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January 4, 2008 2:34 PM PST

Warner goes Blu-ray exclusively, delivering crushing blow to HD DVD

Warner to HD DVD: That's all, folks.

(Credit: www.referenceforbusiness.com)

The big buzz today around CNET offices in New York is the news that Warner Bros. Entertainment has decided to stop making HD DVD discs and will become a Blu-ray-only studio at the end of May. Needless to say, this is a major blow to the HD DVD camp, which earlier this year struck a deal with Paramount to go HD DVD exclusive. You could say this is a tit-for-tat move by Sony and the Blu-ray camp, but it's actually more of a clubbing because Warner has a much bigger library of movies than Paramount.

While rumors of Warner potentially dumping HD DVD have been circulating for the past few months, the timing of the announcement right before the start of the Consumer Electronics Show seems designed to inflict maximum damage to Toshiba's planned HD DVD push at the show. With lower prices on its standalone players and the Paramount deal, Toshiba and HD DVD backers such as Microsoft appeared to be gaining some momentum in the format war. But now the company is faced with a PR nightmare. (An HD DVD event is scheduled for Sunday in Las Vegas; it should be interesting). No one knows at this point what it took for Warner to say sayonara to HD DVD, but you can bet it involved a truckload of something.

Does this spell the end for HD DVD? If I had to give a yes or no answer, I'd have to say yeah, it's probably curtains. The fact is, with the lack of studio support, it's very hard to recommend to readers to buy an HD DVD player, even if it is half the price of a Blu-ray machine. All that said, things have looked bleak for Toshiba and HD DVD before and they've managed to scrap their way back into contention, so you never know. Feel free to weigh in after you read the full press release from Warner, which I've posted below via The Digital Bits:

WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT TO RELEASE ITS HIGH-DEFINITION DVD TITLES EXCLUSIVELY IN THE BLU-RAY DISC FORMAT BEGINNING LATER THIS YEAR

Decision made in response to strong consumer preference for format

(January 4, 2008 - Burbank, CA) - In response to consumer demand, Warner Bros. Entertainment will release its high-definition DVD titles exclusively in the Blu-ray disc format beginning later this year, it was announced today by Barry Meyer, Chairman & CEO, Warner Bros. and Kevin Tsujihara, President, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group.

"Warner Bros.' move to exclusively release in the Blu-ray disc format is a strategic decision focused on the long term and the most direct way to give consumers what they want," said Meyer. "The window of opportunity for high-definition DVD could be missed if format confusion continues to linger. We believe that exclusively distributing in Blu-ray will further the potential for mass market success and ultimately benefit retailers, producers, and most importantly, consumers."

Warner Home Video will continue to release its titles in standard DVD format and Blu-ray. After a short window following their standard DVD and Blu-ray releases, all new titles will continue to be released in HD DVD until the end of May 2008.

"Warner Bros. has produced in both high-definition formats in an effort to provide consumer choice, foster mainstream adoption and drive down hardware prices," said Jeff Bewkes, President and Chief Executive Officer, Time Warner Inc., the parent company of Warner Bros. Entertainment. "Today's decision by Warner Bros. to distribute in a single format comes at the right time and is the best decision both for consumers and Time Warner."

"A two-format landscape has led to consumer confusion and indifference toward high definition, which has kept the technology from reaching mass adoption and becoming the important revenue stream that it can be for the industry," said Tsujihara. "Consumers have clearly chosen Blu-ray, and we believe that recognizing this preference is the right step in making this great home entertainment experience accessible to the widest possible audience. Warner Bros. has worked very closely with the Toshiba Corporation in promoting high definition media and we have enormous respect for their efforts. We look forward to working with them on other projects in the future."

What do you think? Is there any hope for HD DVD? Should Toshiba and Microsoft continue fighting or make a deal?

Originally posted at Crave
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 14 comments
It?s about size.
by the Otter January 4, 2008 6:11 PM PST
Blu-Ray = 50GB.

HD DVD = 30GB.

You do the math.
Reply to this comment
HD DVD should bow out
by megazone January 4, 2008 6:41 PM PST
The right thing for the HD DVD camp to do now is to bow out. Toshiba should join the BDA and start building BD players.

Maybe they can get the BDA to add HDi to the BD spec alongside BD-J - that would probably satisfy MS. The MS can release a BD drive for the Xbox 360 too.
Reply to this comment
As porky pig says...Th..th..th..thatt'ssss All Folks!!!!
by soggy0 January 4, 2008 7:06 PM PST
HD DVD has left the building...
Reply to this comment
Actually...
by ewelch January 4, 2008 7:14 PM PST
Warner most likely didn't time it to be a crushing blow at CES.
They had announced they were going to make a decision before
the holiday season saying that what happened between then and
now would help them determine which way to go.

So maybe the timing is fortuitous, and that was figured into the
overall strategy, but in the end, it's more likely they decided
which way to go because Blu-ray outsold HD-DVD 3:1 over the
holiday season.
Reply to this comment
Blu-ray Battle
by Imperfect Nerd January 4, 2008 7:25 PM PST
Hello, Big Brother, and welcome to our Brave New World. Sony runs Columbia already, and has Warners now, so next step will probably be cold wires in our heads, tuned into "approved" entertainment. As for me, my VCR died and I can't see paying anything extra to put HD on my old TV. Give me a good book and goodbye.
Reply to this comment
No, It's About Money
by seo2seo January 5, 2008 4:19 AM PST
"A two-format landscape has led to consumer confusion and indifference toward high definition, which has kept the technology from reaching mass adoption and becoming the important revenue stream that it can be for the industry"

That's the key sentence, and no truer word has been spoken. Most of us (except the gaming community!), have kept our money firmly in our pockets waiting for the industry to grow up. Maybe they have.

"Decision made in response to strong consumer preference for format"

If that's true, then they've done the right thing. But is it true? Or are hoping to Make It So*?

*as Jean-Luc Picard would have said.
Reply to this comment
SAYONARA HD-DVD!
by NRecob January 5, 2008 5:49 AM PST
DON'T GO AWAY MAD, JUST GO AWAY ;)

LONG LIVE BLURAY!
Reply to this comment
Format Wars Stink
by dcs42441 January 5, 2008 11:25 AM PST
Many years ago (early '70's), quadraplex stereo was introduced with four separate channels vs. two. I bought a quad stereo receiver but there were two formats and finally people just lost interest so very little music was ever available. STUPID format wars!
Reply to this comment
Blu-Ray wins. Consumers lost.
by thriftyT January 5, 2008 1:13 PM PST
If you thought your $199 HD player was a deal, think again. It's
worth about $10 now.
Reply to this comment
Consumers are clueless...
by scottwilkins January 5, 2008 9:05 PM PST
Blu-Ray is in no way better than HD DVD. It's the opposite in fact. But Sony lies in it's advertising of Blu-Ray and consumers believe it. HD DVD uses the newer better MPEG4 format for it's movies where Blu-Ray is currently using the older worse MPEG2. HD DVD has required 2 video decoders in each player, and require internet connectivity ability. Blu-Ray does not. Even the "size" issue is a lie, as Blu-Ray can only hold about 9 hours of HD movies, where HD DVD can hold 8.5, so where's the 50%? It's not there, like many things Sony does these days, it's only done to control the consumer, not help them. Sony is paying out the nose (and in the end the conusmer will pay dearly...) to make sure Blu-Ray wins. It's a sad day for the consumer.
Reply to this comment View reply
Um
by sal-magnone January 6, 2008 1:29 PM PST
Sorry, but why are we still distributing stuff on little shiny discs?
Reply to this comment
The Real Competition is DVD
by kelmon January 6, 2008 11:00 PM PST
I think the subject of this comment says it all - the competition
isn't so much HD-DVD but rather the "legacy" DVD format. DVD
discs were a compelling upgrade over VHS tapes but I can't find
a good enough reason to invest in the high definition formats
because DVD is most definitely "good enough" and I have little
or no interest in the increased capacity of these disks since I
stopped watching the extras on DVDs a long time ago. I can
buy pretty much any DVD movie these days for peanuts so why
should I want to invest in Blu-Ray?
Reply to this comment
Stupidity of a Corporation
by ChimiCelena February 23, 2008 5:15 AM PST
I am going to laugh as Warner brothers loses more money. I am not going to buy a Blu-ray player I have over 200 DVD's. I am not going to be changing them over to Blu-Ray. So where does that leave me and every other person like me? Giving Warner Bro's the One Finger Salute! And I think you know which finger I am referring to. They tried Blu-ray No One around here has bought them. They literally sit around catching dust. You can actually see the dust on them. Yet they say we have shown a preference for them? Ha Ha Ha Shows how little they know about their own customer base. They will lose more money and blame it on Downloading when really many thousands of consumers are boycotting all music/movie industry for suing single mothers, grandparents and college students for downloads. It will be funny to watch.
Reply to this comment
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