jphuff said:
First, I'd like to say that I think your premise is going to happen already. While the format "war" may be over, there are still two fairly significant studios out there that are HD-DVD exclusive (besides SD formats). They will need to make the most of their investment for at least the remaining terms of their contracts. So here's what I'd do if I was in charge of lets say...Paramount. New HD-DVD's are coming with web enabled content by virtue of having the player hooked up to the internet. I'd push that as far and as fast as I could. Web based flash games based on the movie content, perhaps even movie reviews, web-hosted video, whatever I can make happen. True, that content will only appeal to a subset of the customer base, but it will help. By making use of already available web content, I could even drive down my costs in production while still offering this "extra" feature. Unfortunately, I'm not educated enough on the technical capabilities HD-DVD has to offer (or Blu-ray for that matter) in this regard. The only thing I know is that Java is a programming language.....not sure about the HD-DVD side although I'd suspect it's at least similar. The one issue I would have to contend with as an HD-DVD studio is this. Right now there IS confusion out there among consumers as when they pop in a regular SD DVD they often get an ad about "the future is Blu-Ray" or "the future is HD-DVD!" So, they're not sure exactly what the future is and may be hanging back on adoption. Now that this "war" is for all intents and purposes over...media outlets will be blaring that. Slowly, it will catch on in the consumer consciousness that "oh! Blu-ray IS the future, it's the next DVD." and they'll start adopting it. To maximize my profits as an HD-DVD studio, I think I would need to shift my advertising away from proclaiming HD-DVD specifically and instead start touting my studio. For example "Paramount movie productions on high definition disk contain "x" features and the highest quality picture and sound!" That way I can distance myself from a name recognition that's proclaimed as the "loser" or "doomed" and instead get consumers to look at my products under the broader definition of "high definition video and audio" along with the features maximized for impact and production costs as per above. That would extend my profitability on the format, hopefully keep sales growing, and then allow me the flexibility in advertising once I'm able to switch formats. Then I'll be able to say "Paramount ALWAYS has had the highest quality video and audio as well as special features", etc, rather than being tied as much to the HD-DVD name. Thoughts? |
And of course the same should apply for blu-ray, even if they are in the lead, since the point would be for public awareness.
A flashy-first game is awesome when it comes out. A great-first game is awesome forever.
Plus, just for the hell of it: Kelly Brook at the 2008 BAFTAs








