Just saw this article, which to me says the studios are beginning to realize that maybe no one will buy their HD stuff in either format if the DRM restrictions are too severe, which they apparently currently are.
Under the present situation, my nearly-new (and expensive) 62" Mitsubishi DLP set is not "approved" to get an HD feed from one of these new players, so it would get an intentionally-degraded one instead. Hmmm... not a good way of making friends with the very consumers you're hoping to woo.
All I frankly want is a format that I can use to deliver my own HD stuff. As I mused last week, all it would take is an extension of the current DVD protocol to allow for the use of WMV material in addition to MPEG2. Why is this so hard for the industry to see?
Under the present situation, my nearly-new (and expensive) 62" Mitsubishi DLP set is not "approved" to get an HD feed from one of these new players, so it would get an intentionally-degraded one instead. Hmmm... not a good way of making friends with the very consumers you're hoping to woo.
All I frankly want is a format that I can use to deliver my own HD stuff. As I mused last week, all it would take is an extension of the current DVD protocol to allow for the use of WMV material in addition to MPEG2. Why is this so hard for the industry to see?