Microsoft in Sony talks about Blu-ray

By Tor Thorsen on 07 March 2008

Tags: blu-ray | hd dvd | internal | xbox 360 | blu ray | sony | rep

Following its brief campaign to support the doomed HD-DVD format, Microsoft has now apparently entered into talks with Sony to bring Blu-ray disc technology to the Xbox 360. That once unthinkable scenario was outlined recently in a report in the British economic daily the Financial Times, two months after Xbox group marketing manager Albert Penello reopened the door to the possibility.

"It should be consumer choice; and if that's the way they vote, that's something we'll have to consider," Penello told the Reuters news service during the 2008 Consumer Electronics Show in January. Since then, though, decisions by retail giants Wal-Mart and Best Buy as well as online rental house Netflix made up the public's mind for it, causing Toshiba to finally abandon HD-DVD production last month.

Citing an unnamed "senior executive", the Financial Times said Sony and Microsoft are not simply discussing a successor to the Xbox 360's now discontinued, dirt-cheap external HD-DVD drive. The newspaper said there is also the possibility of an internal Blu-ray drive being incorporated into a new, more expensive "premium" 360 model, as is already in the PlayStation 3. Thusly, Sony would earn royalties from sales of a rival console -- a first for the game industry.

For its part, Microsoft quickly denied that any move toward Blu-ray had been officially made. "We have made no such announcement," a rep told CNET. "Games are what are driving consumers to purchase game consoles, and we remain focused on providing the largest library of blockbuster games available."

For its part, Sony welcomes the possibility of a Blu-ray-equipped Xbox 360. "If Microsoft wants to release Gears of War 3 on a Blu-ray Disc, I think we can make that happen," Sony Computer Entertainment America's (SCEA) vice president of Product Marketing Scott A. Steinberg told CNET prior to this report.

While Steinberg's comments were merely hypothetical, they were echoed by another SCEA rep--who declined to confirm nor deny the Times report. "While, of course, we are excited that the Blu-ray won the format war and knew that our decision to include Blu-ray in PS3 would pay off, the Blu-ray format is an initiative developed by the Blu-ray Disc Association," said the rep, referring to the body governing the BD format. While led by Sony, the BDA is made up of nine companies: Sony, Pioneer, Philips, Thomson, LG, Hitachi, Sharp, Samsung, and Panasonic parent company Matsushita.

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Dean
08/03/2008 12:53 AM

Seems like a pretty obvious move to me.

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Dave
11/03/2008 02:18 PM

"Sony would earn royalties from sales of a rival console -- a first for the game industry." Wouldnt have this happened when sega released the Mega CD & Sega Saturn etc, Sony own a number of patents on CDs ?? Or am I missing something here?

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