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Warner puts downloadable files on Harry Potter DVD

OCT. 9 | UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif.--Warner Home Video will include two downloadable digital files on its Dec. 11 DVD release of Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.

The latest Potter installment will allow DVD buyers to download the film to a PC or a portable device, making Warner the first studio to announce that they are marrying physical media and downloads.

The studio earlier offered a download of Superman Returns to consumers who bought the DVD at Wal-Mart.

Jim Wuthrich, Warner senior VP of digital distribution, unveiled the development at Tuesday’s DVD Forum conference here, as he discussed the studio’s plans to meet what it sees as a growing consumer demand for digital content.

“You can buy the DVD and have the option of the digital copy,” said Wuthrich. “This future-proofs the format for consumers.”

Following his presentation, Wuthrich said another studio also is preparing to soon launch digital copies of a film tied to its DVD release.

Wuthrich and other DVD Forum participants cited the recent approval of CSS copyright protection for disc manufacturing-on-demand as proof that the future really is on its way. Major studios can be expected to license more of their libraries for such DVD burning now that they are assured they can manage their content, participants said.

Wuthrich estimated that consumer digital spending will total $300 million in 2007. In 2008, that will grow to $600 million, which includes $12 million in MOD spending. In 2009, $900 million total, including $81 million MOD; and in 2010, $1.55 billion, including $278 million MOD.

“CSS could add about 20% more to digital by 2010,” said Wuthrich.

Studios such as Warner are eager to institute MOD operations as a way to efficiently offer consumers thousands more film and TV library titles than are currently available. Wuthrich envisions the studio offering obscure content that has tiny fan bases, because the studio could limit production costs to exact consumer demand.

“Warner has 6,600 films, and over 75% have not yet been released,” Wuthrich said. “We have released 10% of the available TV episodes, where we have 45,000 left to go. There is significant market value left to be unlocked.”

Drug stores, which normally don’t have the traditional room for DVD sections, could become significant new film and TV retailers, conference participants said. MOD can be done through small automated machines, utilizing drug stores’ existing high-end photo equipment for any DVD art needs.

Wuthrich said the drug store channel will be among the first retailers to offer in-store MOD because of such existing equipment. Its customers are likely seeking ways to entertain themselves while waiting for prescriptions to be filled.

“People need to do something with their time there, and Walgreen’s only has three feet of linear space available for DVD,” said Wuthrich. “[MOD] fits naturally there.”

Warner management believes MOD costs for consumers will likely be equal to traditional retail DVD pricing. Burning is not as efficient as straightforward DVD pressing, but studios wind up saving with the reduction in retail inventory returns.

Jim Taylor, Sonic Solutions senior VP and general manager, reiterated the likely explosion in business opportunities, during a DVD Forum session.

“One retailer told me 30% of customers and another said 50% of customers will walk into their stores looking for titles and walk away empty-handed,” said Taylor. “With a retail kiosk, you can browse through thousands more titles.”

He estimated that MOD could conceivably represent 20% of overall DVD distribution within five years.

In addition to retail, MOD also can be offered directly to consumers' home PCs and eventually on Web-connected hardware such as high-definition players. People are already ordering MOD discs through Amazon.com’s CreateSpace (formerly known as CustomFlix), but the company’s selection is expected to rapidly expand due to CSS approval.

Taylor said it might be slower for consumers to dive into MOD at home, as computer DVD burners will need to be either replaced and/or upgraded with firmware to handle the new CSS requirements.

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Submitted by: John Turner  
12/1/2007 9:41:55 PM PT
Location:Seattle WA
Occupation:Overeducated Graphic Artist

Burning discs on demand in drugstores is a great idea, but DVDs do not burn instantaneously. Today's 20x DVD drives burn single-layer discs in 3.5 minutes, with dual-layer discs taking 17 minutes at 8x speed. Customers are in for a bit of a wait if they make their selections from the kiosk itself; so what we need is a preordering system that puts disc orders into the kiosk before customers actually enter the drugstore -- a straightforward feat given today's Java-enabled mobile phones. Imagine soccer moms and teenagers browsing titles on their mobiles, placing orders while still miles from the store, their selections often already burned, printed and tucked in paper sleeves for pickup as they approach the counter. Ideally customers would also prepay for their discs, the charge appearing on their wireless bill as those for ringtones and wallpapers already do. Offering discounts, BOGO's and special redemptions for mobile users would encourage such payment, which interestingly has less overhead for the merchant than payments by credit card (as typical for PC users) and is also not subject to the 60-day jeopardy of credit card charges. As for printing on the discs, it would be ideal if this could be done within the drive and without using ink. We already have LightScribe technology, which renders art as low-contrast metallic markings, but wouldn't it be great to have a full-color, high contrast option too? A spinoff from Polaroid called "Zink" promises to deliver exactly that. Their first product is a business-card-sized paper that prints in full color in less than a minute without using ink or ribbons. The trick is four colors of thermally-activated ink, precoated on the card, that melt into visibility at different temperatures. Those same inks could be precoated onto blank DVDs. A 4.72-inch-wide thermal printhead placed just above the drive's loading slot would print the discs as they enter or leave the drive. If not one but five thermal heads were ganged in series above the slot, the printing could be done in a single pass at a feed rate of nearly a second per inch. Five seconds to print a disc? Yep. As a bonus the Zink ink is high resolution, archivally stable and protected under a gloss varnish. These kiosks would produce discs even more handsome than most factory discs! Disclaimer: I have no financial stake in any of this. Doesn't that make you feel safer already?

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