The war for high-definition DVD supremacy is over; Blu-ray has won
The move effectively puts an end to a fierce format war-much like the 1980s Betamax-VHS battle – that has raged on for several years between consortiums led by Toshiba and Sony, who were looking to establish their respective formats as the standard for next-generation DVD releases and compatible video equipment.
The format war led to consumer confusion and thus poor sales of the requisite players, which some had predicted to be (and still do) a multibillion-dollar high-definition DVD industry. Hollywood studios had initially split their alliances between the two camps, with only certain titles playing on specific DVD machine.
Industry reports said Toshiba, which led the HD DVD consortium and invested heavily in the format, would lose hundreds of millions of dollars in deciding to give up the fight.
Sony has spent large sums of money to promote Blu-ray and its flat-screen TVs, and its PlayStation 3 game console plays Blu-ray movies (and standard-definition DVDs) exclusively.
Sections: Technology
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