Warner officially announces Total Hi Def hybrid disc

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
Warner officially announces Total Hi Def hybrid disc



Warner Home Video's press conference concerning the Total Hi Def disc that has HD DVD and Blu-ray all on one disc is currently ongoing, and it has stated that the discs are able to contain dual layers of both HD DVD and Blu-ray on one disc. The first Total Hi Def releases will hit in the second half of this year, but no specific titles have yet been announced. At the conference, Warner used a copy of Superman to show off how it worked in an HD DVD player, Blu-ray player, and the recently announced LG Super Multi player that plays either. Finally, Warner claims it will not cost "materially" more than a regular disc. At the conference, already an exec from Best Buy has come out in support of the format, but whether or not other studios would ever pick up on Total Hi Def releases is still unknown, although Warner claims they would not have to pay any licensing fees to Warner for using it



Live Coverage from the Warner press conference



Posted Jan 9th 2007 9:11PM by Ben Drawbaugh

Filed under: CES, Features



5:44pm PST - Wow are they making a big deal out of checking in for this press conference, everyone is waiting to get in. The Bellagio has a very nice convention center.



5:58pm PST - Only 2 mins to 6pm and they haven't let us in yet, there had better be something special in then there.



6:05pm PST - Wow we are in and now we see what all the fuss is about, they really have this placed decked out and quite a spread of food.





6:15pm PST - They just announced that the press conference will start in 2 minutes.



6:20pm PST - An announcement declared that the show is about to begin, the lights dim.

A great quality video starts and they make fun of the limited HD content available. Lots of great hight quality video clips including the matrix.



6:24pm PST - Barry M. Meyer the Chairman of Warner takes the stage. Barry explains that the format war is bad for business and retails don't like to stock two sku's of the same content. Warner thinks they have the solution so they are here to introduce the total HD disc for both consumers and retailers.





6:27pm PST - Kevin Tsujahara and Ron Sanders both Presidents of Warner takes the stage.





First year sales, 775,000 sales. (yeah we missed what they were talking about, here is the slide.)





90% owners surveyed are thrilled with picture quality.

They explain the current hardware situation for both HD DVD and Blu-ray.

HD DVD will bring 2.5 Million devices to the market





Blu-ray 6.2 million devices to the market.





This will total over 9 million including current devices.





SD DVD had 1.3 million 2 years after release.



6:33pm PST - Kevin talks about how many HDTVs there are and the opportunity to sell content regardless of format. They are here to tell us tonight that the wait is over.

Another video starts with blue and red flashing, saying that when you bring together red and blue you bring the best of both worlds on one incredible disc. Everyone claps.

They again claim that Superman is the best selling movie in both Blu-ray and HD DVD.



6:35pm PST - They put a slide with lots of sales stats from both sides.



HD DVD



Blu-ray





Total Hi def logo again.

This will help the retailers so they don't have to stock two copies of the same disc.





The majority of those interviewed said they were 49% more likely to buy a HD format because of a dual format disc.







6:39pm PST - They start the demo by inserting the disc into a HD DVD player.





The movie is playing on a movie theater sized screen and looks awesome, maybe it is a fake demo or a 3 chip DLP.





6:41pm PST - Now they inserted the same disc into the Blu-ray player and are playing the same scene from Superman. It looks just as good on the big screen.





Superman saves the day on both players. Ha



6:44pm PST - Now the same scene in the LG Super Blue player and all three look the same. They stop the scene saying we all know what happens.





They share a few quotes from a Best Buy exec.





As well as from Transworld promoting TotalHD.





A Panel of Execs takes the stages and the floor is open for Q&A



HD DVD



Blu-ray





Everyone on stage





What is the capacity for each side?

They have the full capacity of both HD DVD and Blu-ray and dual layer on both discs.

Cost of production is unknown, but it will not be materially more that a regular HD disc.



No retail price yet, but it is not cost prohibited.

If it motivates customers to buy it will be worth the cost.



Will HBO and Newline be making TotalHD discs?

Yes, no one else has announced support.

They haven't run any titles to market yet, but now they will.

HBO is very excited and think it is important to end the consumer confusion.

We will announce titles later, but right now the second half of 2007.



Licensing costs for other studios?

The fees overall don't change, there is no fee for Warner, only to Blu-ray and HD DVD.



They will move away from regular discs and only produce TotalHD discs.



How will the player know which format to play on a dual format player?

It is a dual sided disc, so you have to put it in the correct way.

They plan to have the same content on both sides.



When will see LOTR in this format, they are working on it now and are determining a release date.



Any replication machine will be able to make this disc.



Does this mean we are authoring twice and isn't the feature support different?

They have to do that now so this doesn't change that process.



Isn't this a temporary solution?

Other formats co-exist, Kevin continues on a long explanation about how long the format war is going to last.





That's it, it's over.





so what do u guys think of this



gunna happen

or

NOOOO WAYY!!



Just got this

""Total HD was something that we offered up to the industry as a solution that would address buyer hesitancy, and the concern a consumer might have about the possible obsolesce of the hardware they were buying. We have no proprietary interest in Total HD. There is no patent we're involved in, and there is no monetary reward for us if another studio decides to put out titles on Total HD. It was offered purely as an industry solution -- and it is still a good and viable solution that has no expiration date"



so i guess its a no

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 2
    galleygalley Posts: 971member
    Total HD died a long time ago.
  • Reply 2 of 2
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Galley View Post


    Total HD died a long time ago.



    And has apparently been resurrected. No doubt Toshiba and Microsoft will jump on board to escape the sinking ship.
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