Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category

Weekly News Roundup (4 January 2009)

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Welcome to the first WNR of 2009. Hope your NTE celebrations were a riot, not literally like the house down the street from my place, but even so, I hope the police dogs didn’t bite too hard. I spent NYE being sick, probably the flu, and that totally ruined my evening of sitting on the couch and watching the fireworks on TV.

It’s still a relatively quiet week, although there are signs that the hangover is nearly over and that reporters are coming back to work. I might make some 2009 predictions/wishes if there’s not enough news.

CopyrightLet’s start the new year with some copyright news. The MPAA’s attempt the “plug the analogue hole” has meant resistance from the general public (no surprise), but now also meets the disapproval of the FCC Chairman. The good old MPAA, making enemies everywhere in 2008 and now in 2009 too. 

 That’s it for copyright news though. Told you it was slow. As for a prediction, or perhaps more precisely, a wish for 2009: I wish that DRM will die a horrible death, just like it did with MP3s, but this time for video and gaming. But I think this will only happen when a legitimate online delivery system is in place so the content owners can be happy with the extra revenue to not worry so much about DRM. There are a couple of important court cases that may come to a conclusion this year too, and the verdicts will determine largely how the copyright industry proceeds from this point. 

High DefinitionIn High Definition news, The Dark Knight continues to be the week’s top seller, outselling the new release The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor by a 3 to 1 margin on Blu-ray. Warner’s catalogue title sale has meant that the top 20 titles by BD/DVD sales ratio has all been taken up by these titles. Could this be a sign of Blu-ray’s imminent conversion to a mainstream format? Or were these titles just really bad DVD sellers that have found some new life on Blu-ray?

Speaking of The Mummy movie, has anyone else noticed how too many of Brendan Fraser’s movies take place underground or involves being underground? “Encino Man” as frozen caveman buried in backyard; The Mummy movies of course; “Blast from the Past” buried in an underground bunker; “Journey to the Center of the Earth” obviously; “Bedazzled” where he makes a deal the Devil, who lives underground … there are also a few movies where he dies at the end, so technically, that’s going under ground too.

Blu-ray and DVD price breakdown

Blu-ray and DVD price breakdown

Anyway. A recent survey shows that Blu-ray buyers are still buying DVDs in droves, thanks to DVD’s lower pricing. There’s a nice graph in the article, where it shows that 66% of Blu-ray movies sold are over $20, whereas 83% of DVDs sold are under $20. If there’s any other way to show where the buying demographic for both formats differ, I would like to see it.  

LG had spiced up its Blu-ray player lineup by adding CinemaNow and YouTube support. Not long ago, Samsung released a Blu-ray player with Netflix support as well. As I have mentioned many times before, but possibly on the forum, is that the processing power these Blu-ray players have, plus the Internet connection capability in Profile 2.0 players, means that these players are ideally suited for online movie streaming. Digital distribution is coming, and that’s a prediction for 2009 that I have confidence in. To further drive the point, Toshiba is backing distributing movies on memory cards, some of which have now exceeded the size of single layer Blu-ray,  is re-writable and does not require special and expensive drives to read/copy discs. Downloads kiosks are being set up in stores where thousands of movies can be downloaded onto memory cards, like an alternative to iTunes or online downloading. While the movies are SD for now, Toshiba says HD is coming and so are set-top boxes to view them on. What chances that LG and Samsung will be one of the first to jump on the bandwagon and offer a Blu-ray player that also plays these types of movies?

NCR's DVD dispensing kiosk - USB memory drive version coming soon

NCR's DVD dispensing kiosk - USB memory drive version coming soon

I’m a big supporter of digital movie distribution, where the media is only important for holding the data, not as a format unto itself. Why does it matter if the movies comes on Blu-ray, or DVDs, or USB memory drives or even by carrier pigeons? It’s the digital data that’s important, and everything would be a lot easier if my movie collection was purely digital, and I can select and watch my movie collection without having to find the disc, pop it out, insert it into the player, wait for it to load, and then when I’m finished, put the disc back to where it belongs again. Then there’s the sorting, and possibly using software to categorize it, which is time consuming. With a digital library, I can do all of that at the click of a few buttons, and with an Internet connection, I have thousands of more movies available to buy instantly as opposed to shopping online or going to the shops and hoping they have the movie in stock. So I hope in 2009 we’ll see more movement towards this eventual goal. And despite what people are saying, Blu-ray is not under threat at all yet from this because HD movie delivery still requires more bandwidth being available, and a disc format will still be needed, just like USB memory drives (or carrier pigeons), in this digital future. 

Asus HDAV 1.3 will support Dolby TrueHD bitstreaming

Asus HDAV 1.3 will support Dolby TrueHD bitstreaming

Another LG innovation is the 480 Hz TV. I don’t know what watching Blu-ray will be like on such a TV, and I would like to find out. As long as it doesn’t have TruMotion or whatever LG calls their in-between animation technology, because they make movies look freakishly smooth. Judder is natural to film content and it should be present. Telecine Judder (from 3:2 pulldown) due to uneven frame doubling is not natural though, and TVs that can refresh at 48, 72, 96, 120, 240 and now 480 Hz should eliminate one of the biggest problems with watching film content on HDTVs. Hopefully, Telecine Judder will be eliminated in 2009. 

On the PC front, Asus has released the first sound card with Dolby TrueHD bitstreaming. ATI is doing good work with enabling HDMI on their graphics cards to also output digital audio, answering a question I posed many moons ago as to whether graphics card/chip manufacturers or sound card manufacturers will be responsible for the audio part of HDMI. Still, the progress has been slow and Blu-ray playback on PCs is still not the “must-have” feature that DVD playback was shortly after it came out. I expect more movement on this front in 2009, because the software players are already quite mature, and the emergence of a few free or open source tools for Blu-ray production, such as BD Rebuilder, could help to drive this segment of the market that I think the Blu-ray people have ignored against their own interests (just because all the PC companies supported HD DVD).  

GamingAnd finally in gaming, a new book reveals that the CPUs in the Xbox 360 and PS3 are actually cousins of sorts, and that Sony helped Microsoft develop the chip used in all Xbox 360’s, even if it wasn’t intentional.

The Xbox 360 has also been updated with a new 65nm GPU, as opposed to the hot 95nm GPU previously. The “Jasper” model of Xbox 360 is now available, and all Arcade models with built-in memory units are Jaspers. Pros/Premiums Jaspers are rare but they do exists,  and even one of our forum members managed to get one without even deliberately trying. My prediction for 2009 is that I will get one of these, or whatever the next Xbox 360 model is, because an Xbox 360 without HDMI is just not right.

As for a larger picture prediction, it’s hard to see the PS3 not climbing in sales if the stories about it becoming cheaper to produce is true. Even a small price cut at this point will drive sales upwards by quite a bit, so if Sony can bite the bullet and compete on prices with the Xbox 360/Wii, then they can still win this generation’s console war. But there’s a little voice at the back of my head (and not just due to the fever I have)  that reminds me of the story some time ago that said the PS3’s processor was great for a media player/hub, but not so much for a game console. Did Sony design the Cell intentionally for this, and are they paying the price for it now, along with the costly (in more than one sense of the word) Blu-ray drive?

Okay, that’s it for now. Back to bed for me for some much needed rest. See you next week.

Weekly News Roundup (28 December 2008)

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

Welcome to the last ever Weekly News Roundup.

For 2008, that is. And predictably, there was hardly any news this week. There was the story of the RIAA changing tactics in their fight against piracy. The Pirate Party in Sweden is gaining support, now surpassing the Green Party in membership. And that’s pretty much it for copyright news.

Hardly any Blu-ray news either, as people are still recovering from TDK fever. The only thing slightly related was the cost of making PS3s dropping, but still higher than the retail price. Sony are still losing money on each PS3 sold, so no wonder they’re not offering any price cuts. And video streaming is coming to the Wii, which means all current generation consoles now have video streaming capabilities, which suggest online based video delivery is here to stay.

And that was the week in news, oh well. So instead of looking at the week’s news, I thought it would be appropriate to do a quick yearly roundup. A proper annual review would takes 20 pages, so I’ll just quickly do the news items that I can still remember, which is not much.

Copyright2008 was a year in which lawsuits were filled left and right, by the RIAA, MPAA and their legion of evildoers across the globe. TorrentSpy was shut down, many others followed, but piracy rates still increased. 

Consumers finally said no to DRM in 2008

Consumers finally said no to DRM in 2008

2008 is also the year that DRM died. Unfortunately, it was limited to the music arena, but it’s still a good sign for the future. DRM still reigns supreme in video and gaming, but on the PC gaming front, the voices of discontent are now being heard, all thanks to EA’s mangling of Spore’s DRM. No PC game gets released these days without a debate on DRM, and I think that’s a healthy development and hopefully, 2009 will be the year DRM died in gaming as well.

At the end, the RIAA decided to change tactics and go after ISPs. It happened in Australia as well, with AFACT suing ISP giant iiNet. iiNet has promised to fight the charges, and we might see what happens in 2009. 

In politics, the George W. Bush White House, firmly on the side of the RIAA/MPAA, established a new Copyright Czar position which will make the government do the dirty work of the copyright industry. Barack Obama was elected President, and he promises a different approach to fighting piracy, but we will have to wait and see if he delivers on the promise. 

High DefinitionIn High Definition, a lot happened in 2008. The year started with a bang, with Warner Bros. ditching HD DVD and going Blu-ray exclusive. Wal-Mart followed, and a string of other companies too, and in February, Toshiba folded and abandoned HD DVD.

RIP, HD DVD

RIP, HD DVD

What followed was a series of fire sales, some of which are still going on, in which yours truly increased his high definition movie collection 15 fold for less money than a Blu-ray player (current pricing). Blu-ray was expected to completely overwhelmed the market, but nothing materialised, at least not what studios were expecting. Blu-ray’s 6% share in March (when HD DVDs were still being released) did not grow at all for the next 6 months. Then came Iron Man, and price cuts to hardware, and Blu-ray was gaining momentum again. The Dark Knight made sure 2008 was a good, but not brilliant, year for Blu-ray, with market share closer to 10%.

Blu-ray standalone prices tumbled towards the end of the year, coming close to HD DVD levels just before it folded, with some deals making them even cheaper than HD DVD players after HD DVD folded. The “players are too expensive” excuse can’t really be used anymore, but people are still not buying players in droves, and with slower PS3 sales, there’s still not nearly enough players in people’s homes. 2009 will be the year of Blu-ray, as the execs now say – we’ll have to wait and see.  

But time may be running out because online video distribution made huge strides in 2008. All three current generation consoles, the Wii, Xbox 360 and PS3, now support some form of online video rental/streaming. There are more than 33 million of these consoles in the US alone.  Netflix, Blockbusters, Microsoft, Sony, Nintendo, Apple, Amazon … are all now doing online video streaming, most of them with their own hardware players as well. If you ask anyone in the industry, they’ll tell you that online video is the next big thing in home video, but until bandwidth increases and its prices drop, we might still have a while to wait before HD video streaming becomes a reality. H.264 has firmly established itself as the video format of choice, and with the H.264 based DivX 7 coming next month, H.264 is truly becoming a mainstream video format and HD streaming using the highly efficient H.264 codec will make bandwidth requirements slightly less demanding. 

GamingAnd finally in gaming, 2008 was a great year for the gaming industry. There were so many hit titles, and my NPD yearly roundup to be published next month will have more details. GTA IV, Gears of War 2, Madden NFL 09, Super Smash Bros. Brawl – all titles that sold more than 1 million copies in the first month of release. The good news for Microsoft was that 3 of these 4 titles were Xbox 360 ones (the other one being for the Wii). The expected PS3 hits like LittleBigPlanet and MGS4 did not really do much for the console, while any old game on the Xbox 360 sold better. The Wii’s usual suspects, Wii Play, Mario Kart, and Wii Fit all helping it to stay number 2 in software sales. 

PS3: Losing momentum, losing sales, but not losing the high price tag

PS3: Losing momentum, losing sales, but not losing the high price tag

On the hardware front, the PS3 started with a bang, outselling the Xbox 360 for the first, and second, times in the first 3 month. Then a couple of months where both consoles were neck and neck, the Xbox 360 came back with a vengeance thanks to some smart price cuts and some hit game releases. But it was all a fight for (a distant) second place as far as Nintendo were concerned, as the Wii took top spot for 12 out of 12 months (we’re still awaiting December figures, but one can assume the Wii won by miles again). More than 2 million Wiis were sold in November alone.

The PS3 ended the year on a sour note (although the December figures might be better), with November of 2008 being a worth month than November of 2007, in terms of raw sales, which is not good news at all for a console that’s not supposed to have peaked yet. The lack of any price cuts, and with only a more expensive model being released for the holiday period, was what caused this. The high cost of making a PS3 is still hurting sales, but with the PS3 costs dropping, 2009 might be the year that the PS3 finally gets some prices cuts. And the good news is that the Xbox 360 can’t make any further drops, so it’s all set for PS3 making 2009 their year. 

So that was the year that was. If you listen to the marketing people, 2009 will be the year of Blu-ray, PS3, online video, H.264, and everything else in between. Nobody really knows what will happen, and I would dare make any predictions, but let’s just hope 2009 is a great year. Have a happy and safe holiday period, a Happy New Year and see you in 2009.

Weekly News Roundup (21 December 2008)

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Only one more WNR before Christmas folks, and two more before its 2009. Can you really believe that? That somehow time is linear and that the years go up, rather than down, is really just amazing to me. You know what’s also amazing? Coleslaw. 

CopyrightIn Copyright news, the MPAA has linked an increase in piracy with the current economic climate. For once, I actually agree with them. Piracy has always been linked to what people are willing and able to spend, and with Hollywood consistently making increasing profits, the MPAA need to take a look at that and realise why the piracy rate is so high.

The MPAA continues their fight against movie websites, suing three more this week bringing the total to 13. But illegal downloads continue, which again links to the point above. Make it affordable, or people will look elsewhere.

The lawsuit against Australian ISP iiNet continues, and iiNet are ready for a legal fight which could start in February. As part of the preparation for the lawsuit, AFACT (the Australian MPAA) spied on iiNet’s users who used BitTorrent, and even planted a ‘copyright infringing’ user into the mix to prove their point. Does that leave a bad taste in your mouth? It does mine, and I’m not even an iiNet customer. Why should corporations or organisations representing corporations be allowed to spy on us? In this case, the information was used to sue another company, but what if they used this information to sue individuals? Oh wait, they’ve done this before. Ethical, moral and legal considerations seems to be second concern to these people, not if it gets in the way of protecting their profits. 

SecuROM - the culprit behind all this DRM nonsense

SecuROM - the culprit behind all this DRM nonsense

Software publisher Ubisoft is dropping DRM for the new Prince of Persia game. But don’t get too happy yet, because “It’s a Trap!”. They are doing it to prove that having no DRM still means a high piracy rate, which might get people to go and buy it prove a point, which is a scenario that they’re happy with too. It’s a win win for them really. Ideally, we as users should buy the game if we like it, and not buy it or download it if we don’t. A low piracy rate + a low purchase rate should send the right message if the game turns out to be crap (early reviews say the game is pretty good, but not an instant classic or anything). I don’t think DRM actually increases piracy, I just don’t think it stops it. And since it doesn’t work, it only annoys legitimate users, which is kind of counterproductive. Back to the game that started all this negative publicity for PC gaming DRM, Spore now has reduced its own DRM. And all it took was a massive public protest and out-lash. And don’t forget the baddies behind all this is SecuROM, and guess who publishes it? That’s right, Sony. The fact that half of SecuROM’s wikipedia page is filled by the “controversies” section says something, doesn’t it?

High DefinitionOnto Blu-ray news now, and it’s been a great week for Blu-ray. Well, actually it was last week, but the sales figures have only come out for “TDK Week”, and they are spectacular. More than $60 million is sales for the week is amazing for Blu-ray, considering the year’s previous big release, Iron Man, did less than $30m. But while this is great news for Blu-ray, it was also good news for DVD, because the DVD version sold tons as well. And the DVD version did better against Blu-ray for TDK compared to Iron Man as well, at least on dollar volume. The Batman has saved Christmas.

HD DVD Combo Discs could make a comeback, but this time in Blu

HD DVD Combo Discs could make a comeback, but this time in Blu

The first day figures for TDK had the Blu-ray version selling at 30% compared to the DVD version in the US, Canada and Britain. Worldwide numbers from a week later had the Blu-ray market share drop to about 13%, which is still an impressive set of figures (this number would have been closer to 3% this time last year). Still, I think something is missing from Blu-ray, as the migration from DVD to Blu-ray hasn’t really materialized for the average consumer. What might help is Blu-ray combo discs. Remember HD DVD combos? Remember HD DVD? Anyway, combos were HD DVD discs that had HD DVD content on one side, and DVD content (playable in any DVD player) on the other. Some discs even had both formats on the same side, although the HD DVD side was limited to a single layer (15 GB). Well, it might be coming to Blu-ray as well, and I think this will be a good idea for Blu-ray, despite the BDA ridiculing the HD DVD people for doing it. If HD DVD had decided to tough it out and were determined to use everything in their arsenal, then they could have made every DVD release a HD DVD combo, instantly taking the HD DVD to DVD sales ratio to 1:1. Blu-ray can now do this as well, if they’re desperate enough (will lose a lot of money in the process though).

GamingAnd finally in gaming, there’s a free Xbox Live Arcade game available at the moment.  I’ve downloaded it, and you don’t need a Gold account either. The way that Xbox Live has been integrated with the Internet is now quite impressive. I was actually able to log into my Xbox Live account on my PC, and schedule the download of this free game to my Xbox 360 all without turning the console on. Plus, my Fallout 3 achievements from my PC version of the game now shows up in my Xbox 360 gamer profile, and vice versa. PC gaming is on the decline, but it’s still huge for certain types of games, and if Microsoft can pressure publishers to include “Games For Windows” in all PC games (thus making sure that an Xbox 360 version will exist with the same set of achievements), then that will be a big boost for the Xbox 360 as well. 

NPD November 2008 Game Console US Sales Figures

NPD November 2008 Game Console US Sales Figures

Overall, there’s a lot of good news for the Xbox 360 at the moment. The Wii is doing amazing things in sales, but as you’ll read about in my November NPD sales figure analysis, the PS3 is struggling. Sales are down compared to last year for all three of Sony’s console platforms, which isn’t too surprising given the current climate, but it’s made worse by the fact that every other console increased in sales: Wii, Xbox 360, DS, some by significant numbers (Wii – sales up 108%!). Some analysts are blaming this on poor HDTV sales. This kind of make sense, except the Xbox 360 is also a HDTV requiring console, so why has it not dropped in sales? I think the PS3 is supposed to drive HDTV sales, not the other way around, to be honest. But the easy solution is to drop prices, but Sony won’t do it claiming the PS3 is still the best value console around. That’s true, but value is relative. It’s as if a car manufacturer includes all extras as standard, except the price has been raised by a couple of thousand. Yes, it’s good value if you need all the extras, but what if you don’t want a sunroof? Then the car is just plain expensive, despite it being worth the price. This is basically the effect of the PS3 also being a Blu-ray player. In another year, Sony could have afforded to take a loss and drop prices, but not in a year where their predicted profits could drop by a massive 72%.

That’s it for yet another week. There’s no holiday break for DVDGuy, so I’ll be back same time next week with another news roundup. Even if there isn’t any news to write, in which case I’ll ramble on about something. So same as usual then.

Blu-ray Year To Date Stats + PC Playback

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

Home Media Magazine last week published year to date sales stats for Blu-ray and DVD. While the year isn’t over yet, they are still worth taking a look at. 

Overall, Blu-ray sales accounted for 4% of the market by disc volume (the number of actual packages sold) for the top 20 titles. If you look at dollar volume (the total amount of money taken in), Blu-ray did a little better at 6.11%, which is not a surprise considering that a typical Blu-ray movie is more expensive than a DVD.

If you look at the growth figures, Blu-ray sales are way up on last year, a 233.23% increase to $USD 410.28 million dollars. DVDs, on the other hand, were down 8.47% at $6,306.01 million, taking into account that the YTD figures are only up to 16th November.

With the above set of figures, it is possible to extrapolate last year’s figures, which are as follows:

  • Blu-ray: $175.91 million (2.5%)
  • DVD: $6,889.56 million (97.5%)

These figures look right to me, as Blu-ray did have a 2.5% market share this time last year (with HD DVD still holding around 1.5%). It looks like Blu-ray has successfully absorbed the HD DVD market share, and still managed to grow about 2%. This may not sound like a lot, but considering that most of Blu-ray’s growth has been in the second half of the year (and in the last quarter of 2008, which is yet to finish), things are looking pretty bright.

But Blu-ray was brought in make up for the ever shrinking DVD profits, and with the above set of figures, it is now possible to see if Blu-ray has managed to do just this for the studios. DVD sales dropped by $583.55 million from 2007 to 2008 (up to 16th November). However, Blu-ray sales have only increased by $234.37 million in the same period. Since these figures do not represent the entire calendar year, so it’s still a bit premature to provide any concrete conclusions at this moment. Blu-ray sales will increase in the one and a half months left in the year, and the DVD sales decrease will lessen – it will only take a little bit of movement on either front for Blu-ray sales to completely cover any losses in DVD sales, and after that, it’s all extra profit. Of course, this does not take into account the amount of money that studios have spent in developing and promoting Blu-ray, but many of these are once off costs.

To conclude, Blu-ray sales have increased beyond simply absorbing the HD DVD market share, and looks set to at the very least cover any decreases in sales for the DVD format, which was the whole point of having a new format. While there’s still a long way to go before one can say that Blu-ray is competing with DVD, it is already supplementing it quite nicely and perhaps that’s the intentions of the studios all along.

As for the second part of this blog post, as you may be aware, I recently purchased a new C2D E8500 powered computer, with an Asus 4850 as the Blu-ray decoding assisting GPU using the latest Catalyst drivers (8.11) in Windows XP. Desktop resolution was set to 1920×1080, the native resolution for Blu-ray (and my LCD monitor). Audio decoding settings in PowerDVD were set to 6 channel output. 

I was interested in CPU usage while playing a H.264 and VC-1 encoded Blu-ray discs, and here are the results.

 

CPU usage while playing VC-1 encoded Blu-ray in PowerDVD 8 Ultra

CPU usage while playing VC-1 encoded Blu-ray in PowerDVD 8 Ultra

CPU usage while playing H.264 encoded Blu-ray in PowerDVD 8 Ultra

CPU usage while playing H.264 encoded Blu-ray in PowerDVD 8 Ultra

As you can see from the above CPU usage graphs, the CPU usage for both VC-1 and H.264 encodes were at a very reasonable 10% on average. ATi’s Avivo HD is doing an excellent job at assisting Blu-ray decoding. It’s unfortunate that PowerDVD no longer allows HD acceleration to be switched off, as I would be interested to see how the CPU handles decoding by itself. It was also interesting that, since I had Intel SpeedStep turned on, the CPU was in power saving mode during most of the playback (CPU multiplier reduced from 9.5x to 6.0x). With this kind of GPU acceleration, you can get away with using one of Intel or AMD’s budget CPUs and still get perfect Blu-ray playback. More sensible though would be getting a silent cooling GPU, with an equally low power CPU part, to build yourself a near silent home theatre PC system.

Weekly News Roundup (9 November 2008)

Sunday, November 9th, 2008
CNN's fake holograms were pointless

CNN's fake holograms were pointless

Obamania is sweeping the world. I watched the election coverage because I love elections, or anything where you get to find out a result at a set date (sports, exams …). I think I can be considered quite knowledgeable on the US election, at least this one, so once I saw PA go blue, it was pretty much all over for McCain. Ohio, Virginia, Florida all going Obama’s way just meant that, as I had predicted, the election will be called for Obama once the polls close in the west. I’m sure the networks would have preferred it to have lasted a bit longer, but there’s only so much one can take in regards to fake holograms. The most  disappointing thing for me was that I had put some money on Obama winning between 311 and 338 Electoral Votes, but he got (it looks like right now) 365 EVs – it’s all Indiana and North Carolina’s fault (plus Nebraska’s single split EV). I did put money on Obama getting more than 338 to hedge my bets, so I didn’t lose any money, but I didn’t win any either which was a shame.

Better news is that it seems my third replacement PS3 (fourth overall) is problem free at last. Fingers crossed. I did go computer shopping, but I ended up buying a system that’s totally different than the one that I thought I would buy last week. That’s just so typical, isn’t it. And despite all the distractions, there happened to be quite a bit of news this week, so let’s get on with it.

CopyrightStarting with copyright news. Following up on last week’s news about MPAA winning against the Chinese DVD manufacturer GoWell. Apparently what happened was that GoWell made a DVD player that played back copied CSS protected discs – not ripped discs, just discs that you copy with Windows Explorer or something which is still encrypted. Normal DVD players won’t play these files, but GoWell made one that did, which is why it got into trouble with the MPAA. GoNotSoWell, it seems.

Real Networks want the public's help in their fight against the MPAA

Real Networks want the public's help in their fight against the MPAA

In the other MPAA case, Real Networks is appealing to the public for support. They are promising free licenses to RealDVD for all trial subscribers once they win the case. If a free license isn’t important for you, then making a stand against the MPAA is. They may have had a case against GoWell, but CSS in itself is a ridiculously crap encryption that can be broken just by sneezing on it, and to see so much money being wasted on licensing and defending just seems like such a waste. Also a waste is all the money the MPAA spends on lobbying politicians, and no sooner had Obama accepted McCain’s concession, the MPAA issued a statement to clarify their intent to work with the new administration on matters of copyright. The kind of people who voted for Obama, especially the younger generation, won’t stand for yet another administration that’s far too friendly and accepting of the MPAA’s position, and I hope President-Elect Obama stands firm on the principle of fair use.

BD+ broken?

BD+ broken?

Copy protection schemes, like Blu-ray’s BD+, are only effective when people aren’t actively trying to find ways to circumvent it. But people are, and they have, which brings the dream of Blu-ray playback on Linux systems one step closer. Remember that CSS was broken as a way to get DVD video working on Linux, so you would think that the BDA had learnt that lesson and officially licensed a Linux based decryption software to prevent people hackers from doing it the hard way.

There are two schools of thought when it comes to fighting piracy. Stick or carrot. The stick approach, like what EA has been  doing lately and getting into trouble with, doesn’t seem to work too well. EA has had to back down time after time, but stories of more snafus won’t help. This time, EA forgot to print one character from the CD key for the game Red Alert 3 and their solution is for customers to guess it by entering all 36 possible options (or send in a picture of their improperly printed CD key for verification). If there was one company that could do without one more DRM related scandal, it was EA. The other approach, carrot, is to not try and prevent people pirating stuff, but work with it for everyone’s benefit. A new technique for online video sharing sites allows ads to be inserted into videos whenever copyrighted work is detected. Not the most ideal solution, but it’s better than having the video removed. One can also fight piracy on the pricing front, and that’s what Warner is doing in China with low-cost online rentals. Why can’t they do low-cost online rentals here? And even the lack of copy protection can be seen as a promotional tool, with DRM-free MP3s now getting a new “MP3 100% Compatible” logo to promote the fact. The anti-DRM movement has helped to fight piracy more effectively than DRMs, it seems.

High DefinitionLet’s move onto Blu-ray. Sony/Universal are coming out with a vending machines that sells Blu-ray movies and PS3 games. It’s funny that Universal is helping Sony out, because if you look at the companies that have contributed most to Blu-ray, it’s Paramount (Iron Man, Transformers), Warner (I Am Legend, The Dark Knight) and now Universal. All three were HD DVD studios, two of them exclusive until the very end. Interesting.

The Dark Knight on Blu-ray is set to break all Blu-ray sales records

The Dark Knight on Blu-ray is set to break all Blu-ray sales records

The other HD DVD exclusive party was Wal-Mart, and now they’re bigging up Blu-ray too by devoting more shelve space to Blu-ray for the holiday shopping season. The low cost players that have started to arrive will suit Wal-Mart’s pricing strategy, something that wasn’t possible last year this time which forced them to go HD DVD exclusive for standalone HD players. The lower hardware prices, movie sales and in-store promotions are all part of the big holiday promotional push for Blu-ray, which is set to cost up to $25 million dollars. Money well spent, or waste of it during harsh economic times? Regardless, analysts all predict Blu-ray player prices will nosedive in the next month and a bit. HD DVD’s price crash was seen by probably the very same analysts as a sign that it was doomed, but this time without any real competitors around, the outlooks if fairly different. The Dark Knight on Blu-ray, which is predicted to sell by the truck load, and coupled with cheap Blu-ray players, should see uptake increase. If it works, this could be the most significant holiday season for Blu-ray – the one that decides whether it can replace DVDs, or merely supplement it as a niche format.

And as I normally like to do at the end of the HD section, there’s a bit of news about H.264. DivX 7 is nearly ready for release, with the first beta player being released with H.264 support.

GamingAnd in gaming, PS3 sales bottomed out last week, but bounced back during the week thanks to GTA IV I think. Just goes to prove that games sell consoles, more than the other way around. Unfortunately for the PS3, it has the lowest attach rate (the average number of games people buy for the console) out of the big 3, with the Xbox 360 way in front followed by the Wii. The Xbox 360 being released earlier helps it, plus the lower prices of the console. The Wii and it’s fun (and hype) factor is helping it too. The PS3’s excellent Blu-ray and media hub functions, is making things worse when it comes to games attach rates. Console manufacturers make money off games more than consoles (that’s if they’re not losing huge amounts of it by selling them below cost, like Sony does with the PS3), so attach rate is everything (especially if your consoles has sold in greater numbers, like the Xbox 360).

In other PS3 news, firmware 2.52 has been released to fix problems with 2.51 which was released to fix problems with 2.50 (which was released to fix problems with …). Sony really need to do better release testing when it comes to their firmware, and there are more reports that 2.52 is borking PS3s by making the not reading disc problem appear after updates. It’s only a matter of time before someone launches a lawsuit, if Sony’s not careful. Sony is also patenting a Wiimote like controller for the PS3.

Will we ever see a slim Xbox 360?

Will we ever see a slim, sexier Xbox 360?

The NPD October figures should be released next week, and it is widely expected that the Xbox 360 will do extremely well thanks to recent price cuts. But Microsoft is hinting that the last round of cuts will be the last round, period. It was always a matter of time before price cuts are so large that they no longer make any financial sense. The next logical step, at least in my mind, would be for them to make a more reliable and “sexier” version of the 360 – doing that, even for higher prices, will drive sales.

One company not looking to drive up more sales is Nintendo, who thinks they will have enough Wii stock for this holiday season, but you never know. If you want one for Christmas, for yourself or as a gift, please take my advice and buy one today, just to be safe.

And that’s all the news we have for this relatively busy week. Obamania will subside I think, as reality of the current situation sink in (two wars, global economic crisis, terrorism, disease, environmental disasters, and of course the big one, movie piracy). Those of us that have wasted countless hours following the election will now have to find something better to do, so the question is then can we fill our empty lives with something else to worry about? Yes We Can!

The New Xbox 360 Elite

Update: The real picture of the Xbox 360 Slim, now that it's available

Update: Seems a lot of people are finding this page on Google or somewhere when searching for pics of the Xbox 360 Slim, so instead of providing just the pic for the prototype one, here’s the real one to the right.