Vudu opens the gates with high-def streaming movies
By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published January 6, 2008, 3:26 PM
The theme of this year's CES could very well be "Leaving the Format War Behind," as already Sunday morning, the emphasis from manufacturers has been centered around device connectivity and streaming service. "HD" is left in, and "blue-laser" is on the sideline...at least thus far.
Monday promises to be "Blu-ray Day," with a flurry of Blu-ray related events to help rub HD DVD's nose in the dirt, after the historic snubbing of HD DVD by Warner Bros. on the weekend.
The prelude Sunday morning was set by Vudu, the up-and-coming streaming media service. The company announced that by the end of this month, it will have added its first 70 high-definition titles to its library of on-demand movies and shows. Any media device or PC with a 4 Mbps downstream broadband connection or better will be able to view these shows live and unbuffered, the company says; for narrower pipelines, buffering may be required.
We don't know just yet how high-def Vudu's HD will be -- 1080p on one side of the scale, or 720i on the other -- but at any rate, a live on-demand stream at 4 Mbps is still quite impressive.
Among Vudu's library additions will be Blades of Glory, A Mighty Heart, the unrated version of Hostel: Part II, and some episodes from the recently remastered special edition of the original Star Trek series.
The question videophiles are asking today is, if not HD DVD or Blu-ray, then what will allow consumers to own their library of movies? This week at CES, Vudu will be demonstrating what is described as the "Vudu XL movie vault." Presumably hard drive-based, it's said to hold up to 500 full-length standard definition movies, and is intended for use with networked home theaters.
Since Vudu's business model is based on movie rentals, not ownership, there's a good chance those 500 shows could be parked on that hard drive for a kind of "extended lease" rather than permanent residence. We'll take a look and let you know what we find out.
VUDU's HD movies are delivered in 1080p/24. This is the optimal format for movies, since it preserves the 24 frame-per-second rate of the original movie without alteration.
VUDU also supports both buying and renting movies. Movies that you purchase are yours to keep and remain on the hard drive indefinitely.
--Matthew (VP Operations, VUDU)
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|I started to watch movie on 360 marketplace and it seem to be the future. Some movies even start to play in the fist minute or two. I'm sure its due to buffering but it seem to work fine. They still have to find a way for me to own the video somehow. What if the company goes out of business or the account database is corrupt. I'm not going to spend another $100 on buying the same thing. Maybe an option to DL the movies on my PC and burn to DVD. Yeah I know that's a pipe dream with the studios and DRM but it's the only option I can see. All I want is the option to keep what I want if I chose to, them im sold on the idea. Forget DVD, HD-DVD, Blue-Ray.
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|Yes, it definitely looks like the floodgates have opened. This will unequivocally do to the DVD what music downloads have done to CD sales. There's no turning back now. Let the neanderthals argue about which rock is better, HD-DVD or Blu-Ray.
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|i can't wait til this is possible. no more waiting, no more leaving the house to rent or buy a movie when you want it now. movies on demand in hidef that i own.. that's all i want. i want to own them on a device i can take with me.. so i can watch them in any room at anyone's house i choose. no scratched discs that i have to rebuy. NO MORE DISCS.. i can't believe that we are so shortsighted that we think discs are the next generation of video distribution.. i'm glad there are some companies that are still not convinced that it is.
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|Hmm, renting movies, that sucks. I like to build my collection.
Blu all the way for me then.
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|The space your collection takes up comes to mind, not everyone has lots of it.
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