Updated Jun.15,2006 20:34 KST

Blu-Ray Set to Win Battle of Future DVD Formats

Samsung Delays Release of Next-Generation DVD Player
Negotiations to Find Single Next-Generation DVD Format Break Down
Blu-Ray or HD DVD? The Battle Postponed
LG Electronics Improves Dual Format Optical Drive
Blu-Ray Wins Format War
LG's Award-Winning DVD Player Debuts in U.S.
Blu-Ray Vs. IPTV: an Unequal Battle
Nat'l Assembly Passes Bill on IPTV
IPTV Bets on Interactivity to Lure Customers
The format war between the Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats for the next-generation DVD market is almost over, with the chances of the Blue-ray camp skyrocketing as more and more companies bet on the system.

The new DVD format will allow consumers to store and replay high-definition video, and the market is expected to exceed W6 trillion (US $6 billion) when the technology becomes more widely available by 2010.

Samsung Electronics on Thursday announced what it says is the first release of a Blu-ray optical disc player in the U.S. market at the end of the month. The Blu-ray format can store a two-hour high definition video on a single disc by using short-wave blue lasers. Usually, storing one hour of high-definition video requires storage capability of 10 GB.

Samsung Electronics unveils its Blue-ray optical disc player for release in the U.S. market in late June on Thursday. It will cost around W1 million (US$1,000).

Samsung Electronics executive Choi Ji-sung compared the release of the Blu-ray player to a Declaration of Independence in the optical disc drive field. Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics pay hefty royalties per unit to U.S. and Japanese companies which own conventional DVD source technology. But Samsung has developed the Blu-ray player source technology on its own. ¡°We used to follow our Japanese or U.S. counterparts, but from now on, we will lead the ODD market,¡± Choi claimed. ¡°We have patents which our overseas counterparts failed to earn, so they will have to pay royalties to get access to our technology.¡±

The Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD battle is of worldwide consequence because it involves stakeholders in the electronics, movie and game industries. Much as VHS dominated the video market after beating Sony¡¯s Betamax system, the winner in the next-generation DVD format war is likely to lead the digital content market of the future. Until last year, it was hard to predict who would come out tops, with about half the leading firms supporting each camp.

The turnaround came early this year, when Time Warner crossed over from the HD-DVD to the Blu-ray camp, which brought the global market share of movie companies in the Blu-ray camp to 80 percent. Universal Studios remains the only big Hollywood firm to support HD-DVD, while Sony Pictures, Disney and 20th Century Fox have already declared in favor of Blu-ray. ¡°In the end, the market will decide the winner, but it¡¯s almost certain that Blu-ray will beat HD-DVD in the format war,¡± says Bang Mun-su, an executive with Samsung Electronics. ¡°The decisive blow came when news came out that Sony¡¯s next-generation game console to be released in the second half of this year will support Blu-ray.¡±

(englishnews@chosun.com )