Archive for the ‘Copyright’ Category

Weekly News Roundup (2 May 2009)

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

Hello. Another week, another WNR. Running out of things to say in the intro though, especially when I’ve been a lazy boy this week and haven’t done a thing of note to talk about. I did continue working on the new project I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, and I had hoped it would be ready before May, but it looks like I missed that deadline as well. I really should stop talking about it, because I’m just building up the hype and no doubt you will be disappointed at what I actually managed to do. So I should now lower expectations by saying that this thing is quite run of the mill, you see it on lots of other websites and they’ve done it better too, and it’s not great looking and it has bad breath. In fact, if you see it, you should run away immediately. Expectation lowered!

Copyright

Copyright news is first. The repercussions from the Pirate Bay trial continues, as the defence tries to work up an appeal. The first point of appeal may be the judge, as TPB lawyers believe the judge of the case may be biased due to his past affiliations with a copyright organization.

Sweden's new copyright laws are forcing ISPs to take action

Sweden's new copyright laws are forcing ISPs to take action

The recent Swedish anti file sharing laws has also produced a strange side-effect that may actually help piracy. Swedish ISPs have stopped retaining usage data in the fear that they may have to turn over this data to the authorities. Not sure if the government will stop them from doing this, but this is quite an effective way to circumvent the law. Of course, this may make the fight against serious computer crime harder, but one can’t expect anything else if government is so keen to infringe the privacy of its own citizens at the behest of multi-national corporations – they have lost the moral high ground on the ability to selectively invade the privacy of citizens for the greater good of society, which is something that needs to to occur from time to time, such as in the fight against child pornography. But to prevent people from downloading MP3s is not sufficient reason to violate a fundamental principle of democracy and human rights.

Meanwhile, the MPAA says that jobs will be saved by the fight against piracy. I have no doubt that *jobs at the MPAA* will be saved if the expensive fight against piracy, which has yielded no results, is set to continue. Meanwhile, the anti-piracy industry sells DRM and other useless things which eats into the profit margins of content owners and means job losses everywhere else. Not to mention the consumer confusion that causes less sales to occur. And the MPAA can at the very least employ few more people to manage the security of their own website, because apparently it can be exploited to allow people to browse The Pirate Bay through the website.

The BBC’s new broadcast TV DRM continues to be under attack by critics. The biggest criticism is that it doesn’t really work, because anyone with a DVB card can easily record the programs without any limitations. It’s only the average Joe that don’t know how to do it, that will be affected, and they’re not the ones uploading TV shows onto the net I can assure you. But this kind of DRM was never meant to stop online piracy – it’s just another way to control the average TV viewer and “steer” them towards a system where they will have less and less control about what they can watch, when they can do it and how many times they can do it. Less control for consumers equals more control for the producers, and someone will then try to squeeze more money out of people just for the right to be able to record anything.

High Definition

And in HD news, but still copyright related, Paramount is set to license BD+, the Blu-ray copy protection system commonly used by Fox, for their own Blu-ray discs. This is bad news, but how bad really depends on how Paramount plans to use BD+.

Paramount adopting BD+ hopefully won't mean region coded Blu-ray's

Paramount adopting BD+ hopefully won't mean region coded Blu-ray's

If it is just a copy protection mechanism, then that’s fine because it’s not as if BD+ is unbreakable. However, if they are going to copy what Fox does with Blu-ray releases, and that means adding region protection to movies, then that’s bad news. For the record, Paramount does not use region coding at all on its Blu-ray releases so far. Not for the people who are willing to take the risk of circumventing the copy protection mechanisms and disable region checking, but for the average consumer who wants to buy the occasional disc from another country.

And speaking of Blu-ray copy protection, this article explains some aspects of the Blu-ray licensing scheme and how it does no favours for small publishers. One of the key differences between the approaches of the HD DVD group, and the Blu-ray people, is their opinions towards home publishing. HD DVD encourages it (and just before it died, it had a partnership with Amazon to allow people to create and sell their own content on HD DVD), while Blu-ray (most supporters are from the traditional movie business side) don’t really want people to be making their own movies at home. Which is why AACS is mandatory on Blu-ray, but only optional on HD DVD (which is more in line with DVDs, as DVD”s CSS copy protection is optional as well). It’s not just the trouble of being forced to put copy protection on content that the producers may not even want copy protection on, but it’s also the added cost, which could go into the thousands for just a small project.

Gaming

And finally in gaming, Sony says the PS3 will win in 3 to 5 years. I really hope that’s not another way of saying that the nearest price cut is 3 to 5 years away, because even an idiot like me can predict that a price cut right now will really help the PS3 catch up to the Xbox 360, possibly by the end of this year.

Build-a-Lot: Good fun for a few spare minutes

Build-a-Lot: Good fun for a few spare minutes

Personally, I’ve not had that much free time recently so I’ve been limited to playing games that won’t take too long. I’ve been playing a lot of Big Fish games that I managed to download for free thanks to coupon codes, which I have posted in the Free Games from Big Fish thread on the Deals & Freebies section. It’s no longer available, but the Build-a-lot series was good fun. I’m now playing Mystic Inn (which sadly, is also no longer available for free – you have to be quick with these types of deals). They are mostly point and click games, bigger than your average flash game, but has strategy elements added so it’s not just a mouse bashing exercise. There are also card games, mystery games … you can’t argue with the price though, and I’ve managed to get about $200 worth of games for free so far.

Another game I’ve been playing is the online time-waster My Brute. This online game lets you create a character that does (automated) battles with other user created characters. It’s a bit of nonsense for first thing in the morning. My brute, ApAzzard, has a webpage where you can challenge me (and become my student, which gives me more experience points).

That’s it for this week. More WNR next week. I wanted to write something funny and witty in this outro, but screw it, I’m going to play Mystic Inn before I get back to work.

Weekly News Roundup (26 April 2009)

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Welcome to yet another WNR. I hope you’ve had a nice week. It’s getting colder now here in Melbourne, and I’m starting to see the downside of having a new Core 2 Duo – it just doesn’t generate enough heat as compared to my old computer. I published the March 2009 NPD video game sales analysis earlier in the week. It’s the first time in a long time that sales have declined, all except for the cheap Xbox 360, so the economy will affect the gaming industry, despite previous months showing otherwise.

Copyright

First up is copyright news. The fallout from The Pirate Bay verdict is still being felt this week, as protesters turned up in Sweden to protest the decision. As reported last week, the fight is far from over (in fact, it’s just barely begun), so it could be years before we know the fate of TPB. IFPI, the organisation suing TPB, has had its own website under attack by supporters of TPB as well.

Protesting The Pirate Bay Verdict

Protesting The Pirate Bay Verdict

Still, even if TPB was taken down, it does not mean the end of piracy. TorrentSpy, Suprnova were all once as big as TPB, but both were taken down and torrent downloads did not cease (in fact, Suprnova was taken over by the TPB and re-launched). The only way to stop torrents is to offer a legal alternative, and it’s as simple as that. The copyright side of things apart, another problem with torrents is the amount of bandwidth it saps from networks. ISPs can deal with this by either banning of throttling P2P traffic, but this has a very negative effect on customer satisfaction. So the alternative is to optimize P2P traffic, by prioritising local based exchanges, and some ISPs are doing this to both save money and improve P2P speeds. Of course, this puts ISPs at greater risk of prosecution, not just from private companies like the MPAA, but also from governments. The German government, for example, has gotten German ISPs to agree to web filtering, which they will say it’s for inappropriate sites, but can also be used against sites like TPB. As you may know, Australia is currently debating this sort of thing and our system could be the envy of authoritarian regimes worldwide, as well as organisations like the MPAA. 

The other big legal news is the official start of the MPAA vs RealDVD trial. With these types of cases, a lot really depends on the Judge, because if you get a tech savvy one that can understand the arguments put forward, then Real Networks may have a chance. If not, then the scare tactics of the MPAA will work in court very well.

Last week, I reported that the BBC is adding DRM. This week, the BBC has started broadcasting propaganda for the MPAA. Next week, the BBC commission a weekly hourly program called “The MPAA: All Hail Our New Masters”. 

While this could possibly be put into the gaming section, I’ll put it here. Sony says that piracy is hurting PSP game sales. And by “piracy”, they are of course referring to the Nintendo DS. Aren’t they? Or perhaps the ease in which the Nintendo DS can be used to play pirated games, and the half-hearted effort from Nintendo to stop the act, is really hurting the PSP, which is harder to mod to make it play homebrew or pirated games. The fact that the DS is more fun than the PSP may also contribute, as PSP sales continue to drop year-on-year as our NPD analysis shows. 

High Definition

In HD news, the big news of the week is Warner Bros.’s launch of their new red2blu.com website. What this website allows you to do is to upgrade your HD DVD collection to Blu-ray, at minimal cost. 

red2blu.com - Exchange your HD DVDs for Blu-ray's

red2blu.com - Exchange your HD DVDs for Blu-ray's

How it works is that you can upgrade up to 25 HD DVD titles (per household) for $4.95 each, with $6.95 charged for shipping for the entire (up to 25 disc) order. Considering that most people paid peanuts for HD DVDs, this adds up to fantastic savings, especially when you consider that people with the HD DVD versions were able to enjoy the movies in HD for a year now, and still end up paying less than the people who went straight to Blu-ray. I guess my series of HD DVD Fire Sales blog posts wasn’t a waste of time after all. I can only hope that something similar will happen in Australia (unlikely, since HD DVD did not sell that much here), because I managed to pick up lots of discs for around $3-5 each. 

For those who managed to buy cheap HD DVD players before or just after the downfall and want to upgrade them as well, then cheap Blu-ray players are coming as well, according to Samsung: Sub $100 Blu-ray players will be here soon. With Samsung’s latest players, I can definitely see the trend of merging Profile 2.0 (BD-Live) Blu-ray players with online video delivery (OVD) services, such as Netflix, so instead of getting the ultra cheap players, it may be wise to wait a bit see what develops in this area. OVD is growing at an extremely fast rate, thanks to deals with gaming and consumer electronic firms that adds integration into hardware devices like the Xbox 360 or Blu-ray players. Amazon is getting into the game as well, now with HD video service added to support Roku, TiVo and other compatible devices. Watch this space.

Plasma TVs are becoming rarer and rarer, now that Pioneer has pulled out of the game and that their beautiful Kuro range will be discontinued soon. But Panasonic is still sticking with the format, and for good reason: Plasma still wins on quality, if not so much on price or energy efficiency. Panasonic’s new THX certified plasma range looks like the perfect way to replace the Kuro. I was all ready to go LCD after reading reviews of the the latest Samsung series, but it looks like I may have to reconsider. 

Gaming

And finally in gaming, inside sources are suggesting a possible Sony PSP and PS3 price cut in June. I’ll believe it when I see it in writing on Sony.com. Sony is still rather bullish about the future of the PS3, and from their recent statements, it doesn’t sound like a price cut will be coming anytime soon. But people do want a price cut, as our recent poll shows.

Sony says that the Xbox 360 owns the office, the PS3 owns the living room, and that the Wii owns the closet. I don’t know what owning the office means, but owning the closet means that they think the Wii is not used as much as the PS3, with most gathering dust in the closet. Considering how the Wii continues to outsell the PS3, people must have big empty closets to fill these days. And offices appears to be fun places to be as well, well for those that still have jobs anyway.

That’s all I have for this week. Really, I’m not lying. You can check my pockets if you want to, I have nothing to hide. Well, not much anyway. See you next week.

Weekly News Roundup (19 April 2009)

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

After last week’s WNR non starter, there’s definitely more news this week. And big news as well, as you will read later on. I posted something that looked very much like an advertorial for Amazon. But no, I was sadly not paid to write that piece, and while I do earn affiliate credits, you’ll find no such link in that particular blog post. What I posted is what I really feel, due to a recent incident involving a slightly damaged item, and I think it’s very hard these days to find a company that values the customer experience more so than the bottom line. 

Copyright

Let’s start with the copyright news. The big news of the week, and you will most likely have heard about it already, is of course Macrovision’s purchase of metadata firm Muze. Not the big story you were expecting huh? I guess I’m just a little hesitant to get to what is essential pretty bad news for everyone (we’ll come back to the Macrovision story later on).

The Pirate Bay: found guilty, but not the end of the story

The Pirate Bay: found guilty, but not the end of the story

In mid-week, the news was that a verdict was due on Friday for the The Pirate Bay trial. Everyone eagerly awaited this news for the next few days, but when it hit, and although you can’t say it’s a huge surprise, it was still somewhat of a shock. The guys of The Pirate Bay were found guilty, each sentenced to a year in prison and fined $3.6 million. Was there ever a chance of another decision? But even so, the severity of the judgement meant that it was like a MPAA wet dream. But all is not lost. Cynthia, our forum’s Swedish expert, explains just what will happen next in the Swedish justice system:

The first instance in the Swedish trial system is based on one Judge + 3 political elected “ordinary” people. The next step is to go to the higher court and that one is 3 judges + 2 political elected “ordinary people”. Most certainly this case will also end up in the highest court and in that one is at least 9 judges. 

So the final verdict will take some years to come and during that time it looks as it will be business as usual from TPB.

So this is by no means a final verdict. In fact, even has the TPB guys won, the decision would still have been appealed all the way to the highest court and it might be years before we finally know what the outcome could be. For now, TPB remains as it is, still offering thousands of torrents and a huge user base that is slowly moving towards anonymous file sharing, which will become impossible to track. So round one goes to the MPAA (or the Swedish equivalent/puppet organisation), but this one could still go either way.

Going back to the Macrovision story. It appears they’ve purchase Muze, which collects and makes available meta data (or descriptive data) for media such as DVDs. What this means is that Macrovision could incorporate this into DVD players, and it would open up a new revenue stream for the company by putting in ads when you play DVDs that will recommend other movies based on what you’re watching. Privacy issues aside, this could become even more annoying than Macrovision analogue protection. 

The MPAA’s use of hacking to retrieve information to sue the likes of TorrentSpy and TPB could come back to haunt them. Apparently, they used the services of a hacker to steal confidential information from these sites to use in their court case, and this illegal act could be used as a way to appeal the verdict, at least in the TorrentSpy’s case. Data theft is an even more serious problem than content theft on the Internet, and it just goes to show how low the MPAA may go to achieve their ultimate victory of stopping the well known torrent sites (of course, it won’t stop new torrent sites to be set up, many of which are already waiting in the wings in case the big ones fall).

And in news that suggests DRM is still alive and well in the video arena, BBC’s UK HDTV broadcast will now employ DRM because this was the only way to allow Blu-ray recorders into the market. There will be tons of restrictions on what you can and cannot record, and how you can use the recorded content, which makes the whole thing all so useless to most users that they will probably go back to DVD recording (another victory for DRM over Blu-ray!). DRM is harmful not only to the sanity of the consumer, but it appears it is also harmful to entire industries. If Blu-ray recorders fail to sell because of these restrictions, then that will hurt the Blu-ray format, and also hurt the very same content owners that want to place these restrictions. Very short sighted thinking that will lead them to their doom if they do not change ways, like the music industry has had to do at the cost of wasting millions of dollars on useless DRM and lost of business.

High Definition

Onto high-def news, another form of DRM is region protection. DVD region protection proved to be the single most useless “feature” of the DVD format. And even the movie studios themselves eventually saw region control as fairly useless, as more and more movies are now released simultaneously around the world.

Momitsu BDP-899: Region-free Blu-ray out of the box

Momitsu BDP-899: Region-free Blu-ray out of the box

So it was no surprise that region control went from mandatory to optional on the Blu-ray format, and completely removed from the HD DVD specs. Unfortunately, for some studios, “optional” was not in their vocabulary. And I’m mainly talking about Fox here. All Blu-ray movies from Warner (not including subsidiaries, some of which still employ region locking), Universal and Paramount are now region-free. Most Sony releases are region-free as well, with only certain new releases being locked. Disney is similar as well, except more of their titles are locked. The situation, you can say, has become even more confusing, because if you randomly buy some movies from the store, half of them might play overseas, while the other might not.

The good news is that the first factory produced region-free Blu-ray player is soon to be available (not really though, because there had been players manufactured for certain countries that were region-free). Momitsu may not be a brand that everyone’s heard of, but it is a brand I’m familiar with as this was the brand of my first DVD upscaling player. Even then, they were pushing the boundaries by producing a DVD upscaler that could upscale over component and unprotected DVI output. It was also DVD region-free, of course. Their new region-free Blu-ray players seems to have all the features that you would want, plus of course the ability to play *any* Blu-ray movie you buy anywhere. For now at least, before the studios update their code perhaps to lock out Momitsu players. But hopefully, this will be a catalyst for more companies to start releasing region-free Blu-ray movies, which should be much less of a deal than region-free DVD players as it affects less movies.

Gaming

And finally, we get to Gaming news. The March NPD figures are out and it was a particularly bad month for the video gaming industry, at least in terms of hardware numbers. There were unexpected drops for almost all the game consoles, and perhaps it’s a sign that the economy is finally catching up with the gaming industry, which looked recession proof for the last 6 months. However, Microsoft’s Xbox 360 still managed to record a year-on-year growth, and as it is the cheapest console now available, perhaps that’s not too surprising. The full analysis will be coming early next week right here, of course. The PlayStation brand is still struggling, although it is doing well in Japan, but that’s what you get if you don’t give users a price cut. Sony will tout their superior attach rate for selected multi-platform hit titles, but overall attach rate still goes to the 360, and these “selected multi-platform hit titles” are still too rare to make any point. 

And with this news, Microsoft have confidently proclaimed that they have won the console war. Well, second place anyway. I don’t know if this is perhaps a bit too early, but they’ve certainly made great strides compared to the last generation where the superior Xbox was beaten by the cheaper PS2 which was released earlier. Sounds familiar?

Microsoft's RRoD and E74 errors gets more publicity, but the PS3's firmware bricking problem is serious and real

Microsoft's RRoD and E74 errors gets more publicity, but the PS3's firmware bricking problem is serious and real

But it’s not all good news for Microsoft (although you can argue it is good news for Xbox 360 owners), in that they have finally admitted that the other 360 hardware error, the E74 error, is part of the RRoD problem and will now be covered by the extended warranty. While you can’t argue with the fact that the 360 just isn’t a very well designed console, but at least Microsoft’s response to the problem, albeit a bit late on all fronts, is encouraging. Now if only Sony come clean on their firmware update “no disc drive” problem (and now, there are new problems involving fast spinning fans and then shutdown, to do with the latest 2.70 firmware)  that you will see thousands of posts on the official PS board with not a single official response. And the other fanboy comments that say “your stupid and you don’t no how to use your PS3” whenever someone posts a serious question about this problem is quite annoying. Yes, most of the posters of these problems are first time posters because like many people, myself included, I only signed up the PS3 board after I had a problem that I wanted to find out more information about. It’s not spamming, it’s not trolling, and the fanboy-ish reactions are really typical of the fever in which some people “support” their consoles. There are serious problems with the PS3 firmware update system, and you can go through the boards and see software engineers and other experts all chime in with their theory of why this is the case. Even for such a small blog such as this one, there’s already several people who have reported the same problem, so I think the problem could be affecting hundreds of thousands of machines. Sony needs to act now and stop charging people $150 to repair a problem that may not be their fault.

So that’s my rant over for this week. Maybe I should rename this the Weekly News Rant. Ranting is good for the soul, good for your health. Or is that venting? Is venting and ranting the same? Am I ranting now? Or is that rambling? Why are there so many question marks in this paragraph?

Weekly News Roundup (12 April 2009)

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Hello everyone. This weekend is the Easter weekend, so while not everyone celebrates this holiday, it was still a very slow news week. So slow that this week’s WNR will be much much shorter than usual, as we only have 4 stories to report on.

I also didn’t have time to make a mid-week blog post, as I had some personal business this week (good news, mainly). Also, I’m working on something new for Digital Digest, which I think will be very interesting, if not entirely useful. All I can say is that it’s something to do with Blu-ray buying, and if you’re a cheapskate like me, you’ll appreciate it.

But on with the news, or whatever there is available. The MPAA has hit back at a claim that 90% of consumers want RealDVD to exist. They claim, correctly, that the study was funded by Real Networks (sneaky buggers). But even if the funding came from Real, it does not suggest that the result isn’t correct, and I think if you asked most people, they won’t think RealDVD should be illegal and most will also think that being able to play DVDs without having to insert the disc all the time is a good thing.

Apple’s iTunes is now 100% DRM free as Apple promised. But at the same time, they’ve introduced tiered pricing and all sorts of other things that may not be that consumer friendly. But no DRM is a good thing, and Apple should be applauded for making this move, even if it was a bit too late for my liking.

But as one industry goes DRM free, another is still clinging on. Atari’s latest Riddick game is full of the latest anti-piracy features we’ve gotten familiar with over the least year:  online authentication; limited PC installs, and limited re-installs per PC (hardware based). The public response has been typical as well, the game is rated with only 1 star on Amazon.com, with most reviews attacking the DRM aspect. I don’t know if this game is a good game or not, but frankly, I won’t care and I won’t buy, not when there are so many other games to choose from. Why do publishers want to take attention away from their games with stupid DRM, although if the game really is bad, then perhaps taking attention away from it may be for the best after all.

And finally (I told you it was a quiet week), Microsoft has a new anti-Apple commercial out and this one, ironically, uses Blu-ray to say why Windows is better than Mac OS. It is true though that you can play Blu-ray on Windows PCs with relative ease, but it is much harder (but not impossible) on Mac OS X. And because PCs are more easily upgraded, you can even turn your old computer into a Blu-ray player with a few minor purchases, which I did a couple of weeks ago to my old P4 system. And the irony of course comes from the fact that Microsoft supported HD DVD, while Apple sits on the board of the Blu-ray Disc Association.

And that’s all the news I found (interesting) in the last week. Hopefully things will be back to normal next week. See you then.

Weekly News Roundup (5 April 2009)

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

Sorry for this somewhat late edition of the WNR. This daylight savings thing has me all confused, and despite the clocks going forward, I end up doing things later than before. The “2008 Game of the Year Poll” has been closed, and the results are in. My game of the decade, Fallout 3, did not win, but still came third which is pretty good for a game that doesn’t appeal to everyone’s tastes. Call of Duty: World at War won, followed by GTA IV – looks more like “best sellers of 2008”, rather than “best games of 2008” to me. Also, April Fools occurred during the week so chances are, some of the news you read below will have been made up. That in itself is not strange, because there’s made up news pretty much every week, but the only difference is that the made up stories this week have been done in the name of comedy, rather than about getting hits to your website.   

Copyright

Let’s get on with the copyright news because it’s already 8 pm, or 6pm, or something in between, I don’t know anymore thanks to the daylight savings (which has either ended or started, I don’t know either).

Sweden has passed new Internet copyright laws and Internet traffic fell dramatically as a result. I’m surprised at the results to be honest, because this would suggest a huge majority of Swedish users are pirates, which goes against what I’ve read (and I think posted here) recently. However, there are already ways to ensure the authorities cannot track your usage, by using encryption, and so the more enterprising users are already downloading free games and movies without the eyes of the law prying into their activities. A new generation of smarter, faster, and more efficient pirates, is what this will breed. 

X-Men Origins: Wolverine is already available to download, but who is to blame?

X-Men Origins: Wolverine is already available to download illegally, but who is to blame?

And then we had the big news of the new X-Men movie being leaked online a whole month before the official release date. I’m sure the Internet and Internet users will get all the blame, but really, how would they get access to an early unfinished print of the movie without some insider doing all the hard work? The Internet is responsible to distributing this movie in a timely and efficient fashion, as that’s what it is designed for, but it is the people who leak the movie that are the very people the MPAA should be going after, not the people who put them online or download them. Before the Internet, the leaked print would have been distributed on bootlegged VHS or DVD, or even in the original film containers – less widespread, but still damaging. Don’t blame the Internet for being good at what it is designed for, is all I’m saying.  

And it’s not only the Internet that’s getting blamed, but also legitimate Internet companies, such as Yahoo and Google. News Corp’s Murdoch, a kingpin of traditional media, is blaming Yahoo and Google for being thieves when it comes to copyright. New media, such as Google’s YouTube, are bringing information and content to people in new ways which are harder to control compared to traditional media, and so it’s only natural for TV networks or movie studios to be afraid. There is maybe less money to be made, but then again, the audience has increased too. But the writing is on the wall for traditional media, and this includes perhaps newspapers, radio, as well as TV, and they will not be able to compete against the “what you want, when you want it” way that the Internet works. But what the Internet has is quantity and not necessarily quality, and this is perhaps an area that traditional media can expand into – to provide quality Internet content that you would want to pay for (or put up with ads). A high quality version of YouTube with the same quality guidelines and editing as your average TV network, as opposed to one that allows any idiot to post their Rickroll’s.  The same with newspapers, which needs to go back to offering quality that’s so good that people will want to subscribe and pay for it (along with the high quality services that you normally wouldn’t expect from a blog, for example). Still, it’s a challenge for the traditional media, and those unwiling or unable to change will be the losers. 

High Definition

Onto high-def news, it’s a somewhat quiet week. The only major news, and it was a bit of a shock, so much so that I still think it’s an April Fools joke, was that Netflix will increase Blu-ray rental prices by as much as $8 per month.

NetFlix Blu-ray rental prices increased

NetFlix Blu-ray rental prices increased

Netflix has various subscription packages allowing you to have X number of discs rented at any one time. To upgrade one of these packages to include Blu-ray means you used to have to pay an extra $1 per month, regardless of what package you’ve chosen. But now, the extra Blu-ray surcharge is has been increased and it goes up depending on which package you’ve chosen. For their most expensive package, which allows 8 discs to be rented out at any time, you’ll need to pay an extra $8 to allow Blu-ray titles to be rented, which works out to be about an 16% increase to the monthly fee. That in itself is okay, except many of the Blu-ray discs you rent from Netflix will be so scratched, that they won’t be playable. Or you end up waiting months on end for a title to be sent out to you because so few of each title are available. Of course, the increase in fees will help in both regards, but other online rental firms aren’t charging more for Blu-ray, and I don’t think this will help Netflix (or Blu-ray).

Which is all reason why I still think it’s an April Fools joke. But then again,  the Sony PlayStation price drop story also seemed like an April Fools, but it turned out to be sadly true, which brings us to …

Gaming

Gaming news – There was rumour going around early last week that Sony was going to make a global announcement in regards to the PS3. Of course, Sony denied that such an announcement was going to occur, but that’s expected and it did not rule out a PS3 announcement. And of course, if it is a major PS3 announcement, then it has to be about a price drop, right?

Sony has dropped PS2 prices, but will this help it sell better against the Wii?

Sony has dropped PS2 prices, but will this help it sell better against the Wii?

But then Sony scheduled a press conference and more reliable sources said that, yes, it would be about the PlayStation game console. Everybody got excited, waited for the announcement, and yes, it was a price drop. It was just for the wrong PlayStation game console. That’s right, Sony has dropped PS2 prices to $99 (although many retailers were already selling at or below this price). The reasoning behind this was that it would make the PS2 competitive with the Wii. The past NPD monthly game console sales reports show that the PS2 is on its last legs, and down 60% compared to the same time last year. Will this price drop help it out?

Maybe, but the real question is why would you want to help out the PS2 at this stage of its life cycle? Sony seems to think that the only reason the Wii is doing well is because it’s cheap. That’s not even remotely true. The Wii is now the second most expensive console on the market (the Xbox 360 Arcade is the cheapest), and it is on the only console not to have had a price drop or a hardware upgrade since release. People like the Wii because it’s fun and it has games that bring enjoyment to a wider range of people, not just hardcore gamers. The PS2 cannot offer this. Now Sony might introduce a Wii-mote like controller for the PS2, but if they can do this and not get sued by Nintendo, then why can’t they do it for the PS3, which already has a motion sensitive controller? And why bring attention to a dying platform, when you’ve got a new platform that could die if not given enough attention? The cost of dropping PS2 prices could have been used to give a small price drop to the PS3, in conjunction with offering a budget version of the PS3 with a smaller HDD or less non essential feature (no built-in wireless, for example). Or just bite the bullet and offer a big price drop to the PS3, take the temporary financial hit, but reap the rewards of better game sales in the future. But people, including myself, has said all this  before time and time again and all we get is a PS2 price drop.  

Which is why I still think it’s an April Fools joke, and a cruel one at that.

The only PS3 news was that firmware 2.7 being released. Sony is at least keeping its promise to add more and more features to the PS3 through software updates. This is a good idea, but it’s not unique since Nintendo and Microsoft, both to a lesser extent, have been doing the same through channel and dashboard updates. And it can’t last forever, because the hardware has limitations and if Microsoft releases the Xbox 720 with more powerful hardware, then Sony will have to abandon the PS3 and go make the PS4, because superior software can only do so much to catch up to  superior hardware.

Super Smash Bros. Brawl on Wii, in 720p

Super Smash Bros. Brawl on Wii, in 720p

Nintendo could very well release an HD version of the Wii too, let not forget. But somebody has beaten them to it, although it may rest in a legal gray area. There is a Wii emulator out now that can run games at 720p, and it doesn’t use upscaling, rather, it renders the game using the emulator’s 3D engine at this higher resolution. And it works well and can make existing Wii games look very good indeed (videos). The Wii controller can already be used on the PC if you have a Bluetooth adapter, and so this could mean a potential way to play Wii games without even having a Wii game console. Although at the moment, you need a monster PC just to get average framerates. In any case, I’m not sure Nintendo will be too happy about this development, but it may show that people do want Wii in HD and maybe Nintendo can come up with something official on this front.

Alright, that’s it for this week. It’s already either 11pm or 9pm or 10pm, so it’s late anyway. See you next week.