Standards war tilting in favor of DVD as execs see hard road ahead
for Divx
By Robert Lemos,
ZDNN
September 8, 1998 5:42 PM PT
Consumers
confused by two standards in the digital video disk market may not
have to wait
much longer for the smoke to clear.
The reason: Consumer electronics retail
chain Circuit City Stores Inc. -- a
strong proponent of Divx -- has failed to
realize its ambitious plans for
the digital video market, according to industry
executives and analysts.
"Divx is the Beta format that will never make
it," said John Freeman, the
president of Strategic Marketing Decisions, a
Los Gatos, Calif. -- based
consultant.
Freeman estimates that 5.3
million DVD players will get sold this year while
another 8 million DVD-capable
drives will wind up installed in PCs. In
contrast, he expects Divx -- which will
have its nationwide launch in
October -- to result in sales of fewer than one
million units.
What is it about Divx?
Tuesday marks the one-year anniversary
of Circuit City's announcement of its
partnership with Los Angeles-based law firm
Ziffren, Brittenham, Branca &
Fischer to create the digital video rental model
known as Digital Video
Express, or Divx. Divx allows consumers to buy a disk for
$4.50 -- about the
price of a video rental. From the time the disk is inserted
into the special
Divx player, customers have 48 hours to watch the movie. After
that, they'll
pay a fee every time they watch the movie. The advantage, said Josh
Dare,
spokesman for Digital Video Express LP, is the absence of late return fees.
"We
are aiming for convenience," he said. Normal DVD movies would have to be
rented
like VHS tapes.
Looking at it from a different angle, Divx allows retailers
to cut into the
lucrative video-rental market, which averages 10 million rentals
a day in
the United States, according to Divx's Dare.
The format debuted
in June in Circuit City and Good Guys stores in San
Francisco and Richmond, Va.
Yet, the reception has been muted. "We have only
sold about five to seven
Divx players a week," said one Good Guys store
manager in San Francisco,
who asked to remain anonymous. The consumer
electronics retailer will sell Divx
players in 70 stores nationwide from
October. DVD players, on the other hand,
"are selling really well," said the
manager.
The Consumer Electronics
Manufacturers Association reports that more than
440,000 DVD players have been
sold this year, driving the sales of more than
4 million disks.
A world
of hurt
Circuit City delayed its nationwide launch from September to October.
What's
more, its first manufacturer of Divx-compliant players, Zenith, has dropped
the
offering from its line due to unrelated financial troubles.
While all the
major Hollywood studios are planning to release movies on DVD,
Time Warner Video
(the owner of HBO, New Line Cinemas, and Warner Bros.) and
Sony Pictures Entertainment
(the owner of Columbia and Tri-Star) have
refused to commit their large library
of films to Divx.
Both Time Warner and Sony are part of the DVD Forum, and
have a vested
interest in the future of DVD.
"We are not really going
to read anything in what has happened so far," said
Dare. "It's after
the fall rollout that counts."
Dare said that the company expects to
inundate the market with about 2.8
million Divx disks and new Divx players from
Panasonic, RCA, and Proscan by
the October kickoff.
Still, that does not
add up to more titles. Already, DVD has racked up over
1,600 movies re-mastered
to its format, while Divx has a little over 300.
Digital done right?
Just
an early lead, or something more?
More, according to SMD's Freeman, who suggested
that Divx was a high-tech
way of squeezing more money from consumers.
"I
can't imagine having kids and a Divx player," he said. "The first time
that
you get a $200 bill after letting the kids play movies over the
weekend -- that
player is history."
Divx's Dare thinks the criticism is misplaced. "We
are not in the race with
DVD," he said. "All the titles that can play
on a DVD player can play on
ours as well." Yet, the reverse is not true.
And
that has many videophiles teed off. Freeman is not alone. Sites are
popping up
across the Internet attacking the nascent format.
Other sites are trying to
attack the convenience of the Divx format. On
Tuesday Blockbuster Video announced
plans to rent DVD to customers through
500 of its 3200 stores. Netflix.com, an
Internet-based company, is already
letting customers rent DVD disks.
"We
can beat Divx on both its claimed advantages," said Te Smith,
spokeswoman
for Netflix.com. "Convenience -- we can deliver right to your
door and our
return mailer is prepaid and pre-addressed. Lower cost? For $4,
you can watch
a DVD disk in your home for 7 days."
Netflix allows users to order movies,
which it will deliver within 48 hours.
If you like the disk, you can keep it and
Netflix will discount the price of
the rental from the purchase price.
On
Tuesday, Internet service provider America Online Inc. announced a
three-year,
$15 million deal to give online store DVD Express Inc. premiere
placement on its
sites.
With interest like that, Divx's battle to convince consumers that a
second
format is necessary will be entirely uphill.