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Monday, October 31, 2005

Wallace and Gromit and the Curse of the Fake DVDs

Wallace and Gromit are facing a new challenge...the curse of fake DVDs.

Within weeks of their latest movie hitting the silver screen, a BBC Inside Out West investigation, broadcasting tonight (31 October 2005) at 7.30pm on BBC ONE, has discovered pirate DVDs are being sold in Bristol for as little as £5.

The DVDs are poor quality copies of the film.

Reacting to the discovery of counterfeit DVDs, Sean Clarke from Aardman Animations says: "They do not show the film in its full glory - and that is a huge kick in the teeth for everybody at Aardman who put all their effort into making this film.

"I think something needs to be done pretty quickly. DVD has grown recently and so has the piracy issue. The quickest way to get on top of the problem is to make it illegal to buy it."

June Vickery who, until this week, ran the Hollywood Video Library in Bath selling and hiring legitimate DVDs, does not think of dodgy DVDs as a victimless crime.

Her business has just closed down, partly because of the easy availability of cheap pirated DVDs.
She says: "We have been here 23 years now and we've enjoyed it. It's not for not loving the business any more, but it’s getting harder. Piracy is a big part of that.

"I fear with piracy, it takes away that diversity. It'll give you whatever the latest blockbuster is at the cinema. But you can't go to a pirate and get Hamlet, Great Expectations, Gone with the Wind, or any of the classics. It greatly diminishes film as a source of entertainment and inspiration."

Tonight's edition of Inside Out West on BBC ONE discovers that the fake DVDs are part of a much wider problem in Bristol, which also involves counterfeit clothing.

Much of it is sold at a market held on Sundays at St Philips Marsh near Temple Meads.

Mike Roylance, from the UK's Anti-Counterfeiting Group, is horrified at the scale of the problem in Bristol and wants action to be taken now.

He says: "I travel around the markets all the time and this has to be classed as one of the worst I've seen in recent years.

"It's possibly the worst market in the country, if not one of the top four or five."

Source: BBC
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Friday, October 28, 2005

Police bust Chinese CD piracy network

Spanish police have arrested 69 Chinese people suspected of belonging to a CD and DVD pirating network capable of copying more than a million discs a month, the Interior Ministry said on Thursday.

Police found 79,000 pirated CDs and 66,000 illegally copied DVDs, copying equipment and false passports in what the ministry said was the biggest police operation against music and film piracy in Spain.

The group's distribution network stretched from the north of Spain to the south and was controlled by members in Madrid and the eastern city of Alicante.

Spain has the biggest piracy problem in Western Europe, according to the International Federation for the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), which named it as one of its top 10 priority countries worldwide in a report published earlier this year.

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Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Blu-Ray winner in DVD war: industry group

Technology group Forrester Research on Wednesday declared Blu-Ray, a new DVD format backed by electronics makers led by Sony Corp as the winner in a heated battle over next-generation DVD technology.

"Two groups are competing for control of high-definition DVD formats to be launched in the spring of 2006. After a long and tedious run up to launch, it is now clear to Forrester that the Sony-led Blu-Ray format will win," said Forrester Research analyst Ted Schadler in a report.

For years the Sony group and a rival set of companies led by Toshiba Corp which back HD DVD technology have been locked in a heated battle over whose standards will be used to make a new generation of DVD players that promise consumers sharper pictures and manufacturers new revenues.

A key to which technology wins has been the support of Hollywood's major film studios, which until only recently had been split evenly with three majors supporting Blu-Ray and three behind HD-DVD. Both formats deliver movies in sharp high-definition and store more data than traditional DVDs, enabling them to offer interactive features such as games.

Earlier this month, however, Paramount Home Entertainment said it would release digital movies in the Blu-Ray format, becoming the first major studio to support both rival formats.
Paramount, owned by Viacom Inc., had previously said it would release titles in HD DVD. Paramount's support of Blu-Ray was prompted by the failure of the two factions to join forces before the new high-definition DVD players went on sale, industry sources have said.
HD DVD supporter Warner Bros. has declined to comment on reports it may soon follow Paramount's lead by endorsing both.

FORMAT WAR, BAD IDEA

The formats are incompatible, which Hollywood fears will lead to consumer confusion. Industry watchers believe one format will ultimately win like in the case of the high-stakes home video battle between VHS and Betamax in the 1980s.

Schadler of Forrester said in his report that Sony learned from its painful Betamax loss that the format with the most industry support will win, and it set out years ago to assemble an "impregnable lineup of partners."

He said a format battle would be risky for both sides. "Unless the HD DVD group abandons the field, it will be another two years before consumers are confident enough of the winner to think about buying a new format DVD player. In the meantime, they will expand their video on-demand, downloadable video, and Internet viewing habits," he said.

Sony and Toshiba held high-level talks earlier this year to try to unify their formats and avoid an all-out standards war, but those discussions broke down.

Backers of HD DVD were not immediately available to comment on the Forrester report, but in an interview earlier this week, HD DVD spokesman Mark Knox said he believes two formats will ultimately reach the market but that HD DVD remains hopeful a unified format will be agreed upon.

"Our position has not changed. We're always open to finding a way to unify the format, but we want to make sure every parameter is available for discussion, whether its on the disc structure, file format," and other issues, he said.

"Let's lay everything on the table and do our due diligence. Unfortunately some of the replies we have received, are that some of the parameters, particularly on the disc structure, are not up for discussion," he said.

Source: Reuters

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Monday, October 17, 2005

Plextor Unveils First 18x DVD±R Burner

Plextor have announced their new PX-760 DVD burner, which is capable of recording on DVD±R media at the envelope-pushing 18x. The company also announced a super-multi DVD recorder, codenamed PX-750.

The Japanese company will launch both an ATAPI (PX-760A/JP) and a SATA (PX-760SA/JP) version of the drive. The PX-760 series is the first recorder to support 18x CAV recording on selected 16x DVD±R media (Taiyo Yuden, MKM) as well as 10x PCAV recording on 8x DVD+R DL media.

The PX-760A/JP is expected in the Japanese market by the end of November for 15,000 Yen (£75), while the SATA version will be launched early December for 18,000 Yen (£89).
According to Plextor, the 18x recording speed was successfully managed by using new servo mechanisms as well as by utilizing the "AutoStrategy" technology.

Originally developed by Taiyo Yuden, the "AutoStrategy" could be comparable with the "SolidBurn" technology, introduced by Philips / BenQ. This function decides the maximum allowed recording speed of the drive according to the blank media type. Using the power calibration areas on a disc, AutoStrategy follows an algorithm that includes power calibration as well as data error checking, in order to decide the optimum writing strategy for each media. The results can be stored in the drive's EEPROM in order to be recalled and used for future recordings of the specific type of disc (MID). In addition, user is able to use the strategy test function only without actually burning the media.

The PX-760 series also supports writing on DVD-R DL at 6x, 8x for DVD+RW, 6x for DVD-RW, and 48x/24x for CD-R/RW. PlexTools Professional is included in the retail package offering the popular Q-Check TA Test, Q-Check PI/PO Test, Q-Check Beta/Jitter Test and Q-Check FE/TE Test features.

In addition, the first super-multi recorder of Plextor will be available in both internal (ATAPI) and external versions (USB 2.0/IEEE 1394). Both PX-750A/JP and PX-750UF/JP drives support 16x DVD±R, 8x DVD±R DL and 5x DVD-RAM recording (non-cartridged only). The ATAPI PX-750A/JP is expected in Japan in the middle of November for 11,000 Yen (£55), while the PX-750UF/JP is scheduled to hit the market early December priced at $70.

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Sunday, October 16, 2005

A Clash Of Titans

Consumers get stepped on when behemoths like Sony and Toshiba can't agree on a new standard for the enxt generation of DVD players.

Hollywood has a nightmare, and it isn't a movie.

This bad dream is about how a duel between two high-tech giants could force consumers to make a costly bet on the wrong technology, or slow the adoption of high-definition DVD players due out next year.

Such a delay would be bad news for consumer electronics retailers such as Best Buy, which count on new products to spur sales growth. The rival technology standards could jeopardize future profits at movie studios, which count on home movie viewing for nearly half of all revenue. Sales of DVDs have slowed, and high-definition DVDs, a natural companion product for new HDTV sets, would open a whole new sales opportunity for new and existing movies.
In Hollywood's disaster epic, Sony and Toshiba might force a rerun of the famed VHS-vs.-Betamax videocassette war of the 1980s. That contest required movie studios to choose between formats, and it forced consumers to bet on which standard would become the future of home movie entertainment. JVC's VHS format won, leaving an army of embittered Sony Betamax owners whose pricey machines became instant relics.

This time around, analysts say competition between the two would-be DVD player standards -- Blu-ray from Sony and HD DVD from Toshiba -- could force movie studios to shell out billions of dollars to duplicate and market movies in the two incompatible DVD formats. Consumers could wind up investing hundreds of dollars in a DVD player, only to have it become the new Betamax.
A Toshiba representative declined to comment, and a Sony spokesman was not available.

Battleground 2006
The first Toshiba HD DVD players are expected to hit stores in March, while the first Blu-ray DVD player might be the disk drive in Sony's PlayStation 3 videogame console, which is expected to debut by late 2006, analysts said. (Microsoft's Xbox 360, which will be introduced late next month, won't have a next-generation DVD drive, analysts said.)

The PlayStation 3 is expected to help bring prices of the new DVD players down, said Josh Martin, an analyst with IDC in Framingham, Mass.

"How can you sell a new high-definition DVD player for $1,000 when the PlayStation 3 is selling for $400? I think the HD DVD players may cost $1,000 in March, but they'll come down to $500 or so when the PlayStation 3 comes out," Martin said.

The next-generation movie disks are expected to sell for more than $20 each, but it's unclear how much more, said Gerry Kaufhold, an analyst at research firm In-Stat in Scottsdale, Ariz.
The arguments over the competing formats mostly involve storage capacity and start-up production costs. Sony's Blu-ray requires more start-up investment to produce the disks in bulk than Toshiba's HD DVD does, Martin said. But Blu-ray holds out the promise of greater storage capacity, which means the movie studios might not have to change disk formats again for several years.

But Toshiba's HD DVD has another, less apparent advantage for movie studios that are worried about film piracy. The first HD DVD units will support only playback, not recording, which means in the short term that movie disks will be impossible to copy, Kaufhold said. Blu-ray, on the other hand, will record blank disks the day it is introduced.

The Sony and Toshiba obsession with DVD storage capacity is understandable. High-definition video requires a lot more storage space on a DVD disk than today's lesser-quality digital images, and both companies have solved this problem with blue-light lasers that can store six to 10 times more data on a standard-sized DVD disk than today's red lasers can.

While a typical DVD today stores 4.7 gigabytes (less common dual-layer DVD disks store about 8.6 gigabytes), Toshiba would increase that to 30 gigabytes and Sony would boost it to 50 gigabytes. By some estimates, a high-definition version of a Hollywood movie will require up to 13 gigabytes of storage space, 5 gigabytes more for a high-quality soundtrack and additional capacity for DVD extras such as "behind the scenes" video and star interviews.

While no one seems to view a standards war as desirable, analysts say neither Sony nor Toshiba will back down, because owning the next-generation home movie technology would be so lucrative. Talks between the two companies about merging the rival technologies collapsed earlier this year. The only hope of a peaceful resolution appears to lie with Hollywood. If enough movie studios endorse one technology, the other would be forced to capitulate, analysts say.

No Negotiations
"I don't think there will be a negotiated pact between Song and Toshiba," Martin said. "There is so much riding on it, and each company is firmly entrenched in believing in their technology."
So far the studios are split over the formats, with Twentieth Century Fox, Vivendi Universal and Walt Disney supporting Sony's Blu-ray and New Line Cinema, Universal Studios Home Entertainment and Warner Home Video supporting Toshiba's HD DVD. Paramount Home Entertainment recently caused a stir by saying it would support both formats.

Computer and software companies are interested because DVD computer drives are a key element in making PCs the center of home multimedia networks.

"The next generation of entertainment PCs will be all about home networking, and one of their features will be storing HD DVD mocies on the PC's hard drive," Kaufhold said. You'll be able to play those movies back on any TV in the the house that's connected to the network, either by cape or wirelessly."

Intel and Microsoft recently endorsed Toshiba's HD DVD format based on the technical benefits such as initial storage capacity and the ability to copy a DVD movie to a PC hard drive. Sony Blu-ray supporters dispute those supposed advantages, and computer manufacturers Hewlett-Packard and Dell remain firmly in the Sony Blu-ray camp.

The first evidence of a crack in the resolve of either next-generation DVD camp was the recent decision by Paramount to support Sony's Blu-ray in addition to Toshiba's HD DVD, Martin said. That clears the way for other studios to do the same -- or perhaps to shift to Blu-ray altogether.
"The biggest studio concern was the cost of developing the Blu-ray technology, but Paramount said Sony had proved the cost-effectiveness to them finally. That removes a barrier for the other studios," Martin said. "If one more movie studio says it will release movies on both formats instead of HD DVD, then I think HD DVD is doomed."

Source: Minneapolis Star Tribune

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Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Apple XSAN Software Training

Learn about Xsan, the high-performance SAN (Storage Area Network) file system for Mac OS X that allows multiple computers to access centralized storage over Fibre Channel. Sharing media this way allows video and film production professionals to build storage networks using Xserve RAID for collaboration during post production.

Registration is required.

Digital Pictures
212 North Second Street
Minneapolis, MN 55401
October 18, 2:00-4:00 PM

Register here

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Friday, October 07, 2005

DVD-RW DL and HD DVD-RR new formats on DVD forum's roadmap

DVD forum did a presentation of recent standardization work and future roadmaps for the organization’s formats at a conference held in Tokyo yesterday. On the agenda were of course the HD DVD format but also faster DVD-R DL and DVD-RAM speeds as well as information about the DVD-RW DL format:
  • HD DVD will get a second rewritable format called HD DVD-RR, as in ReRecordable. The previously announced HD DVD-RW format is more or less like an HD DVD-RAM format while the HD DVD-RR format will share more properties with the HD DVD-R/ROM formats. Supposedly HD DVD-RR will be easier to make in a DL version than HD DVD-RW too. The names are quite confusing though…
  • Region coding, managed copies and AACS were also topics discussed. Region coding will not be a part of AACS and might not be incorporated to the HD DVD format at all. The specifications for AACS are not final yet so exact details of how managed copies will work were not disclosed.
  • 8x DVD-R DL was approved in September and work on the specifications for 12x speed is expected to start later this year.16x DVD-RAM was also approved in September. The media will only be compatible with 6x and higher speeds and hence not be writable with any of the current DVD-RAM burners.
  • Draft version 1.9 of DVD-RW DL specifications are under development and the final 2.0 version is expected to be ready in late Q1 or early Q2 next year. The write speed in the basic specifications will be 2x. The presented specifications for DVD-RW DL show however a reflectivity of only 5-10 % which is way below the 18-30 % required for matching the DVD-ROM DL specifications.


You can find more info at the Japanese website AV Watch (Babelfish translation).

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Wednesday, October 05, 2005

China to develop new format based on HD-DVD

A government-affiliated research body announced Tuesday in Beijing that it will develop China's own DVD format in order to break monopoly of foreign companies in DVD manufacturing.
Lu Da, deputy director of the National Disc Engineering Center, said that the new Chinese DVD format will be based on the prevailing format of HD-DVD but incompatible with the HD-DVD systems.

The Chinese format will produce higher definition, better sound and safer way for copyright protection, Lu said. "With such format and related standards," Lu said, "We could have our own voice in the DVD industry." The new Chinese DVD format is scheduled to put into market before 2008.

China produced about 70 percent to 80 percent of the world's DVD players and recorders. However, Chinese manufacturers need to pay licensing fee to overseas patent holders in the DVD industry. The licensing fee accounts for 40 percent of the rough cost of each DVD player, Lu said.

Source: Xinhua
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