PDA

View Full Version : Why Bill Gates "Hates" Blu-Ray.


Aquanox
20-10-2005, 05:36 PM
Bill Gates has branded Sony's Blu-ray next generation DVD standard as "very anti-consumer" adding that it' "won't work well on PCs".
In an interview with a college newspaper, he said, "The key issue here is that the protection scheme under Blu-ray is very anti-consumer and there's not much visibility of that. The inconvenience is that the [movie] studios got too much protection at the expense of consumers and it won't work well on PCs. You won't be able to play movies and do software in a flexible way.

He added, "It's not the physical format that we have the issue with, it's that the protection scheme on Blu is very anti-consumer. If [the Blu-ray group] would fix that one thing, you know, that'd be fine.

"Understand that this is the last physical format there will ever be. Everything's going to be streamed directly or on a hard disk. So, in this way, it's even unclear how much this one counts."

Here are some highlights from a good interview with The Daily Princetonian…

On his 1995 predictions in 'The Road Ahead'

"A lot of the predictions [I made] were dead on in terms of talking about digital rights management, the arrival of broadband and things like that. Obviously if I wrote it again today, I could talk more about progress we've made in machine learning, speech recognition, vision, tablet computing and security.

Also, things like social networking have grown a lot since ["The Road Ahead"] was written. I talk a little bit about it, but it's a clear phenomenon today, more than it was back then.

On Microsoft's Mission

"Part of the key values at Microsoft are about empowerment — getting computing out to everyone. Our employees love what we're doing and we're pretty neat. There's no one else who's got agreements with [developing] countries, doing donations like we are.

"We believe that every kid should have access to a computer. First we go into the countries and get [computers and software] into the libraries — like we did in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Chile. We're doing that abroad in an increasing number of countries. Then we make sure it's in the schools. Then we make sure, eventually, it's cheap enough so everybody has it at home.

"Information technology is a leveler. It takes any political repression that people try and makes that virtually impossible. It lets curious kids have way more material that even I had as a very privileged student some time ago."

On Apple's Approach vs Microsoft's

"here's room for many cool companies. The software Microsoft is doing is cool. What Apple's doing is cool. The competition amongst all these companies leads to great products.

"We're a software company and if you want to do breakthroughs in artificial intelligence or new databases or speech recognition or tablet computing, there's a depth of software understanding and research at Microsoft you don't find anywhere else. We do research most other companies in the field don't. So, it's nothing to do with any particular company.

"I, throughout the history of Microsoft, have gone out and talked about the software frontiers. So, you know, I'm not doing anything new or different than what I've done for 30 years."

Source: NextGen (http://www.next-gen.biz/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1380&Itemid=2)

P Mack
20-10-2005, 05:44 PM
Nice post Aquanox! I agree with Bills points on why Blu Ray is anti consumer. I think HD DVD has a better chance than Blu Ray.

GamerGurl79
20-10-2005, 05:48 PM
yeah same here hd dvd all the way.sony really hyping blu-ray as they do all there products lol

cablekiller
20-10-2005, 05:58 PM
I wish all forms of physical media were phased out now.

Jeet
20-10-2005, 06:30 PM
hahaha :dito:
everything needs a harddrive

xpitbull
20-10-2005, 06:51 PM
I will rather have dvds instead of hd dvd or blu ray, i mean games will be more expensive and a game will only be like 15% of the media capacity.

cablekiller
20-10-2005, 10:55 PM
I believe the future should be flash memory for movies. Just imagine having a movie on a USB key. You could drop it, run it through the washing machine, and God knows what else, and it still would work 100%. Not to mention much smaller. I hate CD's, DVD's, HD-DVD's, and Blu-Ray all equally. Much too fragile. I keep all my DVD's in an ideal environment, but somehow they seem to develop small scratches from dust or something. It gets really old.

Muthas
21-10-2005, 12:32 PM
Can i get one thing straight here:
One another board people are having a discussion about blu-ray versus DVD. They say i.e. Saints Row can have planes in Saints Row because blu-ray can read (and stream) the data faster from the disk. I've read kinda everything about it and im 100% sure DVD is a lot faster then blu-ray and even made an example: DVD is slower then CD so why would blu-ray be faster then DVD :S
Well they won't believe me, it are noobs, i hate them, but i wanna tell them. So could you all conform this. :D

pApA SmerF01
21-10-2005, 12:53 PM
i've been talking about this with my friends for a little while now. it just makes sense, considering you will already be able to download demoes and trailers to your harddrive.

ace2cloud
21-10-2005, 12:57 PM
He's completely right. We as consumers shouldn't be forced to buy an expensive Disk Drive if we can just download movies instead. It makes much more sense.

Grindstone
21-10-2005, 01:03 PM
Oooo, I feel a riot coming on.

We're not gonna take it, NO!, we're not gonna take it, we'e not gonna take blu-ray, anymore!!!! (sung to a classic `80s number)

Downloading is the future and the future looks good. Blu-ray is too expensive for the causal consumer.