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Global HD VMD day
New Medium Enterprises recently invited press and industry
representatives to the presentation of their first HD VMD replication
line in Eindhoven and presentation of their retail HD VMD player and
discs bundles. So what is HD VMD then?
HD VMD, the logical format
There is a long history behind the format but I prefer to skip that
and have a look what we got right away. Essentially this is a DVD on
steroids, offering VC-1 and H.264 video codec, 1080p max. resolution
and the same HBR (High Bitrate Audio) formats than HD DVD &
Blu-ray. The major difference regarding the logical format is that
there is no interactive technology integrated like HDi or BD-J and no
internet connection, the video and audio specs are slightly different
but more or less the same than the other next-gen formats.
HD VMD, the physical format
The concept behind HD VMD is to stick with existing red-laser
technology and to improve the layer technology. On demonstration in
Eindhoven was a triple replication line, quad layer to be introduced in
the following weeks. This gives us 15GB to 20GB of storage, enough for
the majority of feature film titles.
HD VMD, the players
In opposite to HD DVD & Blu-ray players the good looking HD VMD
players are very similar to current DVD players. Manufacturing cost are
obviously dramatic lower than for the competing next-gen formats,
focusing very much of what consumers need when they want to move up
from SD to HD. Integrated in all players is a nice scaler for ordinary
DVDs, so backward compatibility is not an issue.
HD VMD, the bundles and the market approach
The market approach of New Media Enterprises is indeed very
interesting. They have secured distribution deals for most European
countries, some Asian countries incl. India and the US. For all
territories nice bundles are available with a player and 5 discs of
local taste at US$ 199,- or EUR 199,- for Europe. While this is not
cheaper than the cheapest HD DVD player option, one should consider
that this is not a subsidized product, those are realistic market
prices with positioning the disc itself around $18,- to $20,- or for
Europe at bit more expensive at EUR 18,- to 20,-. While it is obviously
still terrible difficult for HD DVD & Blu-ray to get into the
majority of retail stores, NME actually managed to secure distribution
deals with a large array of low budget retailers and major mail order
merchandisers like Amazon.com. While we still need to wait for real
world sales figures to measure market traction, it appears that the
acceptance of a “low budget” next-gen format is especially in those
countries much better where HD DVD & Blu-ray are considered too
expensive anyway, like in Eastern Europe and India.
HD VMD, authoring
I haven’t had a chance to look at the authoring by myself, hopefully I
will have another report on this in a couple of weeks. What I learned
on my extensive chat with Neil Bottrill, SVP Creative Services, is that
NME approach is to simplify the whole premastering process by keeping
this very close to well known DVD authoring, but simply integrating HD
content. This makes life for current DVD authors obviously much easier.
Encoding of current titles where done with Sonic Cinevision encoders,
offering potentially the same video quality than HD DVD & Blu-ray.
Bottom Line
It can’t be ignored that there is a new player in next-gen town, who
might actually shake things up more than expected. Will they be
successful with their own replication technology? While the investment
for replicators are much lower than for Blu-ray, they are higher than
for HD DVD and the vast majority of replicator haven’t even done that.
But the point is that NME is not even dependent on their own physical
format, HD VMD titles can be replicated on ordinary DVD-5/DVD-9 as
well. If blue laser technology fails in today’s tough mass market
conditions, maybe HD content finds it’s way to the consumer on a red
laser disc. After all, depending on source material current video
codecs allow up to 100min on a DVD-9 without compromising the picture
quality. But then again, if blue laser is for Hollywood niche markets
and HD on red laser wins the mass market war, isn’t that exactly what
Toshiba’s HD DVD offers anyway? Maybe Toshiba should tell this the
productions folks, nobody knows 3X.
After years of rumors and speculation, HD VMD is finally here. Physical
& logical format, licenses, player and titles, distribution deals,
everything is in place and serious people are behind it. If this will
be enough has to be seen, on the other hand with the 4 largest Indian
film studios on board they got Bollywood convinced and local market
might actually be big enough for secure long term survival anyway.
Maybe DVD will be the last globally physical media, who knows? At this
point, congratulations from me to NME. More infos on HD VMD coming
shortly.
Contact Information New Media Enterprises
Alexander Bolker-Hagerty
Executive Vice President
Business Development & General Manager, Nordic
alaxander@nmeinc.com
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