Extraordinary Genius

Chapter 1170

The most important thing for standards to be implemented is recognition. The more enterprises implement this standard, the faster it will be implemented.

Previously on DVD, that's the standard. Leverage more companies to support DVD forums to get their standards rolled out fastest.

Now both sides are fighting again on HD DVD, and the Blu-ray DVD alliance formed by those companies in the DVD Alliance has brought some of the original island companies together. But some of the DVD alliance's businesses have also rebelled and joined the HDDVD forum.

If the Island State enterprise is a result of a local coalition, then those that reverse the DVD coalition are for the benefit. Windstorm Electronics and Philips decided to license their original DVD patents so they could produce more market-popular DVD players, CDs and computer optical drives.

Were they originally licensed by the DVD Alliance, but also by companies buying islands? The same price, of course, is better.

Not to mention, the DVD Forum also has the great advantage of having a technology developed by Mingji that is compatible with DVD Alliance standard discs, while DVD Alliance players are not compatible with DVD Forum standard discs.

In this way, DVD forums, on players and computer optical drives, are innate and have great advantages. Everyone buys the CD-ROM, who knows what format it is, but some players can play it all, some can only play part of it, which do you think consumers buy?

And this time, the HDDVD Forum claimed that the HD DVD standards they were studying could be produced using the original DVD production line, which would save these small companies a lot of money. Not every company can change its production line by investing tens of millions of dollars, just like YANNI and YANNI.

How many CD-ROMs do you need to sell to get this line back?

As a result, the two major HD DVD camps, with many members exchanged, and the directors of each exhibition, began to pull together other electronics companies.

At this point, Tomson representatives, on behalf of the HDDVD Forum, went to talk to film companies in the US to get them to support the HDDVD standard, which is to produce HD DVDs that meet their standards, and don't work with the Blu-ray DVD Alliance.

The companies in the island country, they reacted immediately, and the most important thing is the copyright of these movie companies. If they don't support their formats, they're half the source, which greatly affects their profits.

That was the DVD forum, and they couldn't lift their heads, and this time, they wouldn't make the same mistake again.

Tom Sun, after all, is the number one selling appliance company in North America, and it works with all movie companies, and it has a great advantage from birth.

Of course, Yuni also has its own control over the film company, and Yuni also has shares in the film company, so Ultimately Yuni and Disney joined the Blu-ray DVD Alliance, and of course, they joined Dongbao, while others such as the Teacher Gate Film Industry, Focus of the Twentieth Century, MGM, Vonner Brothers, etc. joined the HDDVD Forum, and Xiangjiang's film company, Baoshima's film company, South Korea's film company, and some European film companies joined the HDDVD camp.

Of course, the Mainland also adheres to HDDVD standards. After all, the Mainland DVD companies are patented by the DVD Forum. They don't dare to turn away from Rain Electronics and work with island companies.

And some computer manufacturers, also divided into two camps, supported Blu-ray DVDs and HDDVDs, respectively, except that Feng Yu didn't think that, this time, Intel actually announced its support for Blu-ray DVD standards.

Just like the last time Microsoft announced its support for the DVD Forum, this time Intel pushed Philip, Thomson and other companies.

We're promoting DVD standards. What's your relationship to Intel? You don't make players, you don't make CD-ROMs, you don't have movies, you don't have MV copyrights. Are you kidding me?

There's more or less an explanation for Microsoft. After all, do their systems support optical drives?

And the optical drive interface standard is already fixed. Don't you have to make a different interface on your motherboard? So Feng Yu thinks that Intel is a mess, there's no need to ignore it.

Eighty percent of the world's DVD players are made by Huaxia, of which Huaxia has its own brand, which accounts for 60 percent of the world's market share, the remaining 20 percent are members of other DVD forums, and 20 percent are members of the DVD Alliance, which is also mainly an island brand.

Fifty percent of global DVDs are also made in Huaxia, and the remaining 30 percent, about 30 percent, are made in the U.S., mainly by film companies, and the remaining 20 percent are made by island countries, Europe, etc.

So whether it's a player or a CD-ROM, Huaxia is the leader, and the most important of them, of course, are Windstorm Electronics and Edward Electronics.

International electronics companies, in fact, have defaulted, this business, is the strongest in Huaxia. It's just an island company.

This time, they promoted HDDVD, and they looked a hundred times more confident, because Windstorm Electronics and Edward Electronics started studying HDDVD technology two years ago, and Yuni's Blu-ray DVD technology, just at the beginning, was lagging behind.

In no time, the HDDVD player will be available, and the new format of the HD disc will be launched into the market. It will take at least a year for them to shut up.

By the time they enter, HDDVD will have taken the lead, although the market will not be saturated.

And for a while, some of the electronics companies that hadn't done DVD before started choosing camps. Some of them chose the HDDVD camp, while others chose the Blu-ray DVD camp.

Overall, however, the number of HDDVD camps is larger, and more importantly, there are more player producers and film sources in control.

But island companies rely on them to lead the world on HD TVs. You bought a HD DVD player, you always had to have a HD TV, right?

What good is it if you can't tell HD from standard TV?

But they had no idea that the technology of LCD TV was going to grow faster and faster, far beyond plasma TV technology, HD TV, LCD could do that.

It is precisely the plasma technology barriers in island countries that make HDDVD more competitive. They can also form strategic alliances on HD TVs.

Windstorm Electronics released its first HDDVD player while you were still competing for members!

Yanni and other companies suddenly pushed, what happened, how could they be so quick, so they developed a successful HDDVD player? Do they have an HDDVD source?

Immediately afterwards, some movie companies in Xiangjiang released HDDVD discs announcing the HD DVD era, officially!

……