displays show MPEG artifacting that normally wouldn't be seen in older CRT TV's. Furthermore, when compared against HDTV broadcasts, DVD's don't look quite as good as they did next to VHS movies.

    The next nail in the coffin is the speed and price of computer technology. DVD players can be had for under $50. The manufacture of cheap DVD players is a reality, partly because of the economies of scale, but also in part, due to our ability to make the IC components in the players cheaper and smaller. We have the technology to make a high definition DVD, using better compression algorithms (both in terms of how much data they can compress, and the overall visual quality of the video) that require greater computing horsepower. This technology can be produced at a cost similar to the current cost of DVD players -- especially after a widespread market adoption over a few years. We are also able to produce players that use a media similar to DVD (optical media sharing the same dimensions and material to its DVD coutnerpart) which have a far greater data density, such as the blue-ray DVD's.

    Assuming backwards compatibility with the traditional DVD format, this technology could become viable within 1-2 years. In this case, the obsolescence of the DVD (in its current state) is completely reasonable and foreseeable within 10 years.

  • by bshroyer ( 21524 ) <<bret> <at> <bretshroyer.org>> on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @11:48AM (#9697372)
    Current IDE drive prices are not quite competitive with DVD storage, on a cost per GB basis.

    My last IDE drive purchase was last month - 250GB IDE for $169 (CompUSA, instant rebate.) This is about $0.68 per GB, compared with a marginal cost of about $0.25 for DVD (4.6GB variety).

    But look at my hard drive purchase history:
    Date Capacity Price $/GB ACG
    09/1999 1 129 129
    12/2000 20 119 5.95 3.9
    03/2002 80 149 1.86 2.5
    03/2004 200 169 0.85 1.5
    07/2004 250 169 0.68 1.8
    ACG is the "Annual Compound Growth" in my sample - the rate at which the GB/$ is growing annually.

    Assuming an annual growth of just 1.50 (50%) is maintained, in ten years $150 will buy a 10TB drive. That's over 1000 9GB DVDs.

    I think that to assume ANY storage technology currently in use today will still be in use in 10 years is a bad assumption. My analysis is therefore flawed as well; for $150 we'll probably be able to buy 100TB of ultra-fast holographic or biomechanical memory in ten years.

    In ten years, the only people buying IDE drives will be the Amiga enthusiasts.
  • by SoopahMan ( 706062 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @11:53AM (#9697424)
    I have to agree the DVD will be replaced by something - because there is a technology that effectively replaces cheap media: other cheap media, that does more.

    It's unlikely any DVRW/CDRW technology will ever be truly rewritable. But as USB thumb drives increase in size and Hard Drive sizes shrink to meet MP3 player and cell phone demand, they'll be fully rewritable, smaller media than DVDs or CDs - why use anything else?

    In a few years the one advantage DVDs will have over hard drives and flash memory will be the complication of copying them, which is ideal for companies trying to sell their content. This advantage will be made obsolete by 2 things:

    Larger optical media, which has been mentioned here several times already.

    A more effective copy protection system that works over the Internet; this same copy protection system could be used just as well for the content on any physical media, leaving the physical complications of copying it negligible.
  • by jekewa ( 751500 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @12:20PM (#9697676) Homepage Journal
    I don't mean to sound like I'm defending Master of the Universe Gates...but his statement isn't terribly out of whack.

    A few things to consider are the vast sweeping changes that can happen in 10 years. Personal Computers, nay, computers at all, are very little like what they were ten years ago. The two things that will decide if this prediction is correct will be the way we store things, and the things we store.

    Looking at the time, 10 years doesn't seem too long to expect a shift in technology. Consider the floppy. Very popular 10 years ago. Hell, 10 years ago CD-ROM drives weren't even guaranteed in most systems, so floppies were the assumed portable storage. Currently CD-ROM is assumed, and DVD is becoming so. I find it easy to purchase systems without floppies. To speclate that the DVD may be replaced in 10 years is not so far fetched.

    The acceleration of advancing technology will probably decide whether the media of DVD is sound enough technology. The write-once, or at least write-more-finite-times-than-magnetic-media aspects of any optical media will lead to their demise before their size, is my personal prediction. Scratching, warping, and other physical weakness of the media seem to be pretty reasonable reasons to not use them forever. While I don't think they'll go away in ten years (my computer store still sells 3.5-inch floppies), they won't last forever (I cannot, however purchase a 5.25-inch floppy off the shelf).

    The size of the things we store continues to grow, but that doesn't seem to be growing as fast. The sampling of sound hasn't increased the size of storage required since the introduction of the CD (in fact, thanks to compression like MP3, it's smaller), but higher-quality video has become common. What you type will rarely fill the media, but what data you generate probably can. For example, backing up other media (like your HDD) onto inexpensive optical is very common, so this might drive a larger solution. Like CDs can store multiple tunes or albums(heck, to the hundreds of tunes and many albums with MP3 compression), video storage of the future may store much more than we live with now; entire seasons or runs of television, all of the series of movies or actor's lines, every home video you've ever produced...

    Not that you care, but personally, I use flash media now for most of my portable storage. It's virtually indestructable (in everyday, carry it in my pocket use). It's pretty spacious; my current 256MB USB drive is capable of holding practically my entire working environment (OS not included, but data and editors are), and larger drives are available when this no longer suffices. They're not as cheap, I'll grant you, but I got it on sale for less than a stack of CDRWs, and I've written to it more times than I could have a similar priced stack of DVD write-onces. While not replacing DVDs yet, I'll argue that these flash media are reasonable replacements for CDs; it's conceivable that a small shift in the technology or manufacture and this could replace DVDs in size, too.

    I use an external HDD for the backup of my main system's HDD. Well, in reality, I typically back up all important data across multiple HDDs--either on drive sets in RAID, separate systems or servers, or both. Again, not as cheap, but faster and rewritable to a much larger degree (lots of billions of rewrites versus thousands or millions).

  • remember (Score:3, Insightful)

    by geoff lane ( 93738 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @01:01PM (#9698166)
    Billy Boy is a capitalist. He wants to own a) the means of production and b) the means of distribution of AV media.

    He doesn't want to share any of either. He really does believe that Microsoft deserves 100% ownership of both.

    He will talk down CDs and DVDs not because he has a better alternative but because they are currently independent and do not rely exclusively on any MS product.
  • I know why (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cinderful ( 586168 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @01:15PM (#9698305) Homepage
    Bill is wishing for digital "On-Demand" video.

    He's a scratcher.

    You know the type.
    You pick up a CD/DVD of theirs off of the stack on top of their TV and notice that every single damn disc has a scratch on it.
    You put it in to play/listen - it starts to skip and they're like, "Oh weird, how'd that happen?"

    The worst is the scratcher-friends who craftily ask to borrow your favorite CD/DVD. (Because all of theirs are unwatch/unlistenable)
    So, you're all like "sure!"
    You get it back after 2 months after bugging them for weeks about it and you open up the case to find . . . SCRATCHES ALL OVER THE DAMN DISC.

    And you call them on it - and they say "What? I didn't put those there! It must've been like that when you gave it to me."
    Even if you obsessively carefully handle your discs, put them away when you're done and never abentmind-edly store stacks of them on sandpaper.
    THEY get offended?!

    Do these people have no respect for personal property?

    The secret, Bill, is to just put things away when you're done with them.

    Either that, or someone will invent un-scratchable coatings, which I find far more likely in the next 10 years.
  • by jilles ( 20976 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @01:19PM (#9698339) Homepage
    The problem with video on demand is that the infrastructure is not widely deployed. Most tvs don't support any of the digital tv standards so you need a settopbox. The situation is different from country to country with many local monopolists competing (i.e. you don't have much choice in selecting cable operators). The network quality is mediocre at best with unpredictable bandwidth, latency and availability. You need uninterrupted downstream bandwidth of at least a few megabits per second for good quality video.

    I agree with Bill Gates that this is going to be different in ten years. By then most homes will have some form of broadband, mobile telephone networks will have been deployed that support broadband services. In other words, pretty much anywhere you go there will be some form of broadband that is good enough for high quality streaming video.

    Then it is just a matter of offering the content and using the bandwidth. However, before that happens a number of legal issues will need to be resolved. Also there will need to be some standards (as in not owned by Microsoft or any other company). And finally the media companies will need to get involved. All that can happen in ten years but I don't see much happening yet.

    The media companies are still clutching to their existing revenue streams. At the same time they seem to be only frustrating attempts to move beyond physisical media. It took a company like Apple to convince the whole industry that online content is a viable revenue stream and that was only this year. The same could happen for other content then audio in a few years.

    Given open, widely supported standards and given the wide availability of networks this could happen. The latter is on schedule to being solved be 2014. However, ten years is a very short time to change an industry that depends on proprietary, closed standards.

  • by peter303 ( 12292 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @01:36PM (#9698564)
    So now each show/movie effectively becomes its own channel. So will we have to revise that familar complaint about cable TV? :-)
  • by Kazoo the Clown ( 644526 ) on Wednesday July 14, 2004 @04:59PM (#9701025)

    Yeah, right. That's what they told us a few years ago in order to get all that free bandwidth. We need the subsidy to convert to HDTV so we'll be ahead of evil foreign competition (there's an oxymoron for you: "subsidized capitalism").

    Yawn. I predict BILL GATES will become obsolete long before DVDs (Oh, wait, it's already happened)...

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