But for how long? I assume they have to licence HD DVD technology, either per device or on a subscription basis. And while the format is not changing, there is still a development cost associated with maintaining the code and testing it still works. At some point its simply not going to be worth bothering with it. They'll probably advise customers who want HD DVD playback to stick with an older version. Hopefully by that point, some tool like Videolan can be used instead.
I wouldn't imagine it would cost much money, or any money at all to support a dead technology. Pisses off consumers less, and keeps less people pissed off @ the companies that gave it to them.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Peter @ Jun 9th 2008 1:55AM
Nice, WinDVD still supports HD DVD, unlike PowerDVD!
DrXym @ Jun 9th 2008 3:49AM
But for how long? I assume they have to licence HD DVD technology, either per device or on a subscription basis. And while the format is not changing, there is still a development cost associated with maintaining the code and testing it still works. At some point its simply not going to be worth bothering with it. They'll probably advise customers who want HD DVD playback to stick with an older version. Hopefully by that point, some tool like Videolan can be used instead.
Peter F @ Jun 9th 2008 12:12PM
I wouldn't imagine it would cost much money, or any money at all to support a dead technology. Pisses off consumers less, and keeps less people pissed off @ the companies that gave it to them.