Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Due to some comments about incompleteness of the "Studio support" section of my diatribe on BluRay, I spent some research time over on the BluRay official site, solicited feedback from a couple locations, and built a more accurate Studio Org Chart over at http://www.klipschcorner.com/.  It does not include every single tiny little indy arm of every studio (like Fox Searchlight) but is farily complete.  Who owns what rights to what is fairly complicated it seems.

Tuesday, February 06, 2007 12:44:28 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, February 05, 2007

Its cold in Wisconsin, real cold.

The weather service is telling me frostbite can occur in as little as 10 minutes with exposed skin, and to keep my gas tank at least half full.  Its -32 with the windchill today and I walk 10 minutes to my car.  In my office I sit near a window, and although the thermostat says 72deg, I've been wearing my wool top coat and shivering all day.  I've been afraid to visit the bathroom for fear that my ass would freeze to the toilet seat.

 

Monday, February 05, 2007 4:09:40 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Friday, February 02, 2007

{edit: replaced sd with cf in last paragraph}

{edit: added Phillips as a BD hardware MFG and fixed typo of Toshiba model # and price}

I've taken a bit of punishment and head shaking for my decision to support BluRay for high definition optical storage.  The first such "silly Damon" conversation was two "deeper in .Net" events ago at a user group dinner where I got an earful.  My decision was based on careful research and thoughtful analysis.  You could call me an audiophile, videophile, Sony fanboy or whatever else you want, but right now BluRay is outselling HD-DVD by very large margins (3:1 and trending upwards) according to any and all metrics we have available to check.  These metrics are:

  • 20th Century Fox's proprietary market research (taken with a grain of salt since they are a BD supporter)
  • DVDEmpire.com tracks how much of each format they sell
  • Amazon.com makes sales data available through the AWS developer program (see http://www.eproductwars.com/dvd)
  • Neilson VideoScan (3rd party market research firm)

BluRay is selling great compared to HD-DVD and trending upwards.  Will this continue?  My magic 8 ball says yes.  So, for the people who think I am insane, let me summarize again.  I am a home theater person 1st, audio person second, gaming person next, "fanboy" last, and I happen to be somewhat technical.  These roles are the filters through which I studied the competing format data starting in early '05.

  1. Studio support:  I don't know what the BluRay Disc Association (BDA) promised to the studios (the Sony owned ones never had a choice) to get them to commit to being BD only, but it worked.   This may not be an exhaustive list but is just what comes to mind, I also don’t claim to be up on who owns who and which of these are just sub-studios, I’m tracking the # of distinct names I’ve seen on releases and in the news.  More exclusive content means more people picking BD when their favorite movies show up on BD only.
    1. Neutral Studios supporting both formats:
      1. Warner
      2. Paramount
      3. Vivid (porn)
    2. HD-DVD only studios
      1. Universal
      2. Some porn studios
    3. BluRay only Studios
      1. MGM
      2. Disney
      3. Lionsgate
      4. Sony Pictures
      5. Colubmia
      6. Tri-Star
      7. ScreenGems
      8. Fox
  2. Consumer Electronics Manufacturer support.  More choice means, well, more choices.  It also means CE manufacturers competing with each other which as a Capitalist I view as a good way to get better products sooner.
    1. Neutral MFGs:
      1. None, unless you count LG’s dual format player
      2. HD-DVD only
        1. Toshiba is essentially going it alone, with rumours that Onkyo will release a player in late 2007 or 2008
      3. BluRay only
        1. Sony
        2. Panasonic
        3. Apple
        4. HP
        5. Pioneer
        6. Samsung
        7. Phillips
  3. The features of the specs themselves.  This is what initially made the decision for me.  Let me hit the highlights.  The same video codecs are mandatory on both formats, despite HD-DVD fanboys trying to spread rumors that BD only supports MPEG-2. I own several stunning MPEG-4/AVC/VC-1 etc. titles on BD. Both support DTS-HD and DolbyDigital+, with uncompressed sound being optional on BD.  I have not heard of any uncompressed sound on HD-DVD.

Feature

BluRay

HD-DVD

Disc space

25GB single layer/50GB dual layer

15GB single layer/30GB dual layer

Maximum Bitrates for video

40mb/s

28mb/s

Total Video+Audio Rate

54mb/s

36.55mb/s

Interactivity

BD-J

iHD

Ignore any larger numbers you’ve seen announced from either format group.  If you want to get into a prick waving contest BD has announced up to 200GB and HD-DVD up to 51GB.  These specs require more than two layers, are targeted at data archival and certainly won’t work on your home players.

Now, if you do research on the HD audio and video codecs supported you’ll see this is a problem.  The maximum video bitrate supported by things like VC-1 for 1080p/60 ends up being 20GB of storage per hour of HD video.  That’s 40GB for a 2 hour video.  Then add the max bitrate for DolbyDigital Plus sound, which is perfect sound identical to the studio master, that’s 18mb/s which means another 8.1GB per hour of high definition sound with eight discreet channels or 7.1 if you prefer that nomenclature.  Now, if we need maximum bitrates for video and sound, we are looking at 58GB for a two hour movie.  This is before extras(interviews, audio commentery, deleted scenes, whatever), this is before we get The Fellowship of the Ring coming it at 3.5 hours.  How do they fit?  How does King Kong look and sound great on HD-DVD despite being a 3 hour movie and only having 30GB to work with.

The truth is that even if you are trying to use the maximum bitrate for video you probably won’t.  The video codecs are all using compression with a variable bitrate.  Some scenes will be easier to compress than others.  The PS3 has a neat feature that allows you to watch the audio and video bitrate on the fly.  Some scenes will look great at 8mb/s video, and some scenes will jump to much higher numbers and look no better.  Obviously not all scenes are going to compress equally well, and things like amount of film grain in the picture will greatly affect the rate of compression. 

My BD copy of The Descent averages something like 36mb/s for video and is obviously stored on a dual layer 50GB disc.  Add the DTS-HD audio and the various “extras” and disc is close to being full.  The Descent contains a lot of dark-lit scenes which is difficult to encode.  I watch movies in my home theater on a 106” projection screen so any flaws are going to show themselves quickly and more apparently than on a smaller display.  I cared about the studios having the maximum amount of space to give me the highest quality audio and sound and not script to fit it on disc, and not have to store long movies with lots of special features on two discs.  Besides the space, the higher max-video and max-total bitrates mandated by the spec obviously allows the extra space to be used “for real”.  The extra space matters for higher quality audio, video, less disc switching and more HD extra features.  To me The Descent in my home theater is the first example of video and audio that would not be possible without the storage space and higher bit rate of BluRay.

Interactive features: from what I’ve seen, HD-DVD currently has better interactive features, and from what I read from format neutral studios like Warner, iHD is far easier to program for (or at least as better tool support, which I count as the same thing) than BD-J.  HD-DVD also has a PIP thing that’s harder to do on BD; Plus one Point for HD-DVD. However, I can count on my fingers the # of times I have watched any kind of commentary or anything so this does not matter for me personally and I suspect  no t for  most other home theater people either.  The only feature I care about is the “pop up menu” that allows me to pick a new scene or change audio options or turn on/off commentaries while the movie is playing without going back to the main menu.  Both formats have this.  Bring on the good movies with high quality audio and video.

4.    Marketing strategy, position, etc.

1.    But HD-DVD is cheaper!  A little, yes, however this often matters little when selling to the early adopter crowd.  Keep in mind also that when the first few players were out the Toshiba HD-A1 was $499 and compared to the $999 Panasonic BD-P1000 that did look like a major price difference.  They forgot to mention that the HD-A1 did not support 1080p/24 or 1080p/60 output, but 1080i only.  To get 1080p you needed to buy the HD-XA2, at $999, which is what the Samsung has been selling for since a few months after launch.

2.    But the BluRay physical media will cost tons more!  Well, with the average cost per disc (using Amazon.com data) fluctuates in the plus or minus $2.50 range vs. HD-DVD, I think we can safely call this theory debunked.

3.    The PS3: Obviously putting BD on the PS3 was a huge risk but it seems to be paying off.  Skepticism ran far and wide as to what the attach rate would be for people watching movies on the PS3.  The market seems to have spoken.  Anecdotally: I would have waited until late Feb to buy a PS3 except that I was eager to watch BD in my home theater.  I own 6 BD movies, 0 BD games now and have watched many more via Netflix.  Virtua Fighter 5, MotorStorm, and Lair will be my first game purchases starting Feb 20th.

4.    Studio support: in addition to the PS3 effect, the fact that huge movies like Spider Man and Casino Royale are coming out on BD only can’t hurt.  Fox owns the distribution rights to some huge franchises like Aliens and Star Wars, Disney is releasing some huge films like Pirates of the Caribbean and Cars in the coming months.  The only films that are arguable bigger like The Matrix and Lord of the Rings franchises are pledged for simultaneous release on both formats by Warner.

5.    Finally, is BluRay important to gaming?  The first major PS3 title, “Resistance: Fall of Man” took up 17GB on disc.  If you install the new Splinter Cell on the PC it takes 14GB.  Hint: that won’t fit on DVD.  I think Gears of War shows us the space is not necessarily needed to look better but developers are finding cool uses for the space.  The developer of “The Darkness”, an upcoming shooter says: “Yeah, well Blu-ray offers us around 25GB to play with, so we're looking to license old TV shows, adverts, and cartoons to build entire TV channels in the game. You can actually turn on the TVs in the game and watch a film, watch a TV series, anything you want really. It's a little bit gimmicky, but at the same time, it's a really cool feature. Also, we tell mission-specific information through the TVs where it's needed.”

Are both optical formats doomed by content downloads?  Maybe in the long run, but right now most home people do not have the bandwidth or the patience to download an equivalent quality movie.  A friend of mine even suggested that optical formats are doomed because CF is becoming fast and cheap and ubiquitous and we’ll be purchasing movies on CF cards in five years.  Many HD-DVD fanboys are so dedicated that cruising some forums I see lots of “If BD wins I’ll stay on regular DVD forever I’m never buying Poo-Ray Sony sucks blah blah”.  For my part, I did my best research and guesswork to pick the winner, but I am a home theater nut and HD-DVD looks so much better than standard DVD of course I’ll jump on HD-DVD if it wins.

But it doesn’t look like it’s going to.

   

Friday, February 02, 2007 1:16:59 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback

Hard to believe it, but my little girl turned four today. Happy Birthday Brooke.

I am currently hard at work teaching her much needed skills like how to type and play video games.

Friday, February 02, 2007 11:27:45 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, January 30, 2007

http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/83995708/article.pl

Interesting that software is "at a dead end" is the analysis based on this news.  Why not rather announce that most software/programming tasks are fundamentally sequential and not paralel in nature, and conclude that there is a tremendous disconnect between what's going on in the hardware and software communities?

Tuesday, January 30, 2007 11:14:05 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
 Monday, January 29, 2007

A little .NET news today.

It appears that something fundamental like Application.StartupPath is broken in .Net 1.1 in some situations.  If your application was not started via a shortcut, but some other system service like registering a device plug-in event with the WIA Automation tools then .NET will report the StartupPath as \windows\system32 instead of the actual location of your .exe. 

Monday, January 29, 2007 12:04:23 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, January 21, 2007

I've seen a few BD movies now: Black Hawk Down, The Descent, Ice Age 2, Total Recall, Underworld: Evolution.  The difference in quality is amazing.  Its easy to get used to how it looks until I switch to a standard DVD of the same content.  On large screens pretty much every flaw is visible and doing A/B between BD and DVD leaves no question that HD optical discs are "worth it" in terms of cost/benefit.  The HD optical discs on the PS3 and 360 are genious in that respect since many people have/would have the systems anyway.

Waiting for Virtua Fighter 5 and Lair now...

Sunday, January 21, 2007 11:21:45 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, January 08, 2007

Opening my mail yesterday (I was way behind) a surprise property tax refund nagged me to buy a Playstation 3.  I'm surprised how much head-shaking and criticism this has been met with from my gamer friends.  The price and the weak launch lineup are the most commonly cited reasons.  The PS2 had a far worse launch with a worse shortage and weaker launch lineup and 75million consoles later I don't hear anyone complaining.  As for the price, well, I wanted a BluRay player for my home theater so even if I never play any games I'll get my $600 worth.  I was playing Blast Factor last night and I'm downloading Gran Tourismo HD tonight.  I've never been a fan of FPS games on a console (too stuck in the PC mode of play control) so I'll be passing on what are the big PS3 games right now: Reistance: Fall of Man and Call of Honor or Medal of Duty 3 or whatever it's called.  Indeed I think I'll be finishing FFXII on the PS3 and doing the downloadable games for a while until Lair comes out, and of course Final Fantasy XIII this fall.

I'm having a lot of fun, lighten up Sony haters.

(Of course when the Xbox 360 comes out with an HDMI connection I might have to score one of those to play that BioShock thinger that's coming out)

Monday, January 08, 2007 10:49:26 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
Jen started her new job today, much to her chagrin as she got used to her month off of not working or going to school.  She's on days this week (except for Tuesday) and then begins her regular nights schedule next week.  This is knocking a dent in family dinners and quality time but I suppose the consolation prize is I get get to work watch the Friday the 13th boxed set I got for xmas.

Congratulations Jen, and hurry up and start bringing home aditional bacon! ;)

Monday, January 08, 2007 10:31:48 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback

http://feeds.cinematical.com/~r/weblogsinc/cinematical/~3/72107754/

I like horror movies and H.P. Lovecraft, very cool.

Monday, January 08, 2007 10:06:11 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Thursday, December 28, 2006

You can see some pictures of my movie room here:

http://forums.klipsch.com/forums/thread/844512.aspx

I will get some pictures onto Flickr when I get a minute.

Thursday, December 28, 2006 11:00:58 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback