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January 10, 2007 10:30 AM PST

Warner details combo HD DVD/Blu-ray disc

As reported last week, Warner Brothers announced yesterday at CES its introduction of a new disc format that will contain both HD DVD and Blu-ray versions of the same movie, so it would work with either type of player. Warner calls the new format Total HD.

The studio fleshed out a few more details at the press conference. It announced that major retailers Best Buy and Circuit City, along with online retailer Amazon, will stock the discs when they appear in the second half of this year. It also specified, according to Reuters, that the discs could be either single- or double-sided, and that Total HD discs would not cost more than standard Blu-ray or HD DVD discs in stores.

Warner is making the move after it became apparent that neither Blu-ray nor HD DVD is taking off all that quickly and that neither format seems to be on the verge of gaining the upper hand, even with the release of Sony's PS3, which has a built-in Blu-ray player. In other words, the company expects a long and protracted war, and I assume the overall cost to market a single disc rather than two separate packages of the same movie will be significantly cheaper. It also will help save precious shelf space in stores (eventually).

Warner is announcing dual-format HD DVD/Blu-ray discs at CES

Warner's planning a supermerger.

Currently, only Warner and Paramount are putting out movies in both formats. Universal has sided exclusively with HD DVD, while Sony, MGM, 20th Century Fox, and Disney are all exclusively Blu-Ray.

In other CES format war news, LG announced a player that can handle discs from both formats. All I can say is that the whole thing is stupid, and I don't plan on buying either format any time soon, especially when I can easily click on a pull-down menu in my Netflix account and rent whatever movies are available in HD DVD or Blu-ray.

TalkBack
2 messages

Anyone can burn HD-DVD now on DVD-R

One major factor not often mentioned is that I burn HD-DVD today, on my regular DVD burner, on regular DVD+/-R or DL media. On DVD-R you can burn 23 minutes, on DVD+RDL up to 40 minutes. Of course, need HD-DVD burning software (many available, under $100), but the results are spectacular! To burn Blu-Ray takes a special, and very expensive, burner (for the red laser), and very expensive ($15+/disc) media. So, use existing burners, existing media, the HD-DVD set-top player is cheaper. I'm set up with HD-DVD and enjoying it!! Now in the process of converting my home DVD's (over 40 titles) to HD-DVD as I've been shooting with HD cameras for 2 years now. This is a major advantage of HD-DVD over Blu-Ray, but few reviewers mention this.
by jmcgauhey (See profile) - September 6, 2007 11:59 AM PDT

well at least it helps us the consumer

We as the consumer will suffer in this war until one format or another takes over. its just like the war of VHS and BeataMax. Eventually VHS won out. Or the war over Recordable DVDs. DVD+R and DVD-R are both still on the shelf creating headaches for the average no tech savvy consumer. the only compromise that could be reached on that front was to make DVD burners that could use both + and - formats. right now I am wondering if some new format will come out in the near future ans squash both the Blue Ray and HDDVD formats since I don't see either camp willing to shake hands and come to a truce any time soon.
by mtp2002 (See profile) - January 10, 2007 5:08 PM PST

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