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.
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?
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
yes, it's called matroska with h.264 video, aac audio, and srt subtitles ; )..
it's been the standard with anime groups for the past couple years.
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
rumors say that the first Blu-ray player won't even have a laser, because they want to introduce the technology gradually.
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."
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.
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!
6. PROFIT!
Oh.. wait
The Blueray player can't play offical movies because of the copy protection...only pirated movies. Thats awesome.