first UMD.. next.. Blu-Ray
#1
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BanHammer™
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first UMD.. next.. Blu-Ray
haha.. BetaMAX version 2.. Version 3 will be here soon
way to go Sony.. stop making your own prepriatory formats
Originally Posted by Shacknews.com
When Sony's PSP launched last year, Sony tried to push it as not just a gaming device but a true portable multimedia hub. To that end, they've supported a line of movies released on the handheld's proprietary UMD storage format. UMD sales were flat from the beginning in Sony's home country of Japan, but the format actually sold very well in the United States for much of the console's early life. At this year's CES, which saw Sony heavily push the multimedia aspects of its devices, the company even boasted that there were four times the number of UMD films released as PSP games. That situation now seems to have changed drastically. A month and a half ago, reports emerged that various movie studios were cutting back on UMD releases due to slow sales. Now, a report by the Hollywood Reporter suggests that sales are not only slow, they're practically dead.
This morning, various sources indicated that retail giant Wal-Mart is dropping UMD altogether. Wal-Mart representatives speaking to the Hollywood Reporter would not confirm those rumors, but followups to individual store locations revealed greatly reduced inventory. Perhaps more damning, however, are the comments coming from studio heads. "It's awful. Sales are near zilch," said a Universal executive. "It's another Sony bomb -- like Blu-ray." A fundamental part of Sony's next generation strategy is to use PlayStation 3, PSP, storage format Blu-Ray, the HDTV market (in which Sony has a significant stake), and Sony's vast amount of music and movie content all as mutually supporting elements to drive sales of one another.
A Paramount spokeswoman was diplomatic about the situation, stating that the studio would continue to evaluate which films fit the UMD format. A Paramount executive was a bit more candid. "Releasing titles on UMD is the exception rather than the rule," he said. "No one's even breaking even on them." Another unnamed major studio president said, "No one's watching movies on PSP. It's a game player, period." One of the most frequent criticms of the PSP by gamers is that, aside from a few standout titles, the system has been slow in generating original high-quality games. Of course, the reality is that quite a few people are in fact watching movies on PSP. However, most of them are not buying the UMDs, which frequently run as much or more than full scale DVDs, but generally do not contain extra features such as commentary tracks or additional footage. Rather, many users compress movies ripped from DVDs (or obtained by other means) and copy them onto PSP-supported Memory Sticks.
Sony has a mixed history when it comes to introducing new storage formats. Its upcoming Blu-ray seems significantly better positioned than UMD, a format that was rather ill-conceived and improperly supported from the start; this may not be seen as a good sign by its Blu-ray studio partners. The company is currently trying to save the format by developing a peripheral allowing users to watch UMDs on a full-sized television set via PSP, but it remains to be seen whether that will be enough.
This morning, various sources indicated that retail giant Wal-Mart is dropping UMD altogether. Wal-Mart representatives speaking to the Hollywood Reporter would not confirm those rumors, but followups to individual store locations revealed greatly reduced inventory. Perhaps more damning, however, are the comments coming from studio heads. "It's awful. Sales are near zilch," said a Universal executive. "It's another Sony bomb -- like Blu-ray." A fundamental part of Sony's next generation strategy is to use PlayStation 3, PSP, storage format Blu-Ray, the HDTV market (in which Sony has a significant stake), and Sony's vast amount of music and movie content all as mutually supporting elements to drive sales of one another.
A Paramount spokeswoman was diplomatic about the situation, stating that the studio would continue to evaluate which films fit the UMD format. A Paramount executive was a bit more candid. "Releasing titles on UMD is the exception rather than the rule," he said. "No one's even breaking even on them." Another unnamed major studio president said, "No one's watching movies on PSP. It's a game player, period." One of the most frequent criticms of the PSP by gamers is that, aside from a few standout titles, the system has been slow in generating original high-quality games. Of course, the reality is that quite a few people are in fact watching movies on PSP. However, most of them are not buying the UMDs, which frequently run as much or more than full scale DVDs, but generally do not contain extra features such as commentary tracks or additional footage. Rather, many users compress movies ripped from DVDs (or obtained by other means) and copy them onto PSP-supported Memory Sticks.
Sony has a mixed history when it comes to introducing new storage formats. Its upcoming Blu-ray seems significantly better positioned than UMD, a format that was rather ill-conceived and improperly supported from the start; this may not be seen as a good sign by its Blu-ray studio partners. The company is currently trying to save the format by developing a peripheral allowing users to watch UMDs on a full-sized television set via PSP, but it remains to be seen whether that will be enough.
#3
sony tried to push the MiniDisc too...
another failure do to consumers not wanting/slow to change.
too bad, cus MiniDisc was actually a better format than CD IMO.
oh well.
sony has great ideas but poor execution.
another failure do to consumers not wanting/slow to change.
too bad, cus MiniDisc was actually a better format than CD IMO.
oh well.
sony has great ideas but poor execution.
#10
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Sony is the fail at proprietary formats, I can't believe the memorystick is still alive.
I have to fess up though, I actually bought a 1GB MS in order to allow me to play ISO PSP games.
I have to fess up though, I actually bought a 1GB MS in order to allow me to play ISO PSP games.
#12
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UMD's are teh_suckz0r5, so are MS (yes i had a sony digital camera and had a MS too), blu ray is going to be soooo ghey....i would never buy it to own since allegedly if you put a burnt dvd in there whether its legit or your own home movies put in the dvd player of it, it will see its a burnt dvd and disable itself...so screw that shiat....im only going to be buying a PS3 so i can resell it and get some mod $$$
#13
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XBox 360 FTW!!!
Sony pretty much screwed themselves with pushing their console so far back, 360'x are still hard as hell to find, especially anything other then the basic console. Mean while Microsoft just keeps growing higher and higher on becoming #1 in gaming consoles. I read something about if PS3 really pushes it that far back they are pretty screwed and will lose most of it's fan base, and people will just end up buying 360 instead then not buying ps3 when it comes out, and will devastate sony financially.
Sony pretty much screwed themselves with pushing their console so far back, 360'x are still hard as hell to find, especially anything other then the basic console. Mean while Microsoft just keeps growing higher and higher on becoming #1 in gaming consoles. I read something about if PS3 really pushes it that far back they are pretty screwed and will lose most of it's fan base, and people will just end up buying 360 instead then not buying ps3 when it comes out, and will devastate sony financially.
#14
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Originally Posted by maddhatteroo7
UMD's are teh_suckz0r5, so are MS (yes i had a sony digital camera and had a MS too), blu ray is going to be soooo ghey....i would never buy it to own since allegedly if you put a burnt dvd in there whether its legit or your own home movies put in the dvd player of it, it will see its a burnt dvd and disable itself...so screw that shiat....im only going to be buying a PS3 so i can resell it and get some mod $$$
#15
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From: Wagonmafia Propaganda Lieutenant
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Originally Posted by R4ND0M_AX3
So you are saying that HD-DVD is better than BluRay?
don't fret.. Toshiba will have a cheaper model at $500
yay for the new formats !