Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category

Weekly News Roundup (24 August 2008)

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

Hello there! No mid week blog as I’m working on something special. And by special, I mean sometimes that takes me a long time to write because I really don’t know what I am doing. I guess I’ll just luck my way through it, although in my experience, there’s no such thing as luck. 

CopyrightLet’s start with copyright news. The RIAA had to pay damages in a court case, a reverse of what usually happens. They falsely accused someone of downloading pirated music, and had to pay $107,951.03 the disabled single mother as a result. I wonder how many other of RIAA’s victims are falsely accused. The MPAA has been busy with Operation Takedown, going after pirates in the Asia-Pacific region. Can’t blame them this time for doing so, as they weren’t going after home users, but rather, large scale piracy rings.

Dream Pinball 3D - sold 800 copies, illegally downloaded 12,000 times

Dream Pinball 3D - sold 800 copies, illegally downloaded 12,000 times

In the PC gaming arena, where piracy is rampant, Atari and Codemasters are trying something new to tackle the problem. They have sent 25,000 people £300 fines for illegally sharing their games. Now this is going into a slightly confusing area. How did Atari/Codemasters get the details of these 25,000, let alone figure out whether these people downloaded the entire game or only part of it, whether they shared the entire game or only part of it, and whether they actually used the game that they allegedly downloaded. If, for example, I accidentally download the wrong torrent file and started downloading/sharing a pirated game, but only for 30 seconds, am I culpable for piracy? Or if I managed to download the entire game without sharing any part of it, but I did not play the game and merely deleted it straight away, then should I be fined for £300 as well? And with malware being so prevalent, how can they prove that it was the user’s intention to download the game, rather than the user’s computer being controlled by someone else. I for one hope one of the 25,000 people fined is a lawyer and will take this up further. The CEO of ID Software, Todd Hollenshead, says that PC manufacturers love piracy, as it helps sales. I think that’s true and has always been true for PCs. EA Sports boss Peter Moore thinks that’s not good and wants a piracy crackdown.

But while anti-piracy measures may be important, they must also not impede the user’s fair use rights, at least according to a California judge. Some common sense from the courts, finally. Copyright holders should also stop being so greedy, forcing music streaming sites such as Pandora to shut down due to excessive cost. This will only drive more people to piracy, so the copyright holders can’t have it both ways.

High DefinitionIn HD news, the big news of the week is Microsoft’s support for Blu-ray in Windows. XP, Vista, Server 2003/2008 will now have built-in Blu-ray burning supports via a feature pack currently in beta testing that will add native Blu-ray burning support. Good news for Blu-ray supporters, that’s for sure.

Hannah Montana Blu-ray - Comes with 3D Viewing Option

Hannah Montana Blu-ray - Comes with 3D Viewing Option

To add more features to Blu-ray, the Blu-ray Group is currently investigating stereoscopic 3D movies, which they think may the “next big thing” in Blu-ray. 3D movies does hold fascination for me personally, but even the best systems today are very clunky or poor in visual quality (not to mention, prone to inducing motion sickness). Can’t help but feel this is all a bit gimmicky, just like BD-Live and most of the “new” features found on Blu-ray. The increased audio/video resolution is the only thing that makes Blu-ray a must-have for me. Convenience of use is something that Blu-ray has to be wary of too, because HD VOD streaming services (either cable based or IP based), especially those on a fixed subscription fee, is a lot more convenient and cheaper than buying Blu-ray movies.

But the problem with at least online HD streaming is the bandwidth, and following our news last week about the BBC upgrading the iPlayer to use H.264/AAC, a new problem with bandwidth has emerged. Small ISPs are complaining that the BBC has switched network carriers, making it unaffordable to them to provide for the increasing demand. There is not nearly enough bandwidth for even today’s video applications if they are to become a success and almost everyone uses them. The fight for bandwidth will certainly heat up, unless new technology can be implemented or if governments and large private enterprises (ie. Google) step up and spend to improve infrastructure (which Google is doing already).

GamingAnd finally in gaming, a follow on from last week’s surprising “Xbox 360 outsells PS3 in Japan of all place” story, the Xbox 360 is officially sold out in all of Japan this week. This sounds like big news, but I suspect the total stock of Xbox 360’s in Japan is probably only a little bit more than what the Wii sells there in weekly numbers. Typical of Microsoft to not take advantage of a good situation, with buyers unable to buy the Xbox 360 even if they wanted to now.

Good news for Xbox 360 GTA IV fans, the downloadable content that was to be delayed until 2009 will arrrive this year, according to Microsoft at least. Nobody seems to have a clue as to what the DLCs will bring. Whole new cities? More buildings that can be entered? More single player storylines? Better weapons? Won’t have to wait too long to find out, if Microsoft is correct.

Rumor: Xbox 360 Arcade for $200 with motion controller

Rumor: Xbox 360 Arcade for $200 with motion controller

There is also the rumour that the Xbox 360 Arcade will ship with motion controllers to find the Wii not only on pricing (only $200 for the console), but on features. Aggressive move by Microsoft, if true.

On the PS3 front, Sony will bring out a 160 GB PS3 in October (not in Australia though). It costs $100 more, so you would expect perhaps it would have some other additional hardware features to justify the increase. Replacing the PS3 HDD is extremely easy and cheap, so if the new model only has a bigger hard-drive, then it’s not really worth it in my opinion.

The Wii, meanwhile, is making more money for Nintendo than all the other consoles. Because the Wii uses cheaper hardware (not as advanced in the CPU/GPU department, and no Blu-ray), a profit is made on every console sold. Sony loses a lot of money for every PS3, and Microsoft has only started to profit from their games division. It just goes to show that it’s the games and how people can play them that matters, not how many gigaflops the CPU can handle per second, that’s important.

That’s it for this week. Hopefully, I will finish that guide I’m currently writing that has me all confused this week. Didn’t spot the Obi-Wan Kenobi reference from my intro? Oh well, better luck next time. Until then, may the force be with you.

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 (10 August 2008)

Sunday, August 10th, 2008

The Olympics have started. I hope you’re watching it in HD, as this is the first Olympics to be presented with the superior resolution of High Definition. Events such as the Olympics are catalysts for huge surge in sales of TVs, and this one seems to have come just at the right time (when HD uptake is reaching a critical point).

CopyrightLet’s not waste any time and get right into the copyright news. There is pressure in Australia on ISPs to become copyright cops and to spy on user downloads to check for pirated material. Not only is this a serious breach of privacy, and many ISP’s terms of usage, it has much larger implications as well. Plus, it adds additional monetary burden on an industry whose profit margins are dropping all the time due to increased usage (and yes, some of this extra usage is related to piracy, but most are due to legal uses, such as viewing YouTube or free online streaming that most major media outlets offer these days). The good news is that Australian ISPs, unlike those in the UK, are still rejecting this idea that they should become copyright cops. How long can they hold out though, is another question.

Will movie studios end up here?

Will movie studios end up here?

With exaggerated claims of piracy, and absurd statements such as “Piracy could put film industry out of business”, there’s definitely a global push to protect the income streams of big media. Even though profits are going through the roof at the moment, with movies like The Dark Knight breaking all records left and right. Greed, as always, is a very dangerous thing. The whole situation is actually quite depressing, and I’m glad I’m not the only one. William Patry, a copyright expert who has hosted a blog on copyright issues, has shut down his blog citing the current depressing copy control climate as a reason.

High DefinitionOnto HD news now, nothing much this week other than the usual “nobody wants Blu-ray, new study finds” stories, which are just recycled stories from a couple of weeks ago. I don’t buy the stories that say Blu-ray will die as a format, but I also don’t buy the stories that say Blu-ray will take over DVDs in a matter of months. Expect DVDs and Blu-rays to exist side by side well into the 2010’s, and then for both to be further supplemented by Internet based video services of one kind or another. I’m still buying DVDs, just bought 13 movies yesterday. And I will buy Blu-ray for movies that I think deserve to be shown in their full HD glory (The Dark Knight, The Godfather Trilogy, for example). And I think this is the way to go for many people, until Blu-ray prices tumble down to DVD levels, that is.

Panasonic wins one of these for their work on MPEG-4 AVC

Panasonic wins one of these for their work on MPEG-4 AVC

Panasonic is set to win a technical Emmy award for its work on the MPEG-4 AVC (H.264) codec, which as I predicted last year, has really established itself as the codec of choice across a wide range of applications. YouTube, Blu-ray, HDTV, mobile streaming … they all use one of the MPEG-4 AVC profiles. Which is why if you’re buying a new computer, you really do need to make sure it can decode H.264 @ 1080p. A fast CPU should do it, but these days, GPUs do a lot of decoding work too and you no longer need to spend hundreds on a dedicated video card … even integrated GPUs, such as Intel’s new GMA X4500HD chip, can do most of the decoding without having to rely on the CPU. It’s worth noting that VC-1 and H.264 are two different formats entirely and you should make sure your GPU supports acceleration for both (ATi is better in this regard than Nvidia). VC-1 is the other major codec used by Blu-ray, by studios such as Warner Bros, Disney, Paramount and Universal.

GamingAnd in gaming, PC gaming is not dead, but its doctor is recommending a strict diet, exercise regiment and monthly check-ups, just to be sure. GTA IV is coming to the PC after all. There was also this rumour that Sony’s long awaited PS3 exclusive, Little Big Planet, will be coming to the PC as well. Most likely just a photoshopped image of the game box. But what was funny, at least to me, was the reaction of certain PS3 sites, who greeted the news with anger and sadness. I never understand the need for games to be exclusive to a certain platform … does it make the game better? No, of course not. Does it improve the game by making it gain more fans across the platforms. I think it does. Does it hurt fanboy pride that a game they thought was going to win some kind of imaginary war for them? Yes it does.

PS Home is finally coming ... erm ... home

PS Home is finally coming ... erm ... home

Another favourite line from PS3 fans is that the full PS3 power is not being utilized yet. PS3 publisher Naughty Dog says only 30% of the PS3’s power is being used at the moment. That may be true on paper, but as with any multi-core/cell technology, it all depends on the software and more importantly, the type of software that can benefit from a multi-threaded environment. For calculations and statistical analysis, multi-threading can’t be beat, but for interactive content like games, the positives are less so and requires a lot more work to get just a little bit more. Basically what John Carmack of ID said last week about PS3 versus Xbox 360. Speaking of software on the PS3, want to run Windows Vista on it? Someone has tried it, and the results, as expected, were pretty nasty. Another software that will run a bit better is PlayStation Home, currently in closed beta, but you might be able to sign up and preview it for yourself.

Over in Xbox 360 land, there was a software update but it didn’t seem to add anything. Just another step towards to the new dashboard update, probably. The new 60 GB Xbox 360 seems to be the same as the old 40 GB version, but there has been some changes under the hood which should improve heat dissipation. It’s August now, so the rumoured Jasper 65nm GPU update should have arrived or be arriving soon, but who knows. I think I’ll wait for that one before exchanging my original HDMI-less 360.

It’s been somewhat quiet in Wii news, which probably means something big is on the horizon. Capcom talks about the new Wii MotionPlus controller add-on and how it plans to use it, but that’s about it.

And that does it for this week I think. I’ll be back next week with more news. If there’s more news. There should be more news, unless the world has ended by next Sunday afternoon (Australian time). I plan on watching all 6 Star Wars movies this week. I don’t know why I’m telling you this, or how it relates to the next WNR. I do get paid by the number of words I write, so that’s probably why. Except it’s not true, as I don’t get paid to write anything. So why am I still writing. I don’t know. Maybe it’s because …

Weekly News Roundup (3 August 2008)

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008

It’s that time of the week again when I go through all the news items of relevance in the week, or at least all the relevant news items that caught my eye, or perhaps more precisely, the interesting news items that I managed to find, but even more accurate, the interesting news items that I managed not to miss or ignore as I was preoccupied with other things like sleeping and watching TV. WNR: It’s the only thing you need to read every week! (especially if you don’t mind missing a few importance pieces of news here and there)

CopyrightLet’s start with the copyright news that I didn’t manage to miss. The MPAA is trying to play the nice guy by offering links to legal movie downloads. The ones that they insist on infesting with DRM? At the very same time, the “bad cop” division of the MPAA is cracking down harder on movie streaming sites, with two smaller sites being targeted. Two much bigger sites are also targetted by Italian publisher Mediaset, Google and YouTube. These companies should really get together and discuss an unified strategy on who to sue: big sites, small sites or individuals. Porn companies, ever the pragmatist, have decided against going after individuals and will target P2P sites instead.

Are anti-piracy measures responsible for the movie's success?

Are anti-piracy measures responsible for the movie's success?

But the question remains whether these lawsuits and other measures are working. Are people downloading less illegal content these days? The Dark Knight had it’s own 6 month intensive anti-piracy strategy. The result? 38 hours before the first illegal copy was found on the net. Is that a success? Warner Brothers thinks so. I think the success of the movie had more to do with the quality of the movie, than whether there were downloads or not in the first 38 hours. Do you see TDK dropping heavily down the charts now that downloads are available and in great demand? Nope, neither do I. A lot of these downloads are from college students with fast/free Internet access at dorms and such. Which is why the powers that be have singled them out and the new US college funding bills has anti-P2P provisions tacked onto it. Just how much money did it cost the RIAA/MPAA to get something like this done, I wonder.

This little thing is all you need to play pirated DS games

This little thing is responsible for a lot of piracy

Gaming piracy is another major problem as perceived by the industry. I do agree that Nintendo DS piracy is far too common for Nintendo not to be concerned, although it has helped them take the market leadership position which is worth a hell of a lot more than revenue lost through piracy. But Nintendo will act and they will try to prevent devices like the R4DS memory cards from being manufactured to stop piracy. You can’t blame them, of course, but you must question the timing a bit: why has it taken them to long to act (after 4 generations of these memory cards have already been released). Perhaps even they realise that it helps more than it hinders, but now that they’re on top, they don’t need or want piracy anymore.

High DefinitionOnto HD news that I didn’t sleep through this week, China is ready to unveil it’s own version of HD, based on existing HD DVD technology but without the royalties, and it will battle Blu-ray for the Chinese market. China is large enough to basically ignore global markets if it wanted to, and so Blu-ray could still be *the* HD format elsewhere, and have absolutely no presence in China if the Chinese insists on it. There’s been some news about Blu-ray struggling, due to a poll or some other. It’s funny, because last week I was reading that Blu-ray was a hit and I’m sure I’ll be reading about it next week too. I trust the sales stats only, and Blu-ray sales have been steadily quite low compared to DVDs. Since I started tracking and posting the weekly sales stats on June 1st, the percentage has hovered around the 6 to 7% range. Not quite the 50% that Sony claim they will have by the end of the year. But remember, the most optimistic predictions say that Blu-ray will only finally get to 51%, and overtake DVD sales, in 2012. And with no competitor in the high density optical disc arena, Blu-ray has all the time it needs.

LG's Blu-ray and Netflix Player

LG's Blu-ray and Netflix Player

And if you are a Netflix subscriber, than you’ll now have to pay a little bit extra for Blu-ray rentals. A couple of dollars per month is nothing really (that’s what, like 5 minutes worth of driving around with today’s petrol prices?). But it obviously hinders, rather than helps Blu-ray at this point. LG is coming out with a Blu-ray player that has Netflix streaming capabilities, and with the Xbox 360 also supporting Netflix streaming, that’s quite a bit of support for Netflix’s new service. I’ve been selling some Blu-ray movies on eBay under the username “dvdguy14”, and I think the interest in Blu-ray is still strong, but only if the price is right (which, after making a loss from the dozen movies I’ve sold so far, is a lesson I’ve learnt the hard way).

GamingAnd finally in gaming, Xbox Live may become free, as more and more games have multi-player modes that don’t required the paid Xbox Live Gold membership. Microsoft’s response to Sony’s PlayStation Home? Perhaps. The new Xbox 360 dashboard is another item that will help to find PS Home, and you can already gain access to the leaked version of the updated dashboard. Another strategy Microsoft has against the rising popularity of the PS3 is to cut prices, this time to the Arcade model as well, which will place it actually below the price of a Wii. You do have to wonder about Microsoft’s strategy, because price cuts can’t go on forever.

ID’s John Carmack recently said a few things which seem to suggest he now prefers the PS3, including some comments about Blu-ray helping to reduce compression related quality problems for an upcoming game (Rage). John D. Carmack (I believe the D stands for Doom – the game he’s best known for), has now clarified his comments which basically boils down the same things many people have been saying forever, that the Xbox 360 is easier to develop for, the PS3 has more power but you need to work hard for it (as most of the advantages the PS3 has over the 360 are “in theory”, and not practically tested yet). I’m still not convinced by Blu-ray’s usefulness in this generation of gaming, because games that require 50 GB of storage will be a pain in the neck in terms of loading – both the 360 and PS3 are very much limited in terms of memory, much more so than your average PC from even a year ago, so how can they handle 50 GB of textures without causing serious playback problems? For A/V storage, including in-game movies/audio, then yes, Blu-ray is useful. Much like how in the early days of CD-ROM, most of the games were rather crappy FMV games (Rebel Assault aside, most of them were 3/10 stuff).

EA has had to apologise to everybody recently

EA has had to apologise to everybody recently

There’s been some EA news recently too. They first had to apologise for dropping the ball on the Red Alert 3 PS3 port, and had to do the rather outrageous act of cancelling it altogether. Then they had to apologise again for concentrating too much on the PS3 and 360 (heh @ the PS3 comment), and not investing enough on the Wii. They are now trying to win back PS3 fans by providing some exclusive content for PS3 owners on some of their upcoming games. If so, then an apology to 360 fans seems to be on the cards from the gaming giant. During all this commotion, the PS3 had a new firmware update to fix some audio problems.

As for the Wii, Nintendo says the Wii’s successor is already in the works for when Wii sales start to decline. Hopefully when that happens, the Wii will get a price drop too and it will no longer force people to fake their own kidnapping in order to get theirparents to pay for a Wii.

Oh looky, we’re at the end of another WNR. It’s been fun folks, it really has, and I look forward to providing you with more news that I bothered to read throughout the week at the same time. And to follow up on last week’s end notes, I did go and see The Dark Knight. Boy was that a long movie. It was a pretty good movie, and given that I had high expectations, I still wasn’t disappointed. Not a 9.2 out of 10 as IMDb users puts it, but a solid 8.5 no doubt. Best Batman movie and best comic book adaptation, that’s for sure. Go and see it at the cinema or grab it on Blu-ray/DVD, it’s worth the money.

Weekly News Roundup (27 July 2008)

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

Welcome to another WNR. My memory of the week was that it was pretty quiet, not many news stories at all, but when I went to check (the latest news forum), I actually found quite a few news items for the week. It’s funny how your memory can play tricks on you … like the other day when super-glued my mouse to my desk. Oh memory, when will you ever grow up!

CopyrightLet’s start with copyright news as per usual. One of the best ways that anti-piracy groups get people to notice them (and politicians to do what they say, apart from the large plain envelopes full of money that they give them) is to take statistics and then spin it their way. The BSA is just one such group that releases misleading stats to justify their actions, but you can read a detailed explanation of why these stats are misleading. Another way they do things is by holding back new technology and services and then blaming piracy for this, saying piracy adds too much risk to introducing these new services. And then they use this to sneak in new DRMs. The MPAA’s DVR-blocking initiative is one such example, and it is now backed by AT&T and DirecTV. The public pressure against this, I hope, will be enough to prevent it from happening.

MPAA's real definition

What MPAA really stands for?

And if sneaking in DRMs doesn’t work, then another way is to blame someone else for the problem and threaten to take action. That’s what the British Phonographic Industry did by blaming ISPs, and the UK ISPs relented and will now act as copyright cops for the BPI. And hypocrisy is another tool of the anti-piracy lobby, and it was revealed this week that the MPAA hired a hacker to spy on The Pirate Bay. Hacking is very illegal pretty much in every country in the world, and to hire someone to hack and spy on a foreign company is very naughty indeed, certainly much more naughtier than downloading an episode of Dexter that you happen to miss on TV.

And it’s not just the so called pirates that get the rough treatment. Often, the legitimate users are the worst affected, which then forces them to seek “illegal” alternatives. Take Yahoo’s DRM music service, which will be shut down and make all those legally purchased songs unplayable. Yahoo says they will compensate, but even if they give back all the money paid for these songs, people will still need to go out and find them again … how much time and effort will that be worth? The only fair compensation is to turn those music files DRM free, but they won’t do that of course. And if you think you’re rich and powerful, then you won’t become a victim of the copyright cops, think again. Senator McCain, US Republican Presidential nominee, might have just been caught by the copyright cops for copyright infringement in a campaign video lambasting Senator Obama. Of course, he’ll probably get away with it just like when Dubya was caught with an iPod full of pirated Beatles songs. 

High DefinitionIn HD news, not much news in the HD arena this week. But there was this very interesting article on how Sony beat Toshiba in the HD format war, and how close Sony came to oblivion just after Paramount ditched Blu-ray for HD DVD. I’ve always said that Sony won because they had it all to lose, and Toshiba didn’t have that kind of pressure to force them to go all the way.

DisplayPort - To replace HDMI soon?

DisplayPort - To replace HDMI soon?

Meanwhile, I get tired of reading the stories about “300% increase in Blu-ray sales”, because what exactly are they comparing the sales figures to? Last year this time when nobody was making and selling Blu-ray players? I’ve recently sold some Blu-ray movies on eBay as well, and I didn’t sell any last year, so my Blu-ray sales are up one billion percent! Take that, Wal-Mart! For the PC, if you want a HDMI equipped video card, now’s a good time because ATI is offering one for only $19 (after rebate). It still surprises me that HDMI hasn’t become standard on all video cards, although I suppose with DisplayPort on the way, one isn’t strictly necessary (and the added licensing cost of the DRM used can be avoided).

GamingAnd last but not least, in gaming, there is a brief peak at the new Xbox 360 Dashboard. Looks rather nice, I have to say. Microsoft is also encouraging users to build and sell their own games. Then came a series of what appears to be verbal tennis between Sony and Microsoft. I don’t know who started, but I’m sure they’re both grounded now.  Sony president Kaz Hirai first questioned the Xbox 360’s longevity, as compared to the PS3’s ten year plan. Microsoft responded by saying PS3 software sales will trail Xbox 360’s for this entire generation. Then Kaz Hirai said (might have been in the same interview as the above one) that he would rather die than have Xbox 360 exclusives on the PS3, not sure what this means to be honest. Although real people might die playing some PS3 exclusives, as it was revealed that Wipeout HD had to be re-designed because it failed an epilepsy test.

He started out playing Wii Sports you know

He started out playing Wii Sports you know

Meanwhile, laughing on the sidelines, Nintendo face some trouble of their own as they lost an appeal to a ruling that said the Wii controller infringed on patents, and they could be banned from selling controllers until this matter is resolved. Someone will give someone else a bag of money and the problem will go away ($21m, reportedly, which is what Nintendo makes every hour these days). While the matter might cause some of the lawyers involved high blood pressure, Nintendo wants to find out about your blood pressure. Pretty soon, there will be a Wii device that hook up to every part of your body. We’ll be like the Borg, except more stylish and family friendly. “Wii are the Borg. Resistance is fun for the whole family!”, that’s what we’ll say. And Americans are apparently better than Brits at Wii Sport. The fact that some scientists actually spent money on researching this is very funny to me.

Okay, that’s all the news we have for this week. Actually, that’s a lie because I left out a bunch of stuff I found boring or mundane, so it’s basically “that’s all the news that I found interesting/had time to post/wasn’t too drunk to pay atttention to this week”. Until next week, same Bat channel, same Bat time … (P.S surely The Dark Knight CANNOT be a better movie than The Godfather, Schindler’s List, Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Citizen Kane … despite what you read on the IMDb)