Archive for the ‘Electronics’ Category

Weekly News Roundup (31 August 2008)

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

I finally finished writing that guide I was talking about last week. The DVD-lab Pro Basic DVD Authoring Guide is one of the more complicated guides I’ve written recently, and also not aimed at beginners that most of my guides are about. DVD-lab Pro, while expensive compared to most other home based DVD authoring solutions, gives you a lot of power and flexibility that you only find in packages worth ten times as much. And it’s relatively easy to use too, once you get the hang of it, and surprisingly error free (no bugs, crashes or any of those things that you usually find with DVD authoring tools). If you need to make DVDs on a semi-professional level, then this is a great tool.

Okay, enough link/content promotion, let’s get on with the news. 

CopyrightIn copyright news, P4P, an upgrade to existing P2P technology whereby local peers are preferred over non-local connections, is a technology that is welcomed by ISPs in their fight against ever increasing bandwidth demands. Local bandwidth is cheaper, you see. But because of the local nature of things, it makes for greater control, and there are those who think that P4P might allow for better anti-piracy measures. Meanwhile, ISPs continue to fight against P2P, on bandwidth related reasons as well as pressure from content owners. Comcast’s anti-P2P stance has come under fire from the FCC, who says it “does not constitute reasonable network management” and that “the company’s discriminatory and arbitrary practice unduly squelches the dynamic benefits of an open and accessible Internet”. Nice comments from the FCC, I have to say.

Veoh - Victory in the Courts

Veoh - Victory in the Courts

Some more positive news in the copyright fight, online video site Veoh has had a copyright case against it (by an Adult entertainment company, no less) dismissed by a Californian Judge. The happiest people will be Google/YouTube, because this precedent could mean that the cases against them are dismissed too. While the courts (and the FCC) seems to be sending out the right messages, the politicians, once again, might be behind the times. With the US elections coming up in just over two months time, both the RIAA and the MPAA are converging on the two political parties’ conventions and lobbying like crazy, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars if needed. I talked about McCain’s views on copyright a couple of weeks ago, and now that the Democrats have chosen Joe Biden as Obama’s running mate, it’s only fair to point out Biden’s pro-RIAA and pro-FBI voting record as well. I know it’s as cynical as hell, but my experience with democratic elections is that you vote for the candidate you hate the least, or you think you will hate the least. Do a bit of research on the Republican and the Democrat’s records on copyright issues, decide which matches your own philosophies the closest (or at least which you find least repulsive), then make that one of the issues that will decide on who you vote for. And you should vote. Here in Australia, voting is compulsory, and you get fined if you don’t vote (of course, we have elections on a Saturday, so everyone has time to vote). Voting should be compulsory in all democracies, in my opinion.

WirelessHD - WirelessDRM Included!

WirelessHD - WirelessDRM Included!

But while the politicians are doing their politicking, the content owners are still hoping DRM is the answer to all their prayers, despite the setback the music industry have had in trying to introduce DRM. Sony, the king of DRM, is once again at the center of it all by introducing a new multi-DRM content format for online movie downloads. Sure, on paper, the new DRM scheme sounds more reasonable, allowing any registered device to work with the DRM’d content, as opposed to forcing you to buy a copy for each device. But the real problem is that if one day they decide to change this policy, then they could do it with a push of a button, and re-write the terms of use of your previously “purchased” content. Just look at what happened with the various collapse of the music DRM stores, and how purchased content became useless once the authentication servers have been turned off. DRM is dangerous, and it should be banned. But not before WirelessHD, a new wireless HD video/audio transmission format, introduces yet another form of DRM. Sigh.

High DefinitionOnto HD news now. I wrote a mid-week blog that looked at the weekly Nielsen VideoScan Blu-ray/DVD sales figures. Hopefully this will become a regular feature in the future. Looking at the stats and graphs I’ve made, it doesn’t seem Blu-ray has made much of a dent at all in terms of either volume or percentage of the market compared to DVDs. DVDs will be here for a long time to come, unless studios decide to pull the plug on the format, which they won’t because it’s still too lucrative (still something like 14:1 sales ratio, in terms of revenue and probably higher in terms of units, at the moment). With upscaling DVD players becoming standard and better in quality, Blu-ray really needs to up the promotional work again.

Toshiba XDE - improved DVD upscaling

Toshiba XDE - improved DVD upscaling

Speaking of upscaling DVD, Toshiba is back into the A/V market with its XDE range of upscaling players, which I mentioned a couple of weeks ago. The players are getting some good promotion from Amazon and other retailers, certainly in the press too thanks for Toshiba’s headline making news earlier in the year. This week, some Taiwanese optical manufacturers have enquired about buying HD DVD patents from Toshiba. The analysis I’ve read suggest they want to do this because they want a stronger negotiation position with Sony in regards to Blu-ray licensing. But Toshiba is holding on to these patents, which either suggest that Sony paid Toshiba to not let HD DVD be promoted again, or that Toshiba has it’s own plans in terms of the China only HD DVD format. Toshiba are not one to give up so easily, it seems, and they’re already talking up beyond 1080p resolution video as well as wireless HDMI, which will be added to their devices next year. There’s also talk about 32 GB memory cards, which rivals Blu-ray for storage, is re-writable and probably cheaper given the prices of USB memory and memory cards these days. Looks like Blu-ray will have some competition in the marketplace when it comes to HD video.

And speaking of competition, the BDA is not happy that satellite and cable companies are using terms like “as good as Blu-ray” when it comes to describing the HD subscription services. Seems the BDA is ever edgier these days, when it comes to “as good as Blu-ray” type services that could render Blu-ray a sideshow in the HD video arena. LG is launching a DVD player that supports HD DivX video, so even Blu-ray supporters are looking at alternatives. The next version of DivX will use H.264, and an early alpha version of the encoder (in command line format), is already available. Blu-ray manufacturers will probably embrace this new format, since all their players can decode H.264, and thereby (with a little modification), DivX 7 as well. The disc-less home theatre dream that I have seems to be getting closer to reality, and if that becomes a reality, then it will be a nightmare for the BDA (unless they do the sensible thing and add managed copy, which make the actual Blu-ray disc just a carrier, like Toshiba’s 32 GB memory cards or portable hard-drive).

GamingAnd in gaming, the Wii has hurt the arcade industry a lot by bringing arcade style games to the home.The Xbox 360 is trying to reverse the trend by bringing Xbox 360 games to the arcade, with coin-ops build around a Xbox 360 console. It’s an interesting idea, and with a common controller interface, a wide variety of games available, it could be a winner. Unless it RRODs, of course.

The "other" Xbox 360 Arcade

The "other" Xbox 360 Arcade

As usual, details of the next PS3 firmware update has been leaked. Screenshot-grabbing, the rumours say, will be the main new feature of this update.

Okay, that’s it for another week. Don’t forget to read my DVD-lab Pro guide. There’s a 30-day trial version available from the official site, so it’s worth a go if you want to see if you can make better menus that what the commercial developers are making these days. Hannah Montana!

(I think he meant to say hasta mañana – ed)

Weekly News Roundup (17 August 2008)

Sunday, August 17th, 2008

A very slow news week. Actually, the volume of news articles I read wasn’t reduced, it’s just that most of them are just rehashes of old stories, or clearly PR releases that have absolutely no news worth. Unfortunately, there are more and more of these types of fluff stories. But that’s why we’re here. To filter out the crap, and the stuff that I didn’t want to or was too lazy to read.

CopyrightIn copyright news, Mark Cuban, the Chairman of HDNet expressing his opinion that piracy is better fought with promotion rather than prevention. Or perhaps just make better movies. The Dark Knight is a success not because nobody was able to pirate it, but because it’s a good movie. The other point of view that Mark expresses is that piracy will always be around and that people who pirate are usually those that would never have paid for it in the first place. I think this has always been the case, and those so called studies that say “X amount of money lost due to piracy” are all a load of crap, with the faulty assumption that people who pirated would have paid for it if piracy had been prevented. The studies then lead to more laws and funding to fight piracy, which can’t be fought anyway. Anti-piracy is now a billion dollar industry borne out of greed and stupidity.

Sony PlayTV will come with DRM

Sony PlayTV will come with DRM

Speaking of stupidity, Sony will add DRM to its PlayTV add-on. This means programmes recorded using PlayTV on the PS3 can’t be transferred to another PS3 and may be lost forever if, for example, your PS3 has been replaced or repaired. To be honest, it’s not a surprise for Sony to add DRM to everything, but it does seem a bit restrictive considering you can do the same thing on PCs and standalone boxes without DRM.

And onto politics for a moment, Senator McCain and potential President of the United States has released his net-neutrality and anti-piracy policies. Not good reading for Internet users, but then that’s what you would expect from a big business backed candidate. Well at least McCain knows what the Internet is, given his age and all (sorry, cheap joke that’s been used far too frequently).

High DefinitionOnto HD now, Warner Brothers is releasing a couple of movies on HD Video-On-Demand. What’s interesting is that the article classifies both Blu-ray and VOD as a threat to DVDs. I think HD VOD has great potential, with a large pool of cable subscribers to draw from, plus the ease of use of on-demand viewing versus searching online for cheap Blu-ray prices, purchase, wait for it the arrive and then insert disc. VOD is a threat not only to DVD, but to Blu-ray as well.

The PS3 still the best Blu-ray player?

The PS3 still the best Blu-ray player?

And if you’re wondering what’s the best Blu-ray player around, the answer apparently is still the PS3 according to Criterion, publishers of the Criterion Collection for serious movie fans. Paramount, now firmly in the Blu-ray camp after their earlier defection to HD DVD (which I bet they don’t want to bring up), is backing Blu-ray by providing a new rebate promotion. Selected Blu-ray titles will feature a voucher that along with a proof of purchase for the same title on DVD, gets you $10 back. This will help to get users who have DVDs to upgrade to Blu-ray, and with some titles going for under $15, it’s good value. It seems Paramount has spotted the fact that many users don’t buy Blu-ray movies that they already own on DVD as a potential problem for the HD format, and have done something about it. It’s a shame they couldn’t work something similar out for HD DVD.

Speaking of HD DVD, Toshiba has just released their next generation DVD player. It’s basically an advanced upconverting DVD player that’s priced between DVD and Blu-ray players. Will it be a success? Who knows, but hopefully it will drive the Blu-ray manufacturers to improve DVD playback quality of their players too (unlikely, and some even suggest that DVD playback quality on Blu-ray players is deliberately sabotaged to make Blu-ray more attractive).

And sort of HD related, BBC’s iPlayer will now use H.264 and AAC to improve quality. The use of a more efficient code will hopefully allow for full HD streaming one day, when bandwidth is less of an issue (currently 5 MB/s or 40 Mbps is needed for full Blu-ray quality, easily obtainable on home networks, but still quite rare for Internet connections). The bandwidth bill might be a bit high though (400+ GB per month, assuming you watch 3 HD movies per week).  

GamingAnd finally in gaming, I wrote up the analysis for July’s US NPD video games sales figures yesterday. Nothing surprising for this month. What was a surprise was that, for the first time ever, the Xbox 360 outsold the PS3 in Japan. Very likely just a one off event, but it was surprising to see the PS3 sell in so small numbers, 9,673 units compared to the Wii’s 38,506 and Xbox 360’s higher than average 24,962. Even the PS2 is still selling at 8,503.

Would you pay $2,000 for this The Dark Knight Limited Edition Xbox 360?

Would you pay $2,000 for this "The Dark Knight" Limited Edition Xbox 360?

The Xbox 360 sales surge in Japan had nothing to do with the price cut, and all to do with a new game (Tales of Vesperia). But while the average Xbox 360 is now cheap as chips, you can also go the other way and pick up a limited edition The Dark Knight Xbox 360 console. It will only set you back $US 1,200!

For the rest of us, the new upcoming Xbox 360 dashboard is looking better everyday. In a demo video, the HDD installation of GTA IV is shown, which would be very much welcomed. This makes sense of the 60 GB model becoming standard, and the demo looked like it was a full install, so the disc itself is only needed for copy protection checking.

And so we come to another conclusion to the WNR, a short one for this week. Hopefully the next week will bring more worthy news items, but with the Olympics going on, it’s probably going to be another quiet week. See you next Sunday.

Weekly News Roundup (20 July 2008)

Sunday, July 20th, 2008

E3 just ended in the US, and no surprise then that most of the stories this week are to do with gaming. And just luck would have it, the NPD June figures were released this week, meaning more stories about gaming. The lucky thing for a video website such as this is that gaming and video are now a lot closely related thanks to the PS3’s Blu-ray and to a lesser extent, the Xbox 360’s ill fated support of the HD DVD format. Plus I like video games so that’s my excuse for covering video game content on a website that’s not about video games.

CopyrightBut there are still some non gaming news first, so let’s get through that. Starting with copyright news, Blu-ray might get a new copy protection system dubbed X-Protect Blue. Blu-ray piracy is not a big thing yet, since while ripping the discs are possible, storing it is impractical (considering blank Blu-ray media costs) and uploading and downloading is time and bandwidth consuming (25 GB for a movie? No thanks). Plus, hardly anybody has a Blu-ray player, so the pirated contents aren’t all that popular. Blu-ray really has these “natural” copy protection barriers, so I’m not sure if it needs any more.

Reloaded - Helping tech support everywhere

Reloaded - Helping tech support everywhere

But perhaps it needs a bit of piracy, because there is evidence that the most pirated shows are the ones that win the most awards. I’m not sure I agree with that completely, as wouldn’t a good show automatically mean more piracy anyway, rather than more piracy leading to a good show? I do agree that piracy opens up the shows to a wider array of people, some of which won’t have had access to the show previously (for example, people in other countries). And this kind of “mass-piracy” leads to mass online interest and discussions, which will help the show. So yes, piracy definitely has its advantages … it helped Microsoft to dominate the operating system market, helped game consoles to sell more hardware, so why not TV and movies as well?

And how’s this for an interesting story. Game publisher Ubisoft recently had to turn to a rather strange source to solve a problem. The Ubisoft tech support team posted a NO-CD crack from notorious piracy group Reloaded to solve a DRM related problem. Just goes to show that sometimes DRM does more harm than good, and that piracy can help sometimes too.

High DefinitionIn HD news, at the SinoCES, there was a range of Chinese Blu-ray players on show. We won’t see many of these players being released in the west just yet, I don’t think, as the last thing Sony and co. wants is cheap players stealing their market before they’ve even started to exploit it.

Netflix on the Xbox 360

Netflix on the Xbox 360

While not strictly HD news, but important in that it could become a rival to Blu-ray, is the news that both Microsoft and Sony are investing heavily into movie streaming services for their game consoles. Sony launched their movie download service during E3, and Microsoft teamed up with online video rental giant Netflix to deliver free movies to Xbox Live Gold users (presumably US users only). Microsoft also signed a deal with NBC-Universal to deliver their content through Xbox Live Video Marketplace. I don’t think movie downloads will dominate this generation, but you can see where things are headed even when Sony, Mr. Blu-ray, is backing video downloads for the future.

GamingAnd of course the gaming news mostly lead by stories coming out of the E3. Microsoft started the ball rolling by officially dropping the price of the Xbox 360 20 GB model which is to be discontinued and replaced by a new 60 GB one. Nobody should be surprised at this one if they’ve been following the WNR. What did surprise, and the headlining news of the E3, was the 360 getting Final Fantasy XIII. The previously PS3 exclusive is exclusive no longer, at least in the United States. It makes sense though for publisher Square Enix, because with the 360, they can reach more US users who perhaps were not into the FF series before. Sony weren’t please, obviously, and I can understand why.

Final Fantasy XIII coming to a Xbox 360 near you

Final Fantasy XIII coming to a Xbox 360 near you

I’ve talked to a lot of people about their choice of consoles, and the ones choosing PS3 almost always mentions FF exclusivity as a reason, perhaps *the* reason. This won’t help the Xbox 360 too much, and they do need help if you read our June NPD sales figure analysis, but it won’t hurt either. But wait, there’s more! There was also Lips, the Xbox 360 Karaoke/Dance game with included motion sensing microphone. And a re-design of the Xbox dashboard to make it more Wii-like, complete with customisable Mii-type characters. Overall, Microsoft has had a good E3, probably the best out of the console publishers, but perhaps it’s too little too late.

Nintendo came out with Wii MotionPlus, which adds increased sensitivity and accuracy to the WIi-mote. There will also be a new musical game called Wii Music (how original), which will allow you to control an entire orchestra. Think of it as a more family-friendly version of Guitar Hero.

The PS3, on the other hand, had only as few major announcements. One includes the ending of the 80 GB line, and a price drop as a result. The PS3 lineup will now only feature a single model. Now would be a good time to get the 80 GB, especially if you still need PS2 compatibility. I personally wouldn’t rule out PS2 emulation coming back on a later model, as manufacturing prices drop for the PS3. The message coming out of Sony seems to be “more of the same”, since the PS3’s popularity is growing and all without having to offer any price cuts. Adding more features to add more value, rather than decreasing price to do the same, seems to be Sony’s strategy, in the short to mid term at least.

Fallout 3 banned in Australia

Fallout 3 banned in Australia

And while the hoopla was going on in the US, Australian gamers suffers yet again with Fallout 3 being banned due to simulated drug use. GTA IV, on the other hand, was not banned here and was offered with minor cuts, even though drug use is prominent in the game (but not by the main character, who only shoots cops and innocent people, as well as commit acts of terror with an RPG). Drugs are bad, mmmkay. And to add insult to injury (or in GTA IV terms, to get run over after being shot 78 times by cops), we pay more for censored games than pretty much anybody else in the world. Twice as much, for most game releases. Thank goodness for region-free games and stores like Play-Asia that take care of Australian gamers with discounts and cheap-ish shipping.

Let me check, yep, I think that’s it for this week. Join me next week for a less gaming oriented WNR. I will probably take some time in mid-week to follow up on that CPU story I wrote on the blog last week, as I’ve been running mega CPU poll on the site for a few weeks now with some interesting results. The poll is still open, so make sure you get your vote in. See you next week.

Weekly News Roundup (13 July 2008)

Sunday, July 13th, 2008

Welcome to another issue of the WNR. I finally updated WordPress to the latest version over the week, and the admin interface is looking much better than before. Let’s not waste any time, here’s the news for the week.

CopyrightStarting with copyright news, the RIAA’s witch-hunt against a home health aide who has never even used a computer was finally dropped, after three years of pursuit. If it takes three years for the RIAA to realise that someone who has never used a computer before can’t possibly be guilty of downloading music, just what other mistakes are they making in their pursuit of copyright violators? Viacom’s contined assault on YouTube/Google has caught the ire of YouTube users, who are posting protest videos on the video sharing site.

YouTube TargettedA study says that 1 in 3 people break the law by ripping DVDs. I don’t know who commissioned the study, but I suspect it is perhaps a company that would profit from a scare campaign that scares content owners into adding more DRM to their content. I say 1 in 3 people probably don’t even know their computers can play DVDs. A solution to this problem is to put a “copy tax” on blank media and disc writing hardware, to basically fine you for things you might do which may not illegal at all under the fair use provisions. Japan has recently decided against adopting an iPod tax, but that was mainly due to bureaucratic reasons, rather than a reaction to genuine public opposition. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to be classified a pirate before I even buy a blank disc or an iPod.

Digital DownloadsBut perhaps the biggest threat to the movie industry is not pirated downloads, but rather, legal downloads, which is cheaper but also makes less profit. That’s certainly what another study says, that digital downloads will dent Hollywood’s bottom line. I think this is inevitable, and the trick would be to get more people to buy downloads, rather than pirate them … you can do that by making prices fairer, and the increased number of buyers should then help make up for any loss in revenue. The traditional disc will still be sold for those who cannot download or still want a physical medium to enjoy their movies on.

High DefinitionIn HD news, Pioneer demonstrated a massive 16 layer Blu-ray disc that can store 400 GB of data. Not sure I would want 400 GB of my data to be stored on a single easily damaged or lost disc, and given the price of current Blu-ray media, such a disc would cost hundreds of dollars (if it is capable of being mass produced, and not just a lab experiment). External HDD storage is still much cheaper, safer and flexible (not to mention faster in file read/write) – you can get 1 TB drive for a third of the cost of a Blu-ray burner drive, for example.

Blu-ray Profiles - image curtesy of audioholics.comSony is touting the new interactive elements of Blu-ray (funny how they made fun of the very same elements in HD DVD, and called it a gimmick, during the HD format war). But some of their statements in regards to future Blu-ray interactive features requiring possibly new hardware profiles is a bit disturbing. Many people are now contemplating upgrading their 1.1 players to 2.0, but if a new profile is coming out (and I’m not talking about the audio only profile 3.0), then when does the upgrade stop? I really don’t want to upgrade my HT equipment as frequently as I update my computer, because unlike computers, it’s very hard to find a HT component that’s exactly right for your system – having to do so every 2 or 3 years will be a (very expensive) pain in the butt.

GamingAnd finally in gaming, Sony’s PlayStation site was hacked earlier in the week. Don’t know how this affects PS3 users, but it never felt right that the PS3 has a web browser but no anti-virus or firewall software (and the PS Store used to be just a website, as opposed to a fully closed system like Xbox Live). The PS3 2.40 firmware debacle was also resolved this week, after a fully working and non corrupting 2.41 version of the firmware was released. The lesson, of course, is to wait before applying new updates and let someone else be the guinea pig. PlayStation Home is still awaiting release, but there is a semi-confirmed date of a northern hemisphere fall/autumn release this year. There is also a rumour of a new PS3 model coming in September, but I don’t know if these last two news items are related or not.

What is certain is that the PS3 will not be getting a price drop anytime soon, while the Xbox 360 is gearing up for one just around the corner. The PS3 may also get a new motion sensing controller like the Wii, and the Xbox 360 will get one too. If the Xbox 360 can tie in the new Wii like controller with cheap HD motion sensing games downloadable from Xbox Live, then there might be a market there … Wii games are quite expensive, and not in HD, and for a quick spot of arcade action, the Xbox Live cannot be beat – add in a motion sensing controller, then that might be interesting. If not, then playing a Star Wars lightsaber game with such a controller would be ace.

That’s all the news that caught my eye this week. I’m sure I’ve missed plenty of important news items, but what can you do. See you next week!

Weekly News Roundup (6 July 2008)

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

I almost forgot about Digital Digest’s 9th birthday on Friday. It was 9 year and 2 days ago that I secreted the very first version of Digital Digest onto the World Wide Web. I chose an easy to remember day to launch the site (4th of July), so I would not forget the site’s founding anniversary. But I still forgot. Mainly because I don’t live in the US I think so 4th of July is just another day here. Anyway, 9 years and 2 day of hair pulling later, here we are. Yeah!

Anyway, back to the news roundup.

CopyrightLet start with copyright news, while I will talk more about it in the HD section, but out of the news that Toshiba was going to pursue an updated version of the DVD specifications (basically turn HD DVD into DVD 2.0), there was an interesting tidbit about adding managed copy for DVDs. This is something Microsoft has demanded for a while now. Imagine Windows Vista Media Center that plays all your DVDs copied and stored on your PC (or external networked drive) – no need for discs, no need to search your library and find that movie you want to watch … everything at the click of a few remote buttons. Digital Copy Included - Managed Copy in it’s current formManaged copy will allow movies to be copied but still retain DRM, as to prevent piracy – I think that’s a good compromise for those of us who want to “digitize” our DVD libraries. On the other end of the “fair use” spectrum is the MPAA’s latest attempt to prevent movie piracy, by introducing a new form of movie distribution using a system called DreamStream. Because this is a streaming service, and not a download one, the actual movie doesn’t end up on users’s systems (the cache is probably encrypted probably to prevent ripping of the movie through the cache). What this will mean for Internet congestion and bandwidth costs, one can only imagine. Remember that these are the same people who thought that disposable DVDs was a good idea without any environmental impact as millions of discs are thrown away every year under that system.

The fight against YouTube continues from Viacom (no doubt with support from other studios). The judge in the case has now demanded Google hand over logs of which users watched what, when and where, to Viacom. Will the fight against piracy lead to the death of privacy instead?

High DefinitionIn HD news, the BD-Live/Profile 2.0 push is continuing, with both Sony and Disney make sure all their future releases will be Profile 2.0 enabled. Of course, this doesn’t mean that these movies won’t play on your Profile 1.0 or 1.1 player, just that if you want to get best out of what you’ve paid for, you’ll need Profile 2.0. It’s all a bit confusing and ultimately unnecessary, but what can you do? BD-Live LogoMy last blog post talked about two polls I ran on the site which basically told me what I already knew, that Blu-ray was too expensive (and hardware more so than movies). Another threat to Blu-ray is gaming, and a new report has just come out showing that the gaming industry is now bigger than the DVD (and Blu-ray) industry in terms of revenue.

DVD Download DL LogoStill not fully satisfied being the loser of the format war, Toshiba is trying to start a new war with their DVD 2.0 format, which adds a lot of the features found on HD DVD onto the DVD format. The video will be at a lower resolution than Blu-ray, a sacrifice necessary to fit HD movies onto DVD. There is also something called DVD Download DL, which I’m not quite sure what it’s all about. I think it will be some kind of downloadable DVD service, given that the interactive HDi elements found on HD DVD (and DVD 2.0) can be used as both a download platform (to download the movies) as well as the usual interactivity element (menus …). It’s an interesting project, but you cannot see Blu-ray backers supporting this format unless they see no future for Blu-ray, in which case, they won’t have been Blu-ray backers in the first place. Of course, Toshiba through the DVD Forum can push through a format and make it mandatory for any manufacturer making DVD players to adopt this new format – including Blu-ray backers. Heavy handed, but effective, as this would mean all Blu-ray players will have to have DVD 2.0 support, or they will have to remove DVD playback functionalities altogether (ie. commit marketing suicide).

Nvidia GeForce GTX 280 with GP-GPUBut regardless of whether DVD 2.0 wins or if Blu-ray beats Toshiba again, H.264 will be one of the codec that will be used for encoding the video. H.264 encoding is a painful process at the moment, because a typical 2 hour movie will take 10+ hours even on the fastest PCs. But Nvidia will try to reduce this to less than 30 minutes with their new range of graphics cards that has GP-GPUs (General Purpose GPUs). Basically, these are graphics card that have GPUs that can also act as CPUs for purposes such as H.264 video encoding. And because GPUs have optimized architecture designed to speed up these sorts of processing, the encoding speed will jump through the roof. A x264 encoder with GP-GPU support would be a very nice thing to have.

GamingAnd finally in gaming news, PS3’s much awaited 2.40 firmware update with support for in-game XMB and trophies has hit a hitch. It has been pulled because it caused corruption problems, and so some more testing and waiting will be needed before PS3 users can enjoy the new features, which are really just a rip-off of Xbox 360’s in-game Dashboard and Achievements. PS3 2.40 FirmwareThe 360 launched with Achievements enabled, and a strict system that governs how each game will provide Achievements and Gamerpoints. Unfortunately for the PS3, this is not possible as Trophies is more of an after-thought. So if you want trophies in games you’ve already finished, you’ll have to play through them again as Trophies aren’t retroactive, for example.

In 360 land, Microsoft is planning to have a series of price cuts around the world (it’s already official here in Oz). The rumours of a new 60 GB version of the console won’t go away either, as are the rumours of a motion controller. There is now even a rumour that a new Dashboard update will make it controllable using motion controls, much like how computers were operated in Minority Report by Tom Cruise.

RipBot264 - Encode SettingsThat’s it for this week, more of the same next week probably. In the meantime, don’t forget to read my new guide: RipBot264 PS3, Xbox 360 H.264 Encoding Guide – it makes encoding H.264 for the PS3 and Xbox 360 very simple indeed. So easy in fact, that the new Quantum of Solace trailer I made was made using this method. Try it out for yourself, although I recommend you start with a very short clip as encoding can take hours.