Troubling Times for Chinese DVD Standard 22
Turtlewind writes "China's second largest home electronics retailer Suning announced today that it will stop selling new EVD products. This blow for China's home-grown video disc standard comes just days after some of China's largest DVD player manufacturers flatly denied claims by EVD Industry Alliance secretary general Zhang Baoquan that all the alliance's members would stop producing DVD equipment by 2008.
The EVD standard — which was discussed on Slashdot back in 2003 — uses different encoding technology to avoid the license fees on DVD equipment. Unfortunately for EVD's backers, which included the Chinese government, the new standard failed to take off in the face of China's large existing DVD market."
This story is a startling contrast to this one ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This story is a startling contrast to this one (Score:2)
You shouldn't be surprised by any of this. China is like the good old USSR, giving the pro-China view on things, no matter how completely it conflicts with reality.
Look for some older articles on AVS (the video codec used on EVD). You'll find numerous claims that it's superior to H.264 in quality/bitrate, while decoding with a fraction of the CPU p
Is any one suprised? (Score:4, Insightful)
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They are tryign to get AROUND the laws. I don't blame them for wanting to, having to pay the licensing fees is kinda a bummer (and that is the only reason they are doing it, money, not because it is "right"). But it was a no brainer that it would fail.
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But if there were no Intellectual Property Laws regarding the codec, they wouldn't need to pay a licensing fee, they could just use it. Correct?
Why would they bother? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is China, right? Since when have they cared about things like royalties or others' intellectual property?
I suspect that if they wanted to make DVD players without paying the $20 fee, they'd just make DVD players, not pay the fee, and sell them within China.
I think this is more about producing a format within China that won't be a
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They care, now. There is WTO. And China's investments in R&D are about to yield lots of patentable ideas. Do you think they'll have scruples doing a 180?
If you ask me, I'd make it legal to ignore Chinese intellectual property for the same amount of time China ignored western one.
But it will never happen. China is just a tool for the elite that pumped investment money into it to get advantage
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Ever since they started exporting DVD players, and getting sued for unpaid fees.
Maybe a little surprised... (Score:2)
You are attempting to replace an item that is heavily entrenched in consumers' mindshare and financial investment with something that offers no real benefit to the consumer?
That's obviously true everywhere else but China, but what's at least a little surprising is that it's true in China as well. The thing you have to remember is that China is a large enough market to sustain its own standard (ignoring the outside world of course). The interesting part is that the Chinese government can't really control t
If it's just encoding... (Score:2)
As for benefit to consumer, how about not having the cost of licensing passed along to them, not having region-locked discs, not having unskippable ads (see: Shrek 2 di
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However, getting people to buy hybrids is still not that easy. Most poeple in China probably HAVE a DVD player, and
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Ha-ha-ha, that was a good one! Dude, do you have any clue on how many Chinese can afford to buy a DVD player? And no, I'm not talkinkg about the 100M people living in cities and industialized areas...
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Because most DVD players people buy are from China. If the Chinese government mandates EVD, then instantly, most DVD players will be EVD players. They may be a couple dollars more than previous DVD-only players, but they'll still be the cheapest DVD players on the market.
It's more or less the same reason why every DVD player a
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exactly...offer up a free blu-ray version and it might have gained some traction.
China has enough numbers that if they wanted to direct the industry they could...however they are not thinking far enough ahead with this to set the standard.
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They have the numbers, but they absolutely don't have the technical know-how. All they can do right now is repurpose the technology comming out of other countries, such as CDs and MPEG-2 to make the SVCD standard, or DVDs for EVD. Everything they've done on their own has been much worse than the competition in every way.
Did it matter? (Score:2)
It's the content, stupid (Score:1)
Too little, too late. (Score:2)