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Sony, Toshiba Give
up on Unified DVD Format
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
Although it is not surprising, groups headed
by Toshiba Corp. and Sony Corp. offering competing
technologies for next-generation DVDs have given
up efforts to develop a unified format, the
Yomiuri newspaper reported on Tuesday.
For three years, the two groups have pushed
to have their respective technology standards
adopted to gain dominance in the multibillion-dollar
markets for DVD players, PC drives and optical
discs.
Toshiba, along with NEC Corp. and Sanyo Electric
Co. , has been promoting HD DVD, while Sony
and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. , the
maker of Panasonic brand products, have been
developing a technology known as Blu-ray.
The two groups have held negotiations on unifying
their formats to persuade consumers to shift
to advanced discs and to promote growth in the
industry.
But negotiations fell through as neither side
yielded, and time ran out to develop a format
before the launch of new products from both
groups, the paper said.
"Late August is the practical time limit (to
unify formats)," Yoshihide Fujii, Toshiba's
corporate senior vice president, was quoted
as saying in the paper.
A Toshiba spokeswoman said Fujii just meant
that the company needed to start developing
software by late August for its HD DVD-based
players, scheduled for release at the end of
2005.
Both officials agreed, however, that a unified
format is still a possibility. They said a single
format would be the best way, and added they
would release their products as scheduled.
Sony plans to put a Blu-ray disc drive in its
new PlayStation game console next year.
Sony's Blu-ray technology is also backed by
Dell Inc. and South Korea's Samsung Electronics
Co. .
Toshiba's then president, Tadashi Okamura, had
said in May producers of next-generation optical
discs would eventually use one format, although
products based on the two competing standards
may be around for a limited time. |
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