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Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Blu-ray > Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology


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Old 06-10-2008, 09:01 AM   #1
Grubert Grubert is offline
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Source: Home Media Magazine

Quote:
Jeff Bewkes, president and CEO of Time Warner Inc., June 9 said Warner Bros. Studios by 2009 will bow half the number of films in its theatrical slate from two years ago.

[...]

Speaking to investors at the Deutsche Bank Media & Telecommunications Conference in New York, Bewkes said pressure to improve revenue and cash flow growth from its $1 billion filmed-entertainment division meant taking a step back and making more out of less.

“Our motivation is to improve our return on capital,” Bewkes said. “Doing that we believe we can move profit up.”

To accomplish this, the CEO said the studio will focus on building wider consumer adoption of Blu-ray, expanding cable video-on-demand simultaneously with standard DVD (Bewkes said cable VOD generated more than three times the margins of DVD rental) and other electronic distribution.

Bewkes said the elimination of New Line Pictures, which he characterized as a redundant infrastructure, would result in ongoing overhead improvements as well.

He said DVD has been a reliable revenue generator for all studios the past five years. Bewkes said that for every $100 in box office revenue, Warner Home Video extracted more from DVD.

“Our studio still leads in that area because we have scale superiority in worldwide DVD distribution,” the CEO said.

Bewkes said expansion of Blu-ray, VOD and related improvements in electronic distribution by moving away from physical DVD would help grow filmed entertainment.

“Those kinds of things we think in the long run will bring revenue growth to the total film sector,” he said.

[...]
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Old 06-10-2008, 09:06 AM   #2
HDJK HDJK is offline
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So there you have it: downloads will replace DVD and Blu-ray will be the next optical medium for many years to come.

I didn't know they want to get rid of New Line. Is there any time frame for that (with all the planned movies like the Hobbits and such)?
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Old 06-10-2008, 11:21 AM   #3
syncguy syncguy is offline
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The natural evolution of DVD is blu-ray. Downloads cannot come close to blu-ray with the current Internet and Access infrastructure. A massive injection of capital is needed to make mass-market downloads and streaming to compete with blu-ray. Who would foot the bill for a massive upgrade of the Internet? Will the movie industry do it? I doubt it.

Blu-ray is the future. Therefore we should make sure blu-ray technology is right. Still need to iron out the rough edges....
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Old 06-10-2008, 03:17 PM   #4
tmok2000 tmok2000 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by syncguy View Post
The natural evolution of DVD is blu-ray. Downloads cannot come close to blu-ray with the current Internet and Access infrastructure. A massive injection of capital is needed to make mass-market downloads and streaming to compete with blu-ray. Who would foot the bill for a massive upgrade of the Internet? Will the movie industry do it? I doubt it....
The answer is, of course, the consumers. We paid for the first Internet, and will also pay for the next Internet. It is already in progress. The next generation of Internet is called Internet2. Check it out: http://www.internet2.edu/about/. Like the first Internet, it won't be paid for in its entirety by one company, one industry, or one government. Every time we pay a cable TV, telephone, and cable modem/DSL bill, we are already paying into building and upgrading the Internet. There will be no "official" label of Internet2, because, this time around, it will be more like an upgrade. Look, some cable companies, e.g., Cablevision Optimum Online, are already offering 30Mbps service. Verizon FIOS and AT&T uVerse are also fiber-based networks that deliver integrated network services. Some day, we will be getting Gbps Internet access, which makes HD video streaming and on-demand network services a reality. If we look back at that time, we will be laughing at ourselves why we insist on having physical medium today. Judging by how far we have come in the last 15 years, that some day may be here much sooner than we know.
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Old 06-10-2008, 03:44 PM   #5
WickyWoo WickyWoo is offline
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Downloads, and more VOD will kill rental dead within the next 10 years, outside of the specialty enthusiast shop (like TLA video in Philadelphia)


People wanting to buy will be sheparded to blu
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Old 06-10-2008, 03:47 PM   #6
stockstar1138 stockstar1138 is offline
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if anybody downloaded Qore to watch, you would all realize real fast that downloading is a total joke. the amount of compression and artifacting was disgusting.
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Old 06-10-2008, 03:51 PM   #7
prerich prerich is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WickyWoo View Post
Downloads, and more VOD will kill rental dead within the next 10 years, outside of the specialty enthusiast shop (like TLA video in Philadelphia)


People wanting to buy will be sheparded to blu
+1 Agreed.
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Old 06-10-2008, 04:00 PM   #8
syncguy syncguy is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tmok2000 View Post
The answer is, of course, the consumers. We paid for the first Internet, and will also pay for the next Internet. It is already in progress. The next generation of Internet is called Internet2. Check it out: http://www.internet2.edu/about/. Like the first Internet, it won't be paid for in its entirety by one company, one industry, or one government. Every time we pay a cable TV, telephone, and cable modem/DSL bill, we are already paying into building and upgrading the Internet.
Internet2 seems to be a technology/academic blurb without any sound business case. With out a massive investment, a HD Internet cannot be realised. This is a massive investment which is difficult for cross subsidisation absorb. Simply there is no business case to build a HD Internet unless Content companies come to the party and pay hard cash (and I doubt this would happen). Content companies are trying to have a free ride which will never come true. Consumer will not pay for the capacity unless they see value in it. Value is content. Unless they get free/subsidised content they will not pay for a capacity upgrade.

Hence I say blu-ray-evolution is the future, at least for a foreseeable future. It is very important to get the blu-ray on the right track and tie-up loose ends at this early stage before it get out of control.
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Old 06-10-2008, 04:03 PM   #9
Chevypower Chevypower is offline
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I assume DD is digital downloads... whats VOD?
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Old 06-10-2008, 04:16 PM   #10
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I get that we all pay for the internet upgrades every time we pay a bill but the problem is that most internet providers are changing the way they bill you. So if you are on a 10 MBs/month plan and you use 11 MBs one month then they charge you huge fees just like a cell phone. The problem is very few people really know how many megs or gigs they'll need until they use it. This alone will destroy any hope of Digital Downloads from ever taking off because people won't pay $10 to download a movie then get a bill from their internet provider for another $20 per movie especially when you have poor quailty video and sound as well as no extras like Blu-ray has. No subtitle options. You simple get the movie they choose to show you not what you choose to see. People need to just give up on digital downloads for it's only a gimmick. At least for another 10+ years.
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Old 06-10-2008, 01:21 PM   #11
EQ3282 EQ3282 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HDJK View Post
I didn't know they want to get rid of New Line. Is there any time frame for that (with all the planned movies like the Hobbits and such)?
In short, it won't effect movies either currently in production, or large-scale films (see: The Hobbit) that are attached financially to New Line.
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Old 06-10-2008, 01:38 PM   #12
Grubert Grubert is offline
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There is a number of things they can do to give Blu-ray a push:

- Content advantage: kill the 2-disc special-edition DVD. Release the single-disc, barebones DVD and put all bonus content on the BD

- Time advantage: release all new titles on BD 2 weeks before DVD

- Catalog advantage: each time a catalog title is released on BD, pull it from DVD availability. It's not really generating any revenue for the studio, so what do you have to lose?
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