The Mercury News Weekend

Blu- ray or HD-DVD? Better to wait and see

- dawnchmiel­ewski in my opinion

On the 20th Century Fox studio lot in Los Angeles, not far from a larger- thanlife mural of Julie Andrews, arms outstretch­ed atop the lyrical hills from ‘‘ The Sound of Music,’’ the studio screened what it hopes will be another blockbuste­r.

This time, it’s not a movie but a technology that it and other studios and electronic­s companies tout as the successor to DVD. It’s called Blu- ray and it plays high- definition movies in resolution so sharp, you can inspect Johnny Depp’s eyeliner in ‘‘ Pirates of the Caribbean.’’

The screening Tuesday was the first in a series of high- profile events to introduce the Blu- ray format. Electronic­s makers are expected to unveil a new generation of Blu- ray players next month at the Consumer Electronic­s

Show in Las

Vegas, with promises of movies and devices in stores next

year.

But before you

race out to be the

first in your neighborho­od with a Bluray player, a word of caution. Blu- ray remains locked in a format war with another consortium of companies backing a rival ( and, naturally, incompatib­le) technology called HDDVD. The format war even divides the tech powerhouse­s of Silicon Valley: Intel backs HDDVD, while Apple and HewlettPac­kard support Blu- ray.

Blu- ray has considerab­le momentum with every major studio but one, NBCUnivers­al, agreeing to release movies in the new high- definition format. But the rival HD-DVD format may still

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States