First Blu-ray Drives Won't play Blu-ray Movies
aapold writes "Sony officially announced its BWU-100A product at its "Experience More 2006" event in Sydney yesterday, all the while acknowledging that there's significant room for improvement before the product is viable for integration into media centre PCs. Sony's product manager for data storage, told CNET.com.au that due to copy protection issues and lagging software development, the drive will only play user-recorded high-definition content from a digital camcorder, and not commercial movies released under the BD format." All this hullabaloo makes me want neither side to win. If only I didn't desperately crave HD content on my TV!
That's gonna take the market by storm for sure.
"Nothing to see here"
Yeah, I think that sums up the latest blu-ray problem
If companies from the past behaved as companies today:
But hey, not all is lost, from the fine article:
So the drive is "useful as a storage device". Cool! Now I can get rid of my 250GX2 SATA Raid and keep my data on something useful. Technology just doesn't get any better than this.
Note to providers of stuff: It doesn't matter why your machine can't do what it's even named after(!), it can't. Don't bring us your tired, your poor, ... the wretched refuse of your
product lines until they do what they're supposed to do! What a
Colossus boner.
Would it be possible to the community to layout the specifications, fabrication methods of the next generation of media?
Is today April 1? Did I miss a memo?
The Doormat
If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
But won't the player play BD content that has been cracked and then burned onto a BluRay disc in the format that the player will accept?
Where were you when the voynix came?
See this just goes to show that DRM isn't a bad thing.
Issues like this are just going to increase the demand for downloadable movies, and hasten the demise of "Disc Media" as the primary means of movie watching.
a future root kit developed by Sony is expected to fix this problem.
I'm looking at a Superbit copy of 5th Element on my Oppo OPDV971H upconverted to 1080i and it looks great. I'm sure Blu-ray would look better, but would it really look so much better that I'd be ready to toss my current DVDs and player for that difference? Especially considering all of the baggage that comes with it?
I'll wait for the price to come way way down and all of the DRM to be cracked... probably when the next format is announced.
This is really typical of Sony. For the last 30 years Sony has iterated this process over and over again.
1. Develop really nice content format.
2. Promote the hell out of new content format.
3. Artificially CRIPPLE THE FUCK out of new content format.
4. Wonder why people aren't buying new content format.
5. Abandon new content format.
See also: BetaMax, MiniDisc, MemoryStick, UDF, etc...
I should say this is really typical of Sony USA. Things like MiniDisc were really popular in Japan, but the restrictions imposed on the format came from pressures from Sony's U.S. media divisions.
Sony execs and marketing people refuse to learn from their mistakes, so they keep repeating them. They've been doing it over and over again for literally decades now.
As a matter of fact, unless HD-DVD manages to be as easy to uncripple as DVDs (and it appears that it will be), it too will be stillborn.
The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
So is this a confession that the low-end PS3 won't be able to play commercial Blu Ray DVDs? Or does the low-end PS3 use an HDCP-compliant graphics card without offering DVI or HDMI connections?
All this hullabaloo makes me want neither side to win. If only I didn't desperately crave HD content on my TV!
go to torrentspy or any other large site and search "hr hdtv"..
blu-ray and hd-dvd are overhyped and already obsolete.
h.264 encoded matroska at 600 mb or so an hour can do the job of these overbloaded and DRM ridden things.
and what's with this.. they expect pc owners to accept the kind of draconian superuser control over their pcs which are specified in their AACS restrictions? Give me a break, it'll never happen.
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
At least for movies.
It looks nice, but unless I'm TRYING to look for the extra detail, I generally don't notice it.
I've watched a few high def movies; compared Lawrence of Arabia in HD format to SD format, and yes the detail is much crisper - that is, the leaves on the trees in the opening scene are discernable. I also watched Fifth Element in HD, but I've seen it several times before and the being HD didn't really look any different.
Hunt your preferred prey at Aliens vs Predator MUD. Join the war at avpmud.com port 4000
You just know that Joe and Jane Consumer will walk into Best Buy and NOT buy something they think they are getting. You have to think that even companies like Best Buy are going to be pissed having to deal with upset customers and spending time restocking stuff.
But we have to remember this is Sony, so you can't expect something smart or fair for the consumer.
...how did you like the play?"
The manufacturers seems to be falling over themselves trying to bring flawed, faulty, and generally unfinished products to market... presumably oblivious to the possibility the first kid on the block to get one will tell all his friends about his experiences.
I do believe Blu-Ray and HDDVD are well on their way to becoming the quadraphonic sound of the new millennium.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
The movie and music industy are tiny in economic contribution compared to the hardware industry.
The total income if the whole world were to buy new HDTVs, HD Entertainment systems and players, as well as a buch of HD DVDs is an order of magnitude higher than what hollywood and RIAA stands to loose if you make it all easy and user friendly.
Instead they mess this huge opportunity up with copy protection BS.
I have no problem buying a few hundred HD DVDs for $20 each over a few years *even* if I can get a copy from a neighbour for free. The $20 gives me a nice full color case and DVD, and a nice looking collection.
"Fix it"
rumors say that the first Blu-ray player won't even have a laser, because they want to introduce the technology gradually.
Am I the only one who strongly believes that if they remove all content protection from Blu-Ray and HD-DVD, the drive and software manufacturers will stand to make more money, even after factoring in rampant piracy, than with the current mess they have? So what idiot decided to spend all this money developing content protection that restricts the format to virtual unusability, giving it a dreadful image in the process? Moreso, what idiot thought that this would be a good way to increase profits?
They reveal this during the "Experience More 2006" event, and yet users are NOT going to experience more with this restriction. I wish I could tag this "DUMBA**" like they do on fark.com. The "IRONIC" tag might work too.
But then again, suppose users are going to "experience more" headaches and nazi-like DRM.
Sony Electronics: Well, we're ready to sell the first Blu-Ray players, but there's this little unfinished DRM issue preventing us from getting started before HD-DVD makes any headway.
Sony Pictures Entertainment: Sorry, we need our DRM.
Sony Electronics: We could be selling these players and achieving market dominance, though.
Sony Pictures Entertainment: DRM.
Sony Electronics: You could also be selling tons of brand new Blu-Ray discs now.
Sony Pictures Entertainment: Hello? DRM?
Sony Electronics: Our players could be in homes across America and around the world in time for the winter holiday season this year, and you'd be selling high def movies like hotcakes.
Sony Pictures Entertainment: What part of "DRM" don't you understand?
Sony Electronics: Fine, DRM, whatever. I just hope we don't become laughing stocks when we go to Australia this summer.
"Sony also unveiled a 120-inch plasma screen television limited to black-and-white programming; a version of the PlayStation that only plays games toggled in on the front panel in assembler; and the 'BurnMan,' a silicon-over-plexiglass contraption that scans in and verifies $100 bills before slowly igniting them for your viewing pleasure, one at a time."
When the software dev un-lags, assuming the hardware is capable, couldn't they release a firmware patch to correct the injustice?
It reminds me of many MMOGs initial releases:
"You can buy Game-X now!, you just won't be able to login to the server and play for 2-3 weeks. l33t!"
the mods may say you posted flamebait, but to me it's a flame that warms my heart. rock on, brother! --chebucto
Thou shalt commit sarcasm
4.5 Blame Pirates.
Demented But Determined.
Corporations should be the ones who decide media specifications and the role of consumers is to choose which corporate offering is best.
When corporations decide for consumers what to choose, that is capitalism, when consumers force corporations to make what consumers really want, that is called communism and America will not tolerate communism!!!
[libertarian parody off]
--- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
1 GB per dollar - Memorex Blu-Ray write-once disc: $25, 25 GB6 4669100&rf=froogle&dfdate=08_10_2006&sid=362233316
2 E16822152020
http://focuscamera.com/sc/froogle-lead-1.asp?id=9
2.9 GB per dollar - Samsung Spinpoint: $55, 160 GB harddrive
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N8
And that is just the blu-ray disc, not the drive.
A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kick boxing.
Does this remind anyone of other Sony products like lets say "Star Wars Galaxies" that didn't work quite as well as promised? Remember installing the software with glee and logging in for the first time? You bought the collectors edition and were wearing your way to cool exclusive sunglasses when the servers crashed? And then you didn't jump on your land speeder or climb into your Xwing fighter, did you? No, you tried to kill a butterfly with your stupid melee knife and got killed.
Well, you can't trick me again Sony. Fuck Sony and all your crapy products that aren't worth a damn because I'm not going to buy them!
In other news today, the author previewed Windows Vista that didn't work quite as well as promised... As he began to install the software with glee...
You cut be cut, dried, and microwaved.
Fellow Pitchshifter fan here. Had to interject.
-------------------------------------------------
a little tip - www.divx.com - DivX 6.1 Supports 720p. plans for 1080i and even 1080p in the works, all with advanced MPEG-4 encoding features, to preserve high quality at extremely low bitrates. DVD players should be out in time for Xmas, at price points only slightly above current SD DVD players. DivX 6 can squish a full length HD movie onto a single DVD, including multiple audio and subtitle tracks. screw new discs, new hardware, new DRM, and new high prices. kthnx.
"The GPL is viral by design, like any good religion."
He meant that in this case, DRM has proven itself impractical and in fact harmful to a product, thus undermining its own credibility.
Sony and its massive 30 caliber shoot-itself-in-the-foot cannon is our friend in the war against DRM. They do more damage to DRM than any EFF lawsuit could ever hope to.
--- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
The really silly thing with the HDCP requirement is that eventually the bluray format will be cracked, and then people will be able to watch bluray movies with this player on a pc that hasn't got any kind of hdcp support. So in the end it's the legal bluray viewers that end up buying new monitors, videocards and bluray drives to satisfy the hdcp requirement, while the pirates can watch them with whatever hardware they want. The media publishing industry has to be full of retards, there really isn't any other explanation.
so who are you blaming?
Sony as a whole (which encompasses more then just the almight world that is the USA)
Sony USA (which has been fucking over the US for quite awhile)
cause there is a big difference in the two, SUSA made a lot of formats die when they really didn't need to (such as MiniDisc), while in other countrys the format(s) took off and flurished.
MiniDisc is the best example, it bombed in the US but just about everywheres else it's still used today. So it makes you wonder just how much influance SUSA has in their global operations now, $600 for the PS3, Blu-Ray drives that don't even play Blu-Ray movies, The Blu-Ray spec isn't even finalized yet cause they haven't decided on a Copy protection scheme to use. Sure their main headquarters is in Japan which is right next to China but the lengths they are going through for copy "protection" is more in tune to the DMCA and stripping rights away from people.
Frankly, I'm sick of it... I'upgrade my sat reciever to watch NFL in HD this fall, but I have very little desire to waste money on HD movies these days. Back when I was an HT geek I probably woulda considered it, but these days I'm far closer to being joe-sixpack than an HT geek. About the only thing that'll get me to start buying HD movies is when the ITMS starts selling them and I can store them indefinitely on my mini, take them with me on my powerbook, and re-encode them to carry on my vPod. Yeah, guess that make me one of the sheeple...
Think outside the... Hey, where'd the friggin' box go?
6. PROFIT!
Oh.. wait
"All this hullabaloo makes me want neither side to win. If only I didn't desperately crave HD content on my TV!"
Honestly I don't crave it and don't see why any one would care. I'm just feeling kinda "done" with media. I can't watch almost anything on TV anymore without going insane and see so few movies since so many just suck now days. Why would I care to upgrade all my crap just to watch bad movies with a little more visual detail? You know what, maybe if they want to convince me to watch any of the crap they'll have to send me some free equipment and some money for my time.
The Blueray player can't play offical movies because of the copy protection...only pirated movies. Thats awesome.
I hope both formats fail.
I work in the pro video industry, and I regularaly use a consumer DVD player for a source, and run it through a quality real time scaler (such as Folsom's ImagePRO) to get it to HD for viewing on a native HD flat panel. What's really intersting to me is that for 99% of content that you find in movies, a good quality scaler can make standard def DVD look just as good as HD.
Now, most consumers have never seen a good quality scaler, as the stuff the put in most TV sets is junk. But, the price on the chips that make good scalers are dropping like rocks, so I don't imagine it'll be long before you can get decently priced pro quality scaling boxes at home.
The simple truth is that for most real life video sources, the jump from SD to HD is minimal enough that a good scaling algorithm can create a result that looks good enough at HD.
That being the case, why do I want to carry around the baggage of all that extra storage space on my media server?
> Disagree. There just isn't enough momentum for people to be bothered hacking these, IMHO.
I disagree with your disagree. Jon Lech Johansen of DeCSS fame is guaranteed to try hack the blu-ray/hd-dvd encryption. His goal is for a Winter 2006-2007 release of DeAACS. And you must remember, DVD Jon is not some one time hacker, as you can see by his long list of credentials
I'd rather he didn't - at least not yet...
Wait until there is LOTS of blu-ray hardware and software out, as well as hundreds (thousands?) of movies released in the format. THEN hack it - then it will be too late for the companies to start making major changes to the hardware and software without impacting huge numbers of consumers (and risking a huge backlash).
If you hack it early, the media empirs will just make modifications to break the hack again, and if it's done early enough, they'll be able to do it without stirring up the masses
N.
"Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
How many times is Sony going to try and fail to put forward a proprietary technology as a standard before they figure out that it's not a winning business strategy?
http://outcampaign.org/