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Originally Posted by Suhit Gupta
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Originally Posted by Crocuta
What we need is for these nutcases to get together and hammer out a single next generation DVD format and have everyone use it.
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You make a competely valid point, although who is to decide which the better technology is?! Plus a bit of competition is sort of good...
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The 'who' is a consortium of all the manufacturers of these devices. History shows us that it's better for everyone when they do this. They did it with DVD and the medium exploded, replacing VHS in an amazingly short time. Then they didn't do it with DVD-R/+R/RAM. Consumers were confused and only hard-core people really understood what the differences were. That dramatically slowed acceptance of the technology. Now the 'solution' we've ended up with is the ridiculous idea that you have to buy a drive that supports multiple standards. This is hugely inefficient, requiring additional production costs and the paying of technology licence fees to more than one company. That's not good for consumers or the economy as a whole. And it still adds complexity to the consumer's use of the product as they still have to decide which kind of DVD to burn for which kind of use.
Now competition... that's a good thing, but only at certain levels. Competition in production is good; competition in interoperability is not. Imagine the decrease in value your telephone would have to you if you could only call people with the same brand of phone. Or if your Internet were only shared with people who used the same ISP. (Used to be that way before the Internet, eh?) Or if each brand of automobile used its own type of fuel. Competition doesn't have to be (and shouldn't be) about competing between standards. Competition should be about competing on features, price, production efficiency, etc. That's the type of competition that's good for society.
I would suggest that there is no downside to the selection of a standard in this case and it doesn't matter which one they choose. You or I might have a preference, but in the long run,
any standard for blue laser is better for all of us than a format war.