SHANGHAI -- In what is sure to send cold chills through those
who bring back dozens of black-market DVDs from trips to China,
the nation has
announced plans to develop its own next-generation DVD standard to
break the monopoly of foreign companies and avoid paying heavy
licensing fees. Two formats are in the running for future consumers: HD DVD and and Blu-ray.
HD DVD is supported by such companies as
Toshiba, Intel and
Microsoft, and
Universal Studios; Blu-ray is supported by
Dell, Hewlett Packard, Sony, Apple and
Paramount Studios.
The Xinhua News Agency, the official news agency of China, said the new standard will be based on
but incompatible with HD DVD. It is not expected to hit the market until at least
2008.
Reports suggest 80% of DVD players are made in China. However, the
makers pay stiff licensing fees -- around 40% of the cost of each
player.
China has tried this before. The country developed its own DVD standard
-- "EVD,"
for enhanced versatile disc -- in 1999. Last year, protoype
EVD players hit the market but consumers haven't jumped on. There was
no indication whether the new Chinese standard -- the name of which
Xinhua did not disclose -- is based on EVD.