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MFDigital CD DVD Information Library
Monday, November 19, 2007
 
Philips Reducing CD Rewritable Royalty Fees
Philips announced several days ago they will reduce the royalty rate for those in compliance for the CD Rewritable disc licensing fee. The decrease is nearly half at 44%. The old fee was 0.045 per disc and with a drop of USD 0.02 the new rate will be 0.025.

The move is in a continued effort of Philips trying to bring manufacturers up-to-date with compliance standings. The reduction shall be available to all licensees who are in full compliance with the terms and conditions of their license agreement with Philips. The reduction shall initially be valid from the 4th quarter of 2007.

MF Digital duplication equipment fully supports burning to rewritable media.

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Friday, November 02, 2007
 
Is the War on HD DVD Verse Blu-ray DVD Too Confusing
Recent research shows the format war between HD DVD and Blu-ray is not only causing confusion among consumers, but it will result in major challenges for manufacturers as they seek to stimulate mainstream adoption of either.

According to the JupiterResearch report "Next Generation DVD: Will the Winner Be HD DVD, Blu-ray, or None of the Above?," while HD DVD and Blu-ray camps are attempting to win over the hearts and minds of consumers with next-generation HD content that effort has little impact on purchasing. In fact, less than 25% of consumers purchasing new AV equipment site HD content as the motivator. With such a large number of DVD titles readily available the limited number of HD titles provide little motivation to make the switch.
"CDs and DVDs both offered a clear value proposition to consumers when they were introduced to the marketplace. There was a visible difference in the experience that was easily grasped," explained Michael Gartenberg, JupiterResearch Vice President and lead author of the report. "The real competitor that both these formats face is not each other, but rather low cost DVD players with up-scaling capabilities that pass the 'good enough' test for most consumers."
Further confusing the issue is the growth of broadband popularity which is facilitating content delivery directly to consumers without the need for optical disks. Combined with ease of use and the ability to move content from room to room as well as onto portable devices, the market for downloadable video content continues to grow each day.
"The abundance of material in such a wide variety of formats is going to make adoption of any single standard very difficult as consumers may well opt for a combination of what is already available," said David Schatsky, President of JupiterResearch. "To be successful, manufacturers must offer a clear and visible improvement in quality and functionality as well as place greater emphasis on platform longevity and backward compatibility."
The complete findings of this report are available to JupiterResearch online at www.jupiterresearch.com.