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