With news this week that vinyl is the technology that most Brits would like to preserve, we look back at the hi-tech formats we'd like to revive... and another two we wouldn't
1. HD DVD
The first format war of the 21st century has already claimed its first victim - and we’re still mourning its loss. HD DVD was - is - still a vastly superior format to Blu-ray in many respects. From the get-go HD DVD offered the kind of interactive features that Blu-ray is lamely, and belatedly, just getting to now.
Every player ever made had built-in persistent memory and an Ethernet port that not only enabled you to get access to that content, but also made the technology future-proof through firmware upgrades... well at least until Warners’ desertion in January 2008 finally persuaded Toshiba to pull the plug.
Toshiba also did its best to encourage independent movie makers - not the big Hollywood giants - to jump on board, promising a variety of and diversity of content that Blu-ray just couldn’t match.
Early HD DVD discs were also famously superior when it came to picture and sound quality too, with many Blu-ray buyers complaining about poor video and audio encoding, not to mention prematurely corrupted discs.
But the biggest reason to lament HD DVD’s demise is the cost. Right from the start, the simpler, already-established technologies used in HD DVD made the players and discs cheaper to produce and to buy, especially when compared to the Blu-ray opposition.
Given that Blu-ray player prices have actually gone up since HD DVD’s demise, it’s a loss we’ve all ended up paying for.
And remember: just weeks before HD DVD went tits-up, Sony CEO Sir Howard Stringer admitted that he'd wished Sony had patched up its differences with the HD DVD camp - a tacit admission that Blu-ray isn't all it's cracked up to be.
2. Laserdisc
Before Blu-ray, before HD DVD, before even DVD, there was laserdisc, a movie format that first appeared in 1978 and was a cross between CD and vinyl. Laserdisc looked like a CD, it was just 12-inches in size instead of 5-inches, and you could fit most movies on to a double-sided disc.
Laserdisc’s benefits were manifold. For a start it was the only way cinephiles could enjoy decent sound and picture quality at home. The PAL version has 440 lines of resolution, compared to 240 lines for VHS.
Laserdisc was also the only format that could offer Dolby AC-3 surround sound, the precursor to the Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD codecs we have today.
Then there’s also laserdisc’s tactile appeal. Like vinyl albums before them, laserdisc movies asked to be cherished, to be held cosseted and caressed; you poring over the sleevenotes while you waited for your laserdisc player to spin into action.
Laserdiscs undoing, of course, was that no-one bloody wanted it. With perfection flaunting them in the face, most punters turned the other cheek and settled for crumbly old VHS instead. It didn’t help of course that laserdiscs were more expensive than VHS, or that Kuro plasma TV maker Pioneer was laserdisc’s only steadfast hardware supporter.
Then came DVD, of course, and it was all over. But imagine if you could team a laserdisc-sized disc with technology advances that we have now.
You could literally cram hundreds of gigabytes on to the thing, making it perfect for use with next-gen Ultra HD technology.
3. MiniDisc
Before iPods, MP3 players and all that nonsense, Sony touted MiniDisc as a true alternative to Philips decrepit Compact Cassette.



Your comments (4) Click to add a new comment
jservov
June 2nd 2008
4. I'm sorry but HD-DVD was not all that and then some. HD-DVD had several limiting factors (the size of the disc, being made by only one CE for mass market, some initial models were only 1080i, et al)
In reality this was a pointless little war over patent royalties that just screwed the consumer. Hem and haw all you like, but Toshiba is not blameless here (and remember that HD-DVD was started in spec after Blu-ray), nor are they the engineers of light and mercy.
Toshiba had a mediocre product along with crappy marketing, it deserved to die for that alone. Other than that, as another person noted: How did Divx (CC Divx) avoid the list of technologies that deserved to die.
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blueskythinker
June 2nd 2008
3. MiniDisc is still used by filmmakers to capture wildtracks. I think the format was/is unfairly treated.
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erexx23
June 2nd 2008
2. 1. If you want to blame anyone for HD-DVD's death it was Sun and Microsoft.
The final compromise to unify the products was to include both JavaScript(BD-J)and MSScript (HDi)as the on-line content delivery and menu system platforms.
That was rejected and the HD format war started.
See IPTV or MHP to see how this that was little war before the big war over the next generation of content delivery systems.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multimedia_Home_Platform
2. Not sure that SAVD and DVD audio deserved to die as badly as Circuit City's Divx technology.
The "disposable" DRM protected movie delivery system was doomed out of the gate.
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castaway666
May 30th 2008
1. I have still got my Minidisc attired mini system bought in 1998, from Sony Centre in sunny Cardiff at the pricely sum of £450 and also have got a Minidisc player in my old car.. all work well even now!
btw, i bought a 16" Sony widescreen tv in 1998 (same shop) for around £550... again still working but was I the only one?
also my Sony VHS player bought in 1998 for £300 still cracking on no problems when I dig out the ole' cassettes... this has outlasted 4 DVD players!!!!
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