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Posts with tag: hd-dvd | Return to ShoppingBlog.com Homepage

Toshiba Launches Its First Blu-ray Player

Toshiba BDX2000


Toshiba was one of the proponents of the failed HD DVD format. Toshiba is now releasing its first Blu-ray player called the BDX2000. The BDX2000 offers 1080p/24 frames-per-second full HD Video output, a SD Card slot and AVCHD playback. The player also offers support for Dolby True HD and DTS-HD Master Audio. The retail price is $249 and the BDX2000 will arrive in stores in November.

Gadgetwise says the $249 price tag is comparable to other blu-ray players. Wired calls the player as "ordinary as could be."

The launch of a Blu-ray player from Toshiba was not unexpected. Toshiba announced last month that they had applied for membership in the Blu-ray Disc Association.

Posted on September 6, 2009
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Blu-Ray Wins DVD-HD Wars

It's official: you can go out and buy that Sony Blu-ray Hi Def DVD player you've had your eye on. Today, Toshiba threw in the towel and said they will stop making the HD DVD player in May, 2008. Here's the press release that must have been galling to write:
TOKYO--Toshiba Corporation today announced that it has undertaken a thorough review of its overall strategy for HD DVD and has decided it will no longer develop, manufacture and market HD DVD players and recorders. This decision has been made following recent major changes in the market. Toshiba will continue, however, to provide full product support and after-sales service for all owners of Toshiba HD DVD products.

HD DVD was developed to offer consumers access at an affordable price to high-quality, high definition content and prepare them for the digital convergence of tomorrow where the fusion of consumer electronics and IT will continue to progress.

"We carefully assessed the long-term impact of continuing the so-called 'next-generation format war' and concluded that a swift decision will best help the market develop," said Atsutoshi Nishida, President and CEO of Toshiba Corporation. "While we are disappointed for the company and more importantly, for the consumer, the real mass market opportunity for high definition content remains untapped and Toshiba is both able and determined to use our talent, technology and intellectual property to make digital convergence a reality."

Toshiba will continue to lead innovation, in a wide range of technologies that will drive mass market access to high definition content. These include high capacity NAND flash memory, small form factor hard disk drives, next generation CPUs, visual processing, and wireless and encryption technologies. The company expects to make forthcoming announcements around strategic progress in these convergence technologies.

Toshiba will begin to reduce shipments of HD DVD players and recorders to retail channels, aiming for cessation of these businesses by the end of March 2008. Toshiba also plans to end volume production of HD DVD disk drives for such applications as PCs and games in the same timeframe, yet will continue to make efforts to meet customer requirements. The company will continue to assess the position of notebook PCs with integrated HD DVD drives within the overall PC business relative to future market demand.

This decision will not impact on Toshiba's commitment to standard DVD, and the company will continue to market conventional DVD players and recorders. Toshiba intends to continue to contribute to the development of the DVD industry, as a member of the DVD Forum, an international organization with some 200 member companies, committed to the discussion and defining of optimum optical disc formats for the consumer and the related industries.

Toshiba also intends to maintain collaborative relations with the companies who joined with Toshiba in working to build up the HD DVD market, including Universal Studios, Paramount Pictures, and DreamWorks Animation and major Japanese and European content providers on the entertainment side, as well as leaders in the IT industry, including Microsoft, Intel, and HP. Toshiba will study possible collaboration with these companies for future business opportunities, utilizing the many assets generated through the development of HD DVD.
We're just glad that it's over early and we hope none of you bought HD DVDs for Christmas. Of course in a couple of years, the Blu-ray will be obsolete because everything will be in digital, downloadable format that you'll just download directly to your tv or your hi-capacity flash drive, bypassing the DVD player entirely. But that's a subject for another day.

Posted on February 19, 2008
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Blu-ray Surges Ahead in Hi Def DVD Wars

In what could be a turning point in the hi-def dvd player wars, Blu Ray has scored a major victory over rival HDTV: Warner Bros just announced that from here on out, its movies will only be put out on Blu Ray Hi Def disc, not on HD DVD.
In some ways, the fight is a replay of the VHS versus Betamax battle of the 1980s. This time, however, the Sony product appears to have prevailed. Revenge is sweet for Sony, which lost the Betamax vs. VHS wars. "The overwhelming industry opinion is that this decides the format battle in favor of Blu-ray," said Richard Doherty, research director at the Envisioneering Group, a market research firm in Seaford, N.Y.

Behind the studio's decision are industrywide fears about the sagging home entertainment market, which has bruised the movie industry in recent years as piracy, competition from video games and the Internet, and soaring costs have cut into profitability. Analysts predict that domestic DVD sales fell by nearly 3 percent in 2007, partly because of confusion in the marketplace over the various formats.

HD DVD, however, is not dead. Two major studios, Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures, have deals in place to continue releasing their movies exclusively on HD DVD, as does DreamWorks Animation. Warner Brothers, part of Time Warner, will also continue to release its titles on both formats until the end of May. But by supporting Blu-ray, Warner Brothers, the largest player in the $42 billion global home entertainment market, makes it next to impossible for HD DVD to recover the early momentum it achieved.

While the specifics of the Blu-ray and HD DVD skirmish might be of interest only to insiders, the consequences of deciding a winner are not. Consumers have been largely sitting on the sidelines, waiting to buy high-definition players until they see which will have the most titles available. Retailers have been complaining about having to devote space to three kinds of DVDs. And the movie business has delayed tapping a lucrative new market worth billions. High-definition discs sell for a 25 percent premium.
So does this mean you should buy a Blu-ray DVD player instead of an HD DVD? All signs point to yes, but it's not over yet. By the end of 2007, we think one format or the other will reign supreme. But right now, Blu-ray has the edge.

Posted on January 7, 2008
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