Toshiba announced on Tuesday it will no longer develop, manufacture and market HD DVD players and recorders.
“We carefully assessed the long-term impact of continuing the so-called ‘next-generation format war’ and concluded that a swift decision will best help the market develop,” Toshiba President and Chief executive Atsutoshi Nishida said in a news release.
Nishida said the decision by Warner Bros. to release movies only in the Blu-ray format made the move inevitable. “That had tremendous impact,” he said. “If we had continued, that would have created problems for consumers, and we simply had no chance to win.”
There’s been no official comment from Universal Studios, Paramount Pictures and DreamWorks Animation, the major Hollywood studios that were producing HD DVD movies.
Toshiba says it will reduce shipments of HD DVD players and recorders to retailers, and stop altogether by the end of March. Production of HD DVD disk drives for PCs and games will meet the same timeframe.
Experts predict the decision to pull out will save Toshiba approximately $400 million a year.
More to come….
Read entire press release.
(Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.)
Enjoy it while you can Sony! I am personally waiting for your next contender to knock you out of the game. I wonder if hardware prices will ever go down now?
Shame to all you movie companies for killing a perfectly good medium and give more power to a company that does not need it.
BTW, that is a great picture up there with the tagged toe… EH must have been prepared to have posted it so quickly this morning. :D
Ding-Dong the witch is dead!
I read somewhere that Toshiba has always maintained that “We’ll support HD DVD for as long as Castro is in command.”
So you HD DVD supports can blame Fidel for this mess…
Home theater, automated lights and a high-tech fish tank.
Home theater, automated lights and a high-tech fish tank.
A new CEA study says that more builders are offering all types of technology.
It’s hard to imagine life without remote controls, but it’s been a long, strange path to the modern incarnation we know and love today.
I guess I never considered it with VHS and Betamax when Betamax lost because there was no widespread Internet at the time, but the Internet really helps reveal what a whiney bunch of big babies there are out there buying high definition movies…