Pact Not to Use Image Constraint Token Until 2010? 285
Devlin C. writes "Ars Technica reports that many major movie studios and several consumer electronics companies have an unofficial pact not to use the controversial Image Constraint Token in movies until at least 2010, presumably in an effort to spur early adoption. As the article at Ars notes, this would explain why both
the low-end PS3 and the Xbox360 lack HDMI. The companies think it's not necessary to have right now, and they would rather shave costs than sell future-proof hardware."
There's a point to be made (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll bet 90% of people of buy DVDs dont know what DRM is or what it does to them.
Consumers are just that: they consume. They buy. If the first gen DVD doesnt work anymore because HDMI, they'll just buy another one...
In a country where people pay $100 a month for premium cable, and where the main reason people buy HDTVs is Live Sporting Event, I dont think DRM will matter.
As long as Marketing is good - and the Americans are freaking good at Marketing - they'll just pay, thats just the way it works. Good luck changing that.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:5, Interesting)
Please go educate the masses of "average consumer".
I'll bet 90% of people of buy DVDs dont know what DRM is or what it does to them.
In general I think you're probably right, but I did have a surprising conversation last week with someone who definitely wasn't a computer nerd. She had basically been screwed over by iTunes and the 3 computer limit that this software imposes. (Excuse me if I don't get the exact details right -- I'm not interested in buying music in crippled formats for myself). She had activated her laptop and a couple of her work machines, but had then changed jobs and had her laptop stolen. The result was that although she still had the music, she was unable to play it at all, and I can tell you she understood exactly what was going on and she was not happy at all about it.
So it seems to me that as more people get screwed over by the music distributors, the message will eventually get out, even if only in a simple form -- "my ripped MP3s work, but my paid downloads don't".
Rich.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:5, Informative)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
I'm guessing from the wording of the FAQ that you might need to actually be in posession of the computer(s) in question in which case she's still out of luck unless she can persuade her old employer to let her back in to "get her iTunes" - like that's going to happen...
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
In order to install it on my new PC, I had to phone Symantec and ask them to remove the old licences. They did that and I was then able to install. It's a bit of a pain, but not too bad. However, if I wa
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Note that you can also copy your DRM'ed music on as many iPods as you like, without authorizing those.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2, Insightful)
I guess it's easier to throw around wild assumptions though.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
So your repeat cycle is limited to once per year. So unless you are really patient I dont think its a viable option :D
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
You don't need to have the computers. That's a good thing, seeing as how reformatting your PC means you just lost a 'computer' to attrition, if you didn't remember to deauthorize it before the wipe. If her employer reformatted those PC's after she left, then those unique IDs are lost forever anyway. I don't know of a technical solution to determining whether you are trying to cheat, or just reformatted the same PC. Macs, as I understand it, use the Apple Serial Number from the hardware when they are aut
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Also heavy re-use in Flash makes for shitty cartoons. By the time you polish up re-used assets you might as well just have animated it for real. This is experience speaking - I worked in the US animation industry during the period when "Flash was going to save us all and let us do all kinds of wonderful work and have more domestic jobs for animation!". A season after it trickled up to TV production, there were Flash shops in India most everything got shipped o
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:3, Insightful)
90% of American consumers. If you don't live in America you encounter DVD DRM regularly when you can't play legitimately purchased DVDs on your computer.
I bought a bunch of DVDs in England when I was living there then I emigrated to Australia. Now any (mainstream) DVD I buy is Region 4 not Region 2. My DVD player is region free but my Laptop is another story so I can't play any DVD I own on My laptop when I want to becaus
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:5, Informative)
From the FAQ:-
So, in short, No.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
VLC certainly gives region-free playback with many RPC2 drives (including mine), and of course has no problem with the old RPC1 drives. I think it's only fairly recently that some manufacturers have started to go beyond the original RPC2 spec and prevent even raw access to the DVD when there'
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:3, Informative)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:3, Informative)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Um, we don't have "fair use" - for 2 reasons:
Reason 1: Despite what the media and politicians have said over the past couple of weeks, no laws have been changed - hell, no new legislation has been tabled, or even formulated! What has been done is an issues paper [ag.gov.au] has been released for public discussion. That's it. The Attorney-General, the rest of the government, and the media have all been misleading you.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Go there and download the RPC-1 firmware for your drive model. Then, fair use or not, you can watch whatever the hell you want on your compy.
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
I think it's to drive the subtitles needed because you're in a foreign country where they speak a different language :-).
Re:No Region Encoding with Blu-Ray (Score:2)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Every European who buys a region 1 or region-free DVD player knows a bit about DRM.
You under estimate the "average consumer" (Score:2)
Then you had Laser Disks. They where cool, and they had a much better picture than VHS. The problem was that they where expensive and there where multiple incompatible formats.
The we had HDTV... How many people ran out and bought them? Ev
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
Live Sporting Event? Is that what they're calling porn now?
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:2)
In the modern era though, people grew up with vi
Re:There's a point to be made (Score:3, Insightful)
But when that 0.5% has 30% of the wealth, then they're a market, even if they're a negligible portion of the population.
Re:Funny, that is exactly what so many have done (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Funny, that is exactly what so many have done (Score:3, Interesting)
Think back to how many people had pirate copies of ET? Well all did. And it was horrible. All grainy and very dark and very green. However, the sheer buzz of actually h
Re:Funny, that is exactly what so many have done (Score:2)
I think it would be the ultimate coup for the DRM trechery to be revealed by having the players display a giant "ZOMG you're using insecure equipment YOU PIRATE!!" message when someone hooked their blu-ray player up to their DVI-D monitor. We can only hope that industry foolishness carries us to that point
They've planned for this already. (Score:5, Insightful)
What the whole ICT issue is going to do is create an extra upgrade cycle: everybody will get on the HD bandwagon now, and in a few years they'll roll out HDCP, and in order to watch new content, people will get new televisions.
This works well for the electronics manufacturers, because they get another shot at replacing a good chunk of the public's equipment in a few years, and although it slows the studios getting total content control by a few years, they'll still get what they want in the end.
Particularly because I don't expect the MPAA et al. to be idle in the meantime before the ICT rollout. On the contrary: I suspect they'll be watching the non-HDCP HD rollout very closely, and tallying up ridiculous numbers of dollars lost to "piracy" and "home copying", so that when HDCP comes, it won't just come from the studios, it'll have the full weight of Congress behind it.
Re:They've planned for this already. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Funny, that is exactly what so many have done (Score:2)
great? except it's one more thing to explain (Score:5, Interesting)
At first blush this may seem a happy development, and it will have been if it contributes to the ulimate demise of any future Image Constraint Token or consideration thereof in the future.
I predict one of two things:
Of course, we'll all be on point and have been handed yet one more piece of a puzzle to understand (I read the article, I'm not totally sure it makes sense to me) and be able to guide friends and family to informed decisions about what equipment to buy and how to make it work. (To friends and family: "You'll have to make sure the TV and player you buy has HDMI so you'll get to see the pretty pictures. No, wait!, You might not need HDMI afterall. Of course, you'll have to have it by the year 2010.") I'm pretty close to recommending people who have working equipment to stay with what they have. (Of course, that recommendation has the pitfall of putting them in harm's way when suddenly new transmissions and DVDs they've been persuaded to buy don't work with what they have.)
The entertainment industry has successfully lobbied to enact laws to satisfy their need to control this technology, and now they're showing they can't even manage that!
Seems like I'm ending most of my posts the same way these recent days...:
Sigh.
I don't see #1 happening... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sony has already said they won't use it, and they have plenty of reason to follow up on that, given that they will be selling HDMI-less players.
If some or most movies play just fine over component, but some don't, the publisher of those that don't will take it in the butt in the marketplace. People just won't buy their discs, because they suspec
Re:great? except it's one more thing to explain (Score:3, Interesting)
+ The vast majority of the installed base of HiDef TVs do not have HDMI
+ There's still virutally no computer support for the protocol.
+ The PR Beating that Microsoft took over the "Vista will require a new monitor" FUD.
+ The fact that HDMI is expensive enough that it apparenlty can't be used on low-end players ($500 PS3).
It was only Hollywood's arrogance that got it this far because any san
Yet another thing: DisplayPort (groan) (Score:2)
ATI, NVIDIA, Phi
1080p HDMI 50" DLP (Score:2, Informative)
We'll See (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We'll See (Score:2)
Business as usual (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Get consumers to re-buy their whole movie collection again in a new format
2) Move all or at least the vast majority of their movie sales for home use to a beter protected format so as to defend themselfs from what they currently percieve as their main competition - sharing of movies via the Internet.
3) Monitize or increase their profits in existing markets (for example: video/DVD rentals) and open new markets (internet distribution) while maintaining or extending their ability to control prices.
4) Increase their share of movie publishing.
DRM is the chosen mechanism by which movie publishers aim to remotelly control, enforce and even change (if an internet connection is available) any rules of their choice on the allowed uses of the movies contained on the media that consumers aquire.
Businesses being businesses, they will naturally use those remote control abilities (pun not intended) to maximize their profits - given their behaviour up to now, this will most likelly include maximizing the amount that consumers pay, up to and including pay-per-single-view.
At the same time, the bigguest part of the movie industry (as measured by sales and also, quite likelly, by lobbying power) consists of old-style, long existing, entrenched businesses - they are aiming to remain dominant beyond the next 5 years and certainly have long term strategies in place to ensure that it will be so.
It is clear to all that, before they can achieve their objectives, massive user adoption of DRM supporting hardware is necessary. Assuming that the main players in the movie industry are indeed engaged in a plan which is only expected to give fruit in a medium to long (5+ years) term, it's hardly surprising that they will start by visibly refraining from exercising the remote control that the newest DRM hardware allows them, if they believe that this will accelerate the transition from the current generation of hardware to the new (strong DRM enabled) generation of hardware.
It should also be pretty obvious, that since they haven't actually signed any contract with any consumers by which they [movie publishers] are obliged to not enable their DRM, this announcement of theirs still leaves open to them the possibility to, at any time and with no penalty to them, change their minds if they believe that the market penetration of the newest DRM enable hardware has passed the point beyond which said hardware has become the de facto standard.
In other words, their promises are as worthless as the paper they are written in.
Re:Business as usual (Score:2)
In other words, their promises are as worth
Console wars are silly (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyway, this is anti-piracy crap and the problem with anti-piracy is that it only hurts the non-pirates. It has already been shown that the next generation copy-protections for movies can be broken. There are some mighty clever people out there who get a thrill out of doing this and not all of them live in countries that could give a shit if some hollywood studio claimes it looses billions.
Back to silly console business. The Wii is not HD and that is defended because not enough people will have HD tv's for this console generations lifespan. The low end PS3 does not have HD and is slammed for not being future proof?
This is one reason I stopped reading game reviews, because I started to notice that reviewers never heard of consistency. They would slam game A for being X and then slam game B for not being X.
Is the computer industry that immature that we can't at least attempt to judge all things equally?
Either HDMI is important or it isn't. Make up your mind. No I don't get the low end PS3 move either. Yes I am familiar with the way fastfood places offer small medium and large so that the medium looks like the better deal. However the PS3 ain't being pushed as a McD coke. At its price it is supposed to be a fine cuisine served at a top restaurant. One way to tell a good restaurant from a fast food place is the lack of supersizing.
Oh well, lets continue the endless console debate. Were we slam the console we don't like for not having the features the console we like doesn't have either.
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
Yes, the Xbox 360 doesn't have HDMI either, but it's currently $100-200 cheaper than the no-HDMI PS3. The price difference is because if people buy a PS3, they're forced to get a Blu-ray drive whether they like it or not. And a Blu-ray drive without HDMI has been argued to be a pretty bad deal (a worse deal than simply forcing first-gen buggy hardware onto the masses, most of whom would otherwise wait to buy the cheaper/less buggy 2nd or 3rd generation players).
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2, Insightful)
The tard-box PS3 is getting slammed for not having HDMI for two reasons:
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
Yes, because if it isn't 1080p, it's not worth having.
The funny thing about this is that Sony was originally spreading this FUD against the XBox360, and now people have bought it hook-line-and-sinker and are using it to FUD the PS3.
The reality is that few sets support 1080p, and without the ICT bullshit, the
btw (Score:2)
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
Now why would anyone buy a player which is not fully up to spec (no HDMI out) and could be cut off playing those movies anytime in the future on the whim of a paranoid movie industry?
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:5, Interesting)
1080p is the highest the PS3 will support. But from what I've heard high-def support isn't required for PS3 developers as it is for X360 developers. Expect to see a lot of PS3 games shipping with 720p as their max resolution (and rightfully so, it's a pretty good balance between resolution and effects-per-pixel).
The X360 is 1080i max.
To answer the grandparent poster, the PS3 was sold as the next movie platform for high-def televisions. Now it is getting slammed because the low-end won't support the image encryption standard Sony (and others) have forced onto us, making it potentially not a movie platform at all.
The Wii makes no pretention to High-def gaming, while the X360 is flagrantly about it while avoiding the movie debate. The PS3 on the other hand is the full deal, hundreds more than the competition, yet the part that may set it apart from the crowd is the part that simply may cease to work on a Hollywood whim.
It's not a question of whether HDMI is important or isn't. It's a question of achieving the standards set forth in your propoganda. Nintendo never said it had the most powerful console out there, it said it had a "powerful enough" gaming system with a nifty controller and a library of backcatalog games. Microsoft never said the 360 was a movie player, but rather an amazing Xbox Live delivery vehicle that had some solid gameplaying power and high-def graphics. Sony, however, always said the PS3 was going to be a movie box. But without HDMI (or HDMI upgradability), that could end at any moment. It's not important to Nintendo because they aren't selling based upon that. Sony is.
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
It seems DRM is killing sony.
It killed their walkman mp3 line replaced by the ipod when they tried to impose their propietary DRM format onto people.
Now, their only advantage over the XBox lies onto a DRM emcumbered market. Lets see what happens.
Sony could be the first company being killed by ther fucking up people with DRM.
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:5, Insightful)
But yes, regardless of the details, if Sony had been more plain-spoken and not appeared to be arrogant, they probably wouldn't have gotten nearly as much ill-will as they did.
Value for functionality, or just for some parts? (Score:3, Insightful)
OTOH, most (non-fanboi) people buy hardware for what they can do with it, not for what it is. If you just want to play games, Wii or 360 or is better value than something that makes you pay for HD movie hardware too. If you want HD games and movies, the low-end PS3 is a good option -
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:3, Insightful)
On top of that, the 360 can put out one 720p image. The PS3 was talking (this may be in the past tense now because of HDMI issues and not power issues) two seperate 1080p pictures.
One thing that you have to realize, is that the XBox today can handle Half Life 2. We see a 733mhz processor, 64 megs of ram, and a 4 year old GPU and we think the hardware is weak. However, it is difficult to
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
One thing that you have to realize, is that the XBox today can handle Half Life 2.
An XBox today is not rendering Half-life 2 at 1280x1024 with 8x anti-aliasing at full detail. It may be able to handle the physics engine, but it's compromising massively on the resolution. The PS3 is competing directly against PC resolutions, so it'll be interesting to see how well it performs compared to PC ports (or vice versa). For once, we'll probably be actually able to benchmark it against a directly comparable p
Re:xbox (Score:2)
Oh, hah hah hah. Hah. :)
So I take it you've not spent any time with Project Gotham. "graphical mess". Hah hah hah. :)
It's total eye-candy. Dreamy, sweet, shiny, ultra-fast and full-o-pixels.
PG-III may be the only title that really takes advantage of the machine's capabilities to any degree, as we're so early on the curve, and because car and track models are so easy to spend polygons on.
But... "graphical mess". Oh, ho, ho,
Re:Console wars are silly (Score:2)
Why do you suspect that a device which is specifically said to NOT support HD will do so? There's no reason to believe Wii will do 720p.
If you like people to have the facts then perhaps you should get them straight first.
The other thing is.. (Score:5, Interesting)
In other words, what problem is ICT supposed to solve? Are there pirates out there right now stealing from DVI signals?
Also, can't will just convert everything to unencrypted analog and digitize the output. D-A and A-D conversion these days should be no different from a direct digital connection on short-length Component video cables. And, when ICT is finally introduced, they'll just digitize the monitor output by placing a camera in front of it, or digitizing the signals going to the framebuffer or display.
Eventually there's going to be a leak of the device keys, like what happened to CSS, and encrypytion of all previous AACS discs are defeated. Although future AACS discs can ban these leaked device keys, a new set of device keys will be leaked. Especially in software decrypters. This is because the AACS doesn't actually define a PHYSICAL secret device key spec, and so these new device keys are going to be continuously leaked as they disassemble software decoders or read EPROMs. I suspect there's going to be a lot of banned devices in the MKB of AACS.
It's always going to be this cat-and-mouse game...
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:5, Informative)
What they are is "A hook on which to hang lawsuits" (Ed Felten):
http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?p=1007 [freedom-to-tinker.com]
And that's *all* they are.
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:5, Insightful)
However, bootleg DVD's were on sale on the streets of NY long before the encryption was cracked. How? Simple. They just made a bitwise copy. They copied everything, copyprotection included, so it ran perfectly fine.
If nothing else, DeCss was just there to ensure that device manufacturers paid their fees. I assume HDMI is there for a similar reason.
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:2)
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:2)
All I did to make the copy was "dd if=/dev/hdc of=image.iso" from the command line, which just copies the filesystem on drive hdc to an iso, hdc being my optical drive.
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:2, Funny)
And the loverly golden apple there will be getting the PS3's device keys out of it's magic box, and seeing if anyone has the balls to ban that.
Re:The other thing is.. (Score:2)
Imagine? (Score:3, Funny)
I can imagine it being controversial indeed.
+1 Giggletypo
This will get people hooked (Score:5, Insightful)
That's how the drug dealers round here work, and they're making good money. Should work for the movie industry too.
They'll be hoping that, by 2010, there won't be any of the old non-DRM hardware still in use.
Re:This will get people hooked (Score:2)
Isn't that a colorful way of describing supply and demand?
Re:This will get people hooked (Score:2, Insightful)
Pretty much, and don't forget inflation. The argument also depends on believing that entertainment is as addicting as recreational drugs.
Maybe it is, I don't know. But I've spent less and less time in front of the toob as I've gotten older.
well (Score:3, Insightful)
My guess is that people buying videos won't know anything about he technologies involved just like now, but they *will* notice if some of their DVDs look like crap. A studio that puts out crappy looking videos is going to hurt their bottom line. People will figure, hey, why not just get the DVD cheaper instead of the HDDVD since it doesn't seem to be much better quality?
All this noise that the studios make about implementing these technologies with end to end encryption is pretty rediculous. The market at large is not concerned one way or the other with their anti piracy initiatives, but they do notice when the their equipment isn't compatible. There's already so little incentive to buy some new expensive DVD player that only makes a difference on HDTVs that no one has anyway that the industry fiddling with the standard at the last minute like this might kill HDDVD and HDTV altogether.
The public at large could easily forget about upgrading to the next generation. The current tv format has lasted a long time and could last much longer. That really doesn't seem like the worst thing in the world to me... I'm really pretty iffy on how dropping a couple of grand on the new equipment would improve my life in any measurable way.
Re:well (Score:2)
Sure they'd notice if it "looked like crap", but let's be real, even with the downscaling, the contant is still higher-rez than that of current-generation DVDs.
Yes, it's downgraded, I'm still not sure consumers are going to notice or care all that much.
A CD that is poorly encoded as 128Kbps CBR mp3 is also significantly degraded, most people couldn't care less.
Hell, 99% of the movies that are transfered illegally over the net today are recompressed in ways that significantly degrades them.
Future-proof hardware?! (Score:2)
makes sense (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Am I wrong here? (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems to me that the issue isn't any of those stated, its about sales. First most 'consumers' don't know the differences between the standards, and any improvement seems good enough, so they are buying the cheapest improvement they can - that only makes sense. The standards are not in play enough to enforce a change across the buying public. The US government is still working to force all users to switch to digital television. Until that happens, joe public won't give a damn. There is only a small portion of the unwashed masses that even cares. Many of them think big screen == high definition still.
My experience is that if it says HD on it, joe public thinks its the shiznitz, they really don't care, and don't want to earn a EE degree to figure it out. Sony et al are cutting their own throats until they can convince the FCC and joe public that the 'thing they want' is 1080p and BR or whatever they decide on, as if they will ever be able to decide on something.
That may well be a cynical view, but it is the impression I get from various encounters. I have a SideKick phone, and the number of people that don't even know what it is (is that one of them blueberry's?) or what it can do is totally amazing. Trying to get even the technically savvy to understand that buying HD is difficult decision is crazy. One friend told me of spending 2500 on an HD setup (and he's happy with it) and I asked him what resolution it was.... he wasn't sure. What most people know about the technical details of what they buy is what they learned from the 18 year old salesman... who makes a commission on the sale... ya, that's working out well.
Any gentlemen's agreement is about setting the marketplace up so they can make money on the formats, and not kill their bottom line with product that isn't selling because of misinformation on the part of joe public. There is no technical reason, its all about the money. If HD products were selling, LALAwood and DVD/TV makers would very quickly work out any details in a short but sharp format war. This is all about sales, and no content provider is getting on board until the hardware makers "show 'em the money". 14 million copies of a DRM'ed movie are a liability if there is nobody to buy them. Hell, 14 million copies of a movie is a liability if there is nobody buying them even if they don't have DRM.
How may people here (raise your hands) have the capability to do more than 5.1 surround? There are better/improved sound systems... but what's the point, if your ears can't tell the difference in the money you spent? Its going to take some real education to get joe public to understand what the difference is, and then to get him to appreciate it enough to spend the extra money. Its all about the money.
Still no one gets it - Sigh (Score:4, Interesting)
Wake up folks. This is about preventing independant content makers from having access to a high quality cheap distribution mechanism (i.e., The Internet). Todays production equipment costs are plummeting. Any independant content maker has no excuse not to be able to create his masterpiece.
So today an independant content provider could make a high quality movie, produce it and distribute it for next to nothing (compared to the "old" way of using 35mm film). His costs are hiring actors and his blood, sweat, and tears in shooting, mixing, producing, etc.
**AA is shitting themselves over THIS! NOT PIRACY. They are slimey little devils. They will do _anything_ and use _any_ excuse to prevent any new production and distribution model that doesn't 'deal' them in.
Re:Still no one gets it - Sigh (Score:2)
Duh.
The laws simply do NOT address piracy. Laws are already on the books that deal with piracy. The new laws do not change this.
Duh.
Most piracy comes from _within_ the entertainment industry anyway.
Possible.
Every new 'leaked' CD that comes out never came from a store bought and ripped CD.
"Leaked", maybe. But most music online does come from store bought and ripped CDs. Anime comes from someone's TV tuner card in Japan. And there are plenty of full r
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Still no one gets it - Sigh (Score:2)
Watch out, this is coming. They want piracy to happen. So they can say "99% of all the non-copy-protected disks are pirated copies, we should make them illegal". And they will probably be correct about that 99% number. Then they can mandate that machines that play these pirated disks are illegal.
Grandpa and grandma will be able to watch their children's movie
Re:Still no one gets it - Sigh (Score:2)
SO how exactly is he prevented from doing that? Have iTunes become the new Paradise for idependent artists, have their sales shaken RIAA to its kness? Nope. I'll give you that I find some independent music good, but indepe
plan of attack (Score:2)
But then that's getting back to the completely retarded idea of how manufacturers want to sell you something, and still be the one in control over and owner of i
DRM In the Long Term Light (Score:2)
I say that DRM is the studio's plan to have perpetual copyright. Think of it this way: it is, now and until the law is removed, a violation of the DMCA to unscramble CSS. So, when the copyright on Steamboat Willie (or any other DVD-released movie) expires, the studios will have a (
DRM= Digital Restrictions Management (Score:2)
The **AA groups don't care about consumers, they only care about money, and any way to make people buy multiple copies is a good thing, from their prospective.
Next-Gen Console War (Score:2)
Not buying HD-DVD or Blu-Ray (Score:2)
Returns (Score:2)
HDMI damned (Score:2)
But here's the deal: the average consumer doesn't know or care what the hell that flag is, and does it exist on this disk or the other, or whether his player is supporting it. He goes to the shop and buys a HD DVD player and has a HDTV. That's it.
People will buy non-HDMI players and tv sets now since they'll work *NOW*. And this pretty much sets up post
Hey maybe they'll screw up again (Score:2)
The pact relies on HDMI becoming prevalient (Score:3, Insightful)
But if that is not the case they WILL NOT enable the flag or risk loosing many sales. That's why it is important if you are going to buy the PS3 to buy only the $500 model, to send a signal that you have no interest in HDMI. The fewer people support HDMI the longer it will take to turn on this flag, and if the timeframe is long enough no-one will ever enable it because there will be no need.
Re:ummm (Score:2, Insightful)
Can you imagine buying a $100,000 sports car and having a regulator that won't let you use half the cylinders in the engine? I don't see why you defend this practice.
Re:ummm (Score:2)
Unless I'm watching a 720p signal (such as "Lost" on ABC, or "House" on FOX), everything I watch comes from a source which is not much higher in resolution than a 480p DVD.
There are also a ton of native 1/4 HD systems floating around out there, as they are vastly more affordable than a 108
Re:ummm (Score:2)
And jumping from 9.8mbps MPEG2 (DVD) to 36-54mbps MPEG4 (Blu-ray/HD DVD) isn't simply "adding 60 lines".
Re:ummm (Score:2)
Another couple points. You can't compare resolution in only one dimension when two formats have different aspect ratios, and DVD doesn't always produce 480p. It's interesting that the original poster chose to assume best-case processing of DVD content and co
Re:ummm (Score:2)
Re:ummm (Score:2)
So basically what you're saying is that I have no reason to throw away my money on an expensive HD-DVD player when I can get similar quality with a $50 DVD player and cheaper discs? Soooo... why would I want to upgrade again? I don't have an HDTV either and don't plan to buy one so it sounds like HD-DVD is useless to me.
Re:problem defining property rights (Score:2)
IANAL (yet) but informal agreements like these can be seen as anti-competitive, and as such, illegal under anti-trust laws. Then again, all of these companies already have high-paid lawyers who haven't throw up red flags about this, so I could be wrong.
Re:Software HD-DVD Players? (Score:2)
You forgot your question mark. And yes.
I am sure that five years from now most of the people who are interested enough in HD-DVD will just get an inexpensive 1080p or higher LCD with a decent computer and not have to bother with B.S.
Only, you now have to bother with the B.S. of not being able to backup your movies. That, and my current LCD will be working just fine
Re:Xbox 360 Screwed? (Score:2)
1080p may be the ultimate format goal but there are precious few devices that can do it and no software coded in it. How many HD televisions can take a 1080p source today? Any Sony's? Hopefully this year sometime.
The biggest problem with 1080i is that it has to be deinterlaced for progressive
Re:Dreamcast/Xbox Fans Commiting Suicide (Score:2)
Muhammad Saeed al-Sahhaf [wikipedia.org] has a Slashdot account?
"$499 PS3
1080p BluRay movies out of the box"
Assuming there's anything actually worth watching on BluRay. And assuming that HD-DVD doesn't win (otherwise your BluRay makes for a rather expensive paperweight, much like your Betamax player). And, finally, assuming the movie studios remain so magnanimous between now and launch to not put the ICT in.
"1080p games out of the box - about 1/3 to 1/4 of the current crop of PS3 ga