Microsoft Longhorn To Support HD DVD Format
MSDVD writes "Microsoft's Japanese Division reported that its upcoming operating system, code-named Longhorn, will support HD DVD format. HD DVD is an enhanced version of the standard DVD technology. According to online reports, Microsoft is pushing the next-generation blue-laser DVD technology like NEC and Toshiba. Blue-light technology can read and write data much faster and at higher densities, which is needed for high-definition content. Few Japanese companies said they will have HD DVD content based DVDs by next year to support the players."
So with Microsoft throwing its support behind HD-DVD, does this mean that Sony's Blu-ray will go the way of Betamax (and to a lesser extent Minidisc)?
The take up of DVD and CD technologies has been driven by content. However, sales of "CD plus" technology (high resolution CD, DVD-audio) are going nowhere fast, despite the hype.
While these technologies will be nice to have for storage, I can't see that joe average is suddenly going to go out and re-buy their DVD collection.
I believe the average punter has a fairly good feel for what is 'good enough' and it won't take off.
I suspect that this is driven by Hollywood with its hand up Microsoft's bottom pulling the strings, wanting to move away from the CD and DVD debacle as soon as it can. Unfortunately the genie is out of the bag.
(mixed metaphors are the new black).
Humorous signatures are over-rated.
Sigs cause cancer.
shit, i think ill go camp out in front of comp-usa and wait for longhorn!
bash: rtfm: command not found
and from yet another rumor-mill, it is also supposed to support quantum computing, since it looks like the final release date will be close to the time when we're all using quantum computers!
MPEG video is encumbered by patents for a few more years, but at least the details are publicly available.
HD DVD is supposed to be MPEG-4 Advanced, and does not require a new physical formatted disc, since it gets HD size at the same rate DVDs are at today.
Seems to me that there are other motives for changing the media format...
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I can see it now at K-Mart -- "Blue light special on LongHorn in the bed&bath^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^hstereo department.
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"Guess I'll have to buy the White Album again."
Amazing isn't it? We have all these incredible new technologies for communications, literature and entertainment and our great cultural accomplishments are sequels to Cinderella and Scooby Doo.
Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
More importantly, will other Microsoft operating systems be updated to support HD-DVD?
I'm glad that Microsoft will support this :)
English is easier said than done.
It's getting to the point where OSes will need DVD media because the installation routines are so large. XP is huge and Longhorn will make it look lean and mean by comparison. I would imagine by the time it's actually shipping, the service packs will be over a gig. ;-)
Time travel -- as the OS gets postponed further into the future, efforts are underway to have built in time-travel.
Space travel -- care of Paul Allen. Everyone who can afford to purchase a copy of Longhorn will get vouchers for a free ride on SpaceShip-ME.
OogaBoogle will be built in. This is Microsoft's next generation search engine. Incorporating Yukon into the filesystem, folks will be able to wade through all the metadata they could ever want, and more!
Plug and Play support for the USB 5.0 matter transmogrifier. We don't have a prototype yet, but um...by the time Longhorn is stable, I'm sure we'll have the transmogrifier supported.
IE will be fully xhtml 1.0 and CSS1 compliant.
Lastly, each package will be bundled with Duke Nukem Forever.
In a reasonable world, you wouldn't have to wait for a new OS release to support a new media format, because the video codecs wouldn't be part of the OS...
This is like saying "Microsoft has thrown it's support behind Windows!". HD-DVD is a Microsoft product, and it's not surprising that they'll bundle it with Windows - just like all of their other products.
We might as well try to use the U.S. Justice Dept. to force Microsoft to add blu-ray compatibility too.
They want to release the damn things in cartridges of all things. Remember back in the day when Laserdiscs were in those? And the first CD-Writers? It's a horrible way to store stuff. I prefer having just the discs themselves, and be able to store them in neat, small booklets when I travel. Also, the DVD Consortium does not back Sonys blu-ray, they are backing HD DVD. Blu-Ray is the DIVX, Betamax, etc of the DVD generation. Evil.
IS it possible to play HD DVD using a normal DVD player?
Since WM9 is one of the three (Apple's H.264/AVC is another one) codecs that MUST be supported by any HD DVD player, is this any surprise? I mean, duh...
Slow news day indeed.
Microsoft's Japanese Division reported that its upcoming operating system, code-named Longhorn, will support HD DVD format.
How else would we be able to download and install all the new features and security patches?
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...it will support many things not yet common. So will every other OS at the time.
Hm?
:-)
If they wouldn't support HD-DVD in Longhorn it would be big news though.
- Uhh, yes, we designed a video format that will be used on these discs, but Longhorn won't support them.
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Why does MS do so much talking about what they're going to do instead of actually getting it done? What is the point of all these endless "sneak peeks" and feature announcements and blah blah blah. I'm not just asking this as someone who (admittedly) dislike MS and their products, but rather as someone who just doesn't get why so much blabbing is being done about a product that is supposedly years away from release? One could make the argument that this is potentially harmful to MS in the long-run. They're announcing support for feature X today, but given that feature X may be yesterday's news two years from now, the announcement may actually be harmful to perception of their products. I mean, really: how does this benefit anyone?
--Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
Any word on whether Microsoft will be incorporating the highly-touted H.264 video standard like Apple is doing for it's upcoming Tiger?
After all, The Steve did imply that Redmond was going to start their photocopiers? Or, is H.264 integrated with this HD-DVD format?
Also to note, that the cart based Blu Ray discs are not the same dimensions as current DVDs, meaning new cases will be have to be used, and your current DVD racks will become useless in the process. Fun.
...so as well as getting an OS that features the blue screen of death, we'll also get one that'll have a blue laser of death!
...does this mean they will actively disallow blu-ray drives & drivers from Longhorn somehow? I don't know anything about the technical stuff associated with either standard, but surely connecting the drive to an IDE/SCSI/SATA/whatever port and having a driver would be all you'd need?
Can Microsoft stop blu-ray working on Longhorn completely? More lawsuits to follow if they do, I'm thinking...
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forewarning for the possiblility that....Longhorn will be such a huge (resource NOT friendly) OS, it will need to be installed off an HD DVD disc
Longhorn is going to support HD-DVD, what do you think will be required to hold all the installation files?
Windows Media Player requires that a third-party plug-in be purchased in order to play DVDs. Will Longhorn "support" HD DVD in this way, or will you be able to pop in an HD DVD into your computer and play it without forking over more cash?
--Kevin
And this is relevant... how?
Should I assume that Roxio and the Blu-Ray hardware manufacturers will not make drivers?
The next pasture is always greener
I've waited as long as I can... but what's with an "IT" category on Slashdot? Is there *any* story here that doesn't have to do with Information Technology? Or will we soon have a category for the latest on J.Lo and Britney Spears?
(Please don't mod me into oblivion before someone answers my question... thanks...)
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
The result is that consumers and manufacturers have a real choice with Linux, whereas Windows users and OEMs are completely at the mercy of Microsoft's business plan.
Your move.
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
None of this applies to DVD-A. Nobody is really buying the kinds of things you might give away DVD-A capability in. When people drop a huge wad of money on music, it's on playing MP3s. Music has moved beyond the disc.
That's on the market side. On the sensory side, "good enough" will be when the TV picture is indistinguishable from real life.
There's a layman's sense that a CD is "the same" as the song of which it is a recording, even though sure, the acoustics are better at a concert. With someone like Britney Spears, it IS the same as real life... what they're playing on the speakers is a digital recording with some real-time elements.
This sense doesn't exist with TV... you can still "feel" how HD-TV falls short. With standard DVDs, it's painfully clear. We've got a whole 'nother generation of higher-res televisions to sell before it feels "good enough".
And how exactly is Blu-ray not proprietary? Even if you use Mpeg2, you do realize that royalties is going somewhere, just not to Microsoft?
What's the news?
"HD" & "BluRay": it seems to me that those are orthogonal categories.
What makes a DVD an "HD" DVD, other than the fact that HD requires more bytes and BluRay's got 'em?
After all, I could store an HD file on paper-tape, if I wanted to.
What about MS pull a Sony and bundle a 'free' HD-DVD player with their game console?
GPL Deconstructed
Re Rail it!
Microsoft has announced that Longhorn will support Duke Nukem Forever (which will probably ship before Longhorn does).
They just make me laugh. Every day it's something else that will be in Longhorn. Whoo-freakin'-hoo. They're all talk and no action-- this time next year I'll be enjoying Tiger on my Macs and Microsoft will still be talking about more stuff they're adding to Longhorn.
No wonder Windows is such a buggy, insecure piece of shit-- how can anyone be expected to write good code when the feature set is in a constant state of flux through the entire development process? This is just like when they were very far along doing Windows 3.0 and Gates made them go back and add full keyboard navigation capability.
HD DVD is a blue laser disc format but the manufacturing techniques are similar to those for red-laser discs.
As explained the main difference is that BluRay places the recording layer 0.1 mm below the surface of the media to maximize data capacity at around 27gb for single and 54 gb for dual layer. This will require disc manufacturers to build new factories because this is completely different from DVD and CD specifications. Because of this the layer of protective plastic will be very thin which some have speculated will initially require either a special layer of protective plastic which has been reported to decrease reliability or it will require the discs to be contained in a cartridge (think magneto-optical). Carts would, of course, increase production costs and REALLY increase end user costs.
HD DVD places the recording layer at 0.6mm below the surface which is currently the standard used by DVD so that DVD manufacturing plants can make either format discs on the same assembly lines. This is at a cost, though, with a reduced capacity at 15gb for single layer and 30 gb for dual layer. And, of course, the existing protective layer will be sufficient as it is the same as the standard DVD.
The actual codecs supported will be the same for both formats. Both will support MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and (probably) Microsoft's WM9 codecs. As part of Microsoft's deal to get WM9 included in the HD DVD spec it was forced to open the specification to allow competitors to make products for encoding and decoding. Their benefit will be a share of the royalties for products that encode or decode HD-DVD content and sales of encoding/decoding software that they produce, but the deal does not include in any way a monopoly on encoder/decoder software.
The main difference, as stated, is the distance for the recording layer from the surface of the media which changes the maximal capacity because of the effect on the intensity of the laser as it passes through the media.
In other words, it's scheduled to be released next week.
T2 comes with "HD" media file in the form of WM9 with some extra DRM shit.
Of course they support this type of "HD-DVD", since it would be a lock in to their proprietary format.
You are grossly misinformed .
As a condition to Microsoft before it could establish VC-9 as a standard, it had to strip VC-9 of proprietary status, Majidimehr said.
MIcrosoft's fulfillment department announced that a serious effort will be made to ship the Longhorn operating system before the emerging HD DVD standard becomes obsolete.
Expect it to require the HD DVD just to store the install files...
....
Office, well that is another HD/DVD... and god help you if you want visual studio 20xx
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Yes, let's ignore all the good, classic films that come out every year just because there were some flash-in-the-pan sequels that got some press for about a month.
It's cool to bitch about ourselves--it makes us enlightened!
Today developers announced that the upcomming 3D Action game "Duke Nukem" will require a computer with blu-ray enabled technology. "Due to the size of bitmaps and the advancements made in technology lately gamers will need much more storage capacity for the product we are about to deliver" said one enthusiastic developer. The game is due to be released just after the long anticipated next-generation Microsoft operating system codename "Longhorn", which is expected to fully support Duke Nukem.
Does it go on forever?
They're just saying it will support it out of the box. I'm sure manufacturers will make their own drivers for previous operating systems.
What exactly is the problem here? I also have to wait for certain features when a new Linux kernel is due out.
Seems Windows has the greater chance of driver and codec support here due to its much, much greater manufacturer support.
This is the second post I've seen that assumes HD-DVD will be the only supported format on Longhorn, that it won't be available for previous versions of Windows, etc. People, they make these things called codecs and drivers. I hear tell you can even install them.
All this news is saying is that HD-DVD will be supported out of the box. You know, how DVDs are supported out of the box for Windows XP? I fail to see the issue here, but I guess it allows a few Slashdotters to get up on a soapbox and bitch about nothing in the name of feeling important, so there you go.
H.264 is an international standard from MPEG and ITU, sometimes known as MPEG-4 Part 10 or MPEG AVC (Advanced Video Codec).
And yes, if they're supporting HD DVD, they will be supporting H.264, since it's one of the required codecs for HD DVD, along with VC-9 and MPEG-2.
"Most average joes i know didnt even get a dvd player because of the additional features or the better picture quality. no it was just because video rental stores started carrying dvds instead of vhs tapes! "
Most video stores STILL carry video tapes.
Yes DVD's took off because of a couple things.
One better video and sound quality. Two no more "be kind, rewind". Smaller than video tape. More durable overall than video tape. More content for the money than video tape (no making of LOTR on VHS). Better resale value than video tape. Random access of that one scene you like. And with Apples iDVD and the prolifuration of DVD burners, as well as video capture cards, and camcorders. DVD's future was assured with "joe consumer".
You know, in this day and age with all the crap DRM and copy protection the RIAA is pushing through on its CDs, I can't help but shudder when I see "enhanced" with a product like this. I've come to associate it as a term that either implies superflous marketing speak with no real meaning, or a dysfunctional disc that is crippled by protection.
Any word yet on what kind of "enhancements" these HD DVDs will have?
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With 'Longhorn' scheduled to ship no earlier than 2007, they've got plenty of time to work on it!
I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
So now, in addition to handling the overblown, cartoonish graphics already slated (no pun here...) for Longhorn, our whimpering machines will have to struggle with MS's version of an HD-DVD decoder? Perfect. Given Microsoft's record with high CPU usage, crappy AV performance, and unstable systems, I'd love to see just one computer capable of playing an HD-DVD on Longhorn without shitting itself. Chances are this will be just like XP's Help and Support center...another feature that looks great on the back of the box, but is absolutely worthless in practice.
The real litigious bastards...
Vaporware will now include vaporware!
"Any word yet on what kind of "enhancements" these HD DVDs will have?"
The ability to store all of Slashdot, complete with "In Russia", "FP" and "Hot Grits".
Windows Media has been submitted to SMTPE and other standards bodies, and can be licenced by 3rd parties.
Bad stuff:
8 individual DRM regions not enough any more.
These fuckers are gonna nail it down - not just to your street, or your house, but to a room in your home on a particular day of the week!
Good stuff:
The proposed Sony extension: limiting the colour of pants you can wear whilst over-hearing somebodies brother talk about a work collegue who read an article in another country regarding the disc in question is not expected to make it to the final standard
Phew!
What exactly is the difference between MPEG-2 and MPEG-4? Presumably, one has better compression than the other, so perhaps there's a reason for the decreased space in HD-DVDs.
Other than dislike for something that supports a Microsoft codec as well as the need to re-encode HDTV programs, what is the disadvantage to HD-DVD as opposed to Blu-Ray?
Basically, I just want the LOTR trilogy in the best format possible for home theater entertainment.
54GB, while a tad on the small side compared to hard disks, is a meaningful amount of data storage. Dual-layer DVD might have cut it 3 years ago, but not anymore -- it's just a bigger floppy and better movie copy medium.
It'd be nice to see the better data storage medium win this time.
I haven't been keeping up that closely on all things HD, but right now, isn't the only HD DVD the most recent edition of Terminator 2, and doesn't the HD part of it only play in WMP?
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
The rest of the industry likes Blu-Ray because it has a higher storage capacity (54 GB vs. 30 GB), uses MPEG-2 so movie/television companies don't need to re-encode their HDTV streams and has Sony behind it (movie studio/music label).
Being only MPEG2, the common player is not able to play DivX/XviD (MPEG4) content. How it may be preferable for the MPAA not to use an efficient compression, is left as an exercise to the reader. Hint: Security through bloat.
Kjella
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
...and in other news, Bill Gates has decided to switch from BVD to Fruit of the Loom.
Whoopee.
OK the whole point of my rant here is to alert anyone in the media arena that what will really give a better viewing experience now is to get the FPS rate up during filming. 60p doesn't help when you're just upconverting a 24 fps film source. DVD was a good compromise for resolution and frame rate at the number of bits we had. Now lets start pumping up the frame rate as well as the resolution, now that we have the headroom to do it.
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Duke Nukem Forever
you may find the Higgs in this signature.
See here.
Will Microsoft Longhorn be supporting viruses, trojans, worms, crashes, continuous patching and upkeep, cobbling through licensing, etc. like all the other Microsoft operating systems? Forget Microsoft and switch to Linux.
...in Japan!
They determined through an independent testing organization that it sucks the weenie. They decided to quietly drop H.264.
"This is just like when they were very far along doing Windows 3.0 and Gates made them go back and add full keyboard navigation capability."
Your story is kind of correct, but keyboard navigation was added in Windows 1.0, primarily because mice were rare on PC's.
... People started entering the DVD player craze out of two reason : 1) tehre was suddenly a dearth of cheapo 30$ players, and the videothek only had the new Blockbuster in DVD, and rarely as VHS (the change was gradual with more DVD coming out then VHS). And frankly this is what forced me to give up on my VHS recorder to put a DVD player. I am not alone colleague did the same. As for picture/sound quality, I do not see any difference on my TV. It might be true on HDTV but around here HDTV are a RARE occurence. As for the rewind things, people do not seem to care that much (after all you need is push a button, do something else, and when you are ready take the VHS already rewinded out). So I doubt that for the average consummer without a gret equipement the advantage you cited are true. Even worse with DVD I am FORCE FEEDED advertising at the start of the DVD, with the DVD forbidding fast forward. Lately I had to take 15 minutes of ads before the feature. With VHS you can at least use the fast forward button....
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An operating system that will be availalbe in 2006 will support technology from 2005!
Windows XP appears to support rewritable CDs (couldn't get their rewritable DVD act together in time for XP, I guess), but it's really a bundled Roxio "one big burn" solution under the covers.
You can get third-party software that lets you treat DVD+/-RW and CD-RW "like a floppy", but so far reliability has remained suspect, and interoperability between different vendor solutions has been provably A Big Mess.
The re-recordable media problem is especially crucial to Windows backups. With dual-layer re-recordable DVDs coming, DVD could be a plausible Windows backup media for many situations -- if direct O/S support solved the compatibility mess.
I can't believe how many years will pass before Windows has any direct, API-level support for any form of re-writable disc. I also fear that when Longhorn finally ships, it will somehow manage to be one or more steps behind the current technology of that time, leading up to another umpteen-year delay to have decent backup solutions for the casual user.
Will they get Mt. Rainier support in, as promised? Seems like dual-layer RW will be a reality before Longhorn is -- will it support that? I wait with bated breath!
One of the conditions Microsoft had to satisfy to get their codec accepted for HD-DVD was to allow open licensing of their codec. There is still royalties, but there is no restriction on who can license it.
Wrote this on my blog a while ago...
Although I'm not a particular "conspiracy theory" freak, I'm starting to smell a rat on the latest moves on the DVD arena. First, the industry tries to play good sport and announces (also here and here, and discussed on Slashdot) out of a sudden it's going to "tolerate" limited copy of DVD, allowing them to be backed up and to transfer content to portable devices. The "gift" is based on technology being developed by a consortium that includes IBM, Microsoft, Intel, Sony, Toshiba, Matsushita, Warner Bros. and Disney, and is being labeled Advanced Access Content System (AACS). Trying the usual PR stunt of passing a consumer right, upheld by most Worldwide copyright laws that for a long time have entitled consumers to private copy (something that has up to now, and as you will see, in the future, been denied), as their "gift" to society, they have just, as usual, forgot to mention some "little details".
The same industry that brought us region encoding, supposedly to avoid the possibility of buying a movie in a given place before it premieres at the cinema, although it is available elsewhere, in practice a cover-up to allow regional pricing of DVD (what else justifies 20, 30, 40 year old movies being region encoded?), has "forgot" to stress that this "feature" will only be available on the upcoming new-generation DVD format, still being cooked up by the DVD Forum, former DVD Consortium. So, to keep it short, they want us to buy all over again our DVD collection, now in a neat DRM crippled format.
After failing miserably with the CSS content encryption of current DVD, quickly cracked by the uber-reverse-engineer DVD Jon, and being at the present time little more than a nuisance, they want to have another go. But this time they are making their homework. Lets take the steps and see.
A little more than one year ago, Microsoft unveiled its plans for a new DRM system, nicknamed Janus. One year later it is confirmed and Microsoft lets out a few more details on the features, licensing and partners. A few weeks later, the DVD Forum announces it is going to include Microsoft WM9 codec in its upcoming HD-DVD specification (as a mandatory requirement). Although it may seem they are going down the same road and bound again to be reverse-engineered and fail miserably all over again, things are now different: of course Microsoft is going to patent its DRM scheme. So, while CSS was qualified as a "trade secret", not allowing the ones who cracked it to be prosecuted, reverse-engineering Microsoft DRM scheme will be violating patent law, and the all-mighty DMCA, what makes it a completely different scenario.
Microsoft has already shown it is very interested in the media turf. After developing its own audio and video codecs and using its dominating position to spread them to the web and hardware devices like portable players and even some standalone players, and after including its Media Player in all current Windows version (earning them the current EU law suit), that will of course support both the WM9 codec and the Janus DRM, we can already see they are trying to broaden their scope. This can be seen on their Windows XP Media Center Edition 2004, and it would not surprise me to see it ported to standalone devices, either on its current packaging or by porting it to Windows CE.
So what can we see as the outcome of this scenario?
" I absoloutely loathe caddies - I sincerely hope blu ray falls on it's ass."
Then you must loath 8", 3.5", HD, and Tape, as well as VHS. All are hard-shell'ed for a reason. You want more data? Bite the bullet.
It looks like the HD DVD has long been replaced by newer technology by the time Microsoft gets Longhorn out! They even cannot get the XP SP2 ready.
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http://www.crn.com/sections/breakingnews/breaki
"The RC2 code that was made available Monday had been promised for release in mid-May, but the date shifted after Microsoft confirmed last month that the final release of Windows XP2 had slipped until the third quarter. The beta was first released in December and RC1 appeared in March. The Windows update was originally scheduled to ship during the first half of 2004."
I don't understand what you are talking about. VC-9's details are already available. Take a look at http://www.mpegla.com/pid/vc9/.
... any technology will be supported. USB holodecks will be supported, but release will only be in 2050...
When he claimed at WWDC that MacOSX Tiger (10.4) was 'Introducing Longhorn' ;)
Exercise caution when modding this message up: the author acts like a jerk when his karma is excellent.
I suspect we'll have more "declarations of intent" from MS over the next couple of years so that we don't forget about Longhorn, like:
"Gates says 640GB should be enough memory for anyone running Longhorn"
"Ballmer dresses in a tu-tu and chants 'Longhorn' repeatedly on stage at an MS Developer conference"
"Microsoft say Longhorn will be more secure than Windows"
etc.
I don't know about "Longhorn" but thinking about it just gives me a "floppy"...
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
Got Those DVD Blues
Look, I'm sorry, I really don't mean to troll... but why all this info about Longhorn?
;)
In the past, Microsoft has told us a lot about the next OS. What it'll do. How great it'll be. How safe. How good.
And then, when you had the actual CD(s) in hand, it turned out to be less, to be announced, to be patched, to be in the next version...
I don't care about Longhorn. It's years away. Many years.
When it's promised to show up within the next three months, I'll be interested. And I'll try it out. And I'll look at a lot of reviews. And I'll read the hatred from Slashdot
But not now.
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Linux, on the other hand, will support HD DVD as soon as a kernel hacker gets enough of the spec to implement the driver. Any bets on when exactly that will be?
What is the big news here?
So LongHorn will have HD-DVD out of the box, and Linux will have support for all of the DVD formats available out of the box long before Longhorn is available in a box. My point still stands, that the Linux universe is much less constrained by some megalomaniac's business model.
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
Shouldn't microsoft should focus it efforts on security rather than dvd formats?
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What makes you think Windows XP won't have support for those DVD devices as well?
My point still stands--hardware manufacturers develop drivers for Windows on a daily basis. You'll see hardware support for Windows before you'll see it for Linux. And then it just so happens that Longhorn will have out-of-the-box support for HD-DVD (and who's not to say other formats as well).
The "megalomaniac" comment was baseless and silly. Yes, putting out an operating system makes a company a megalomaniac. You need to graduate college and get out of the dorm room into the real world.
more episodes or hours on a single disk.