
Cable or over-the-air HDTV was just the beginning, though. Of course true movie and gaming buffs would want to take full advantage of the high definition resolutions, and sure enough the consumer electronics industry brought the digital goodness to market. The problem was, there was disagreement between the major manufacturers on what high-definition format should be the one to replace the 480i DVD. And so two formats came to the stores to wage battle for the hearts and pocketbooks of the people: Toshiba brought HD-DVD, and Sony had Blu-Ray. In terms of gaming, Microsoft's XBOX360 offered HD-DVD capability as an add-on, and Sony's PlayStation3 came with Blu-Ray playback right out of the box. Well in retrospect, it certainly looks like Sony made the right choice to include that functionality as standard, because it meant that for every gamer who bought a PS3 they also got a Blu-Ray player which leads logically to more Blu-Ray sales. HD-DVD (and the X360) came to market first and took the initial lead, but now, some 2 years later, it appears inevitable that Blu-ray is the outright winner of this battle.
And now, this really has to be the final nail in the coffin for HD-DVD -- national retail giant Wal-Mart has announced they are backing Blu-Ray as well. I think it's game over for Toshiba's HD-DVD at this point. There are already rumors that Toshiba will officially declare the format dead soon.
As a PS3 owner, I'm glad I backed the winning side. Now, I'm waiting to see if Universal and Paramount will finally change their minds and release films like Transformers on Blu-Ray!
From MSN: Wal-Mart dumps HD-DVD in favor of Blu-Ray