Version: 2008
  • On TV.com: TOP 10 Shows CANCELED Too Soon

Comments on: NEC unveils chip to bridge Blu-ray/HD DVD divide

One chip that works with both standards could cut the cost of building a player that accomodates Blu-ray and HD DVD discs.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) (12 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
Royalties?
by bitesizepankakes October 11, 2006 11:12 AM PDT
"But royalties are also a factor. The companies that invented the
standards could make millions in licensing fees over the next
decade if their standard gets adopted widely. Building a combo
player, therefore, would require paying royalties to both camps."

Somehow, i just don't buy it. Royalties alone are not going to
double the cost. once more components become compatible
with both standards, i would certainly pay an extra couple of
hundred or so dollars for a product which plays both. I mean,
rather that than buy 2 separate $500-1000 players. I Can not
really believe they are not going to pay 2 sets of royalties, (if
there would not be too many redundant components required),
is gonna dissuade companies if faced with the possibility of
alienating as much as half the HD market.
Reply to this comment
Double the cost?
by Gasaraki October 11, 2006 11:34 AM PDT
It never said royalties will double the cost...

A hybrid drive will cost more because of the components like the lasers and the royalties to both camps.
Royalties are the REASON behind the split
by aabcdefghij987654321 October 11, 2006 1:03 PM PDT
It has nothing to do with the superiority of one format over the other, the reason the players haven't united behind a single standard is the hope of getting royalty payments.

Personally I hope a new standard emerges and displaces both of these simply because the developers of these two "standards" can't agree.
Winner Take All
by Mister Winky October 11, 2006 12:15 PM PDT
I think the real reason we won't see a hybrid player is that these companies are trying to defeat one another's standard early in the race

If both technologies succeed, hybrid players are inevitable, but none of the CE companies want to be the first to give in -- none want to admit that the competing standard is gaining traction.

All this will come at the expense of consumers, of course. Format wars during the development phase can push the bounds of technology (i.e. when companies battle towards a common standard), but format wars in the marketplace are never healthy.

People like me will wait until this blows over and I can buy a combo player for $250, by which time the next standard will be brewing...

-MisterWinky
Reply to this comment
Better wait for the air to clear.
by Stan Johnson October 11, 2006 12:41 PM PDT
Better wait for the air to clear.

I am hoping HD/DVD wins as I prefer a lower cost.
Reply to this comment
NEC is the only rational company in this war
by airwalkery2k October 11, 2006 5:56 PM PDT
Since Blu-Ray and HD-DVD companies can't come together, NEC and whatever companies end up making the hybrid players will be the ones the consumers will flock to, as they found a simple solution.

I would much rather pick up a disc and know I can play it, rather than being restricted to one format or forced to have 2 expensive players. (I'd much rather have 1 slightly more expensive player.)

Plus, if one side does win, you aren't stuck with obsolete equipment had you chose the wrong side. Customers are turned off by the prospective of betting on the wrong horse.
Reply to this comment
NEC is the only rational company in this war
by airwalkery2k October 11, 2006 5:57 PM PDT
Since Blu-Ray and HD-DVD companies can't come together, NEC and whatever companies end up making the hybrid players will be the ones the consumers will flock to, as they found a simple solution.

I would much rather pick up a disc and know I can play it, rather than being restricted to one format or forced to have 2 expensive players. (I'd much rather have 1 slightly more expensive player.)

Plus, if one side does win, you aren't stuck with obsolete equipment had you chose the wrong side. Customers are turned off by the prospective of betting on the wrong horse.
Reply to this comment
NEC is the winner here.
by airwalkery2k October 11, 2006 5:57 PM PDT
Since Blu-Ray and HD-DVD companies can't come together, NEC and whatever companies end up making the hybrid players will be the ones the consumers will flock to, as they found a simple solution.

I would much rather pick up a disc and know I can play it, rather than being restricted to one format or forced to have 2 expensive players. (I'd much rather have 1 slightly more expensive player.)

Plus, if one side does win, you aren't stuck with obsolete equipment had you chose the wrong side. Customers are turned off by the prospective of betting on the wrong horse.
Reply to this comment
A Duel-Format Player Isn't The Way To Go
by aka_tripleB October 11, 2006 9:17 PM PDT
The only benefit that a duel-format player has is letting you watch rented video. If you start buying video in either format, then you still run the risk of getting stuck with a partially obsolete machine and not too mention any video in the format that loses.

So you would still have to repurchase something (most likely re-releases of the videos) to continue to enjoy the videos. The reason I say you would have to re-buy the videos is once a format wins, that format player will be the only one you can buy. This is why you'll still get stuck buying about half of your videos again and makes no sense in buying a hybrid player.
View reply
Well never be a player, against licencing agreement
by Chase211 October 11, 2006 10:32 PM PDT
NEC made the chip IN HOPES that sony and Toshiba would concede to allow the hybrid players to be produced, the companys would only do this to hedge thier bets on thier own format and they would both have to agree (I assume thats the case with toshiba, I know they have declined to allow hybrid players to be produced but I do not know if it is also agianst thier licencing agreement as it is with sony) but either way this will never hit Amarican (or any other major market, if any market at all) the most I expect to see from this is one or two prototypes sitting in hitachi or some other manufacturers warehouse.
No new development, there are already prototype blu ray players, but none can be sold on the open market.
Reply to this comment
No restrictions in license
by Zappoman October 14, 2006 12:31 AM PDT
There's a misconception, created largely by an article by John Dvorak, that the BD or HD DVD license prohibits hybrid players. This is simply not true. First off, people who have read the license have confirmed that there's no such prohibition, and second, there's no way such license would be accepted. Can you say "antitrust" and "restraint of trade"?
(12 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement
Click Here

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement