Thursday, July 31, 2008

LG To Offer Blu-ray Player, LG BD300, With Netflix Streaming Access

The partnership between Netflix and LG Electronics announced prior this year’s CES is ready to enter in a new phase, as the LG BD300 Network Blu-ray Disc Player is ready for launch.

The South Korean maker said that the device, which is capable to play high definition Blu-ray discs, up-convert standard DVDs to 1080p and allow Netflix subscribers to instantly stream more than 12,000 choices of movies and TV episodes, will be available at retail starting this fall.
However, LG offered also a hint about the price, with the company officials saying that the new player, the LG BD300 Network Blu-ray disc, will be priced “well under $500”

Earlier this month, Netflix said it recorded its sixth quarter with profit growth in a row on the growing number of customers and the decreasing cost of adding.

The Los Gatos, Calofornia- based company posted a net income growth for the second quarter of fiscal year 2008 of 3.8 percent to $26.6 million, or 42 cents a share. During that same period last year, Netflix earned $25.6 million, or 37 cents.

Netflix, which has more than 55 million discs and ships 1.9 million of them to customers each day (on average), saw its sales increase 11 percent to $337.6 million. The company’s leadership forecasted a second-quarter revenue of $334 million to $339 million.

Netflix reduced its prices last year in order to draw more customers. The strategy contributed to the firm’s lowest cost to bring on new subscribers since Netflix became a public company in May 2002. In May, the company introduced a new device, Roku by Netflix, which allows movies sent by mail to be watched on television. Netflix, which sends movies by mail, finished the quarter with 8.4 million subscribers, while net subscriptions rose 168,000.

Also, at this year’s E3 Business and Media Summit Microsoft announced its new collaboration with Netflix that will allow to the Xbox 360 users to stream shows and movies directly on TVs.

The new service is intended to complement the already-made available Xbox Live Video Marketplace, rather than to replace it. Those Xbox 360 owners who had already subscribed to Netflix and currently have an Xbox LIVE Gold account will get the service for free.

Netflix is competing with several similar services. For example, at E3, Sony launched its own movie and television sales and rental service through the PlayStation Network. The content is provided by Fox, MGM, Disney, Paramount and Sony Pictures and the TV shows are available for 1.99 dollars per episode, while the movies can be rented for prices between 2.99 to 5.99 dollars. Those customers who wish to buy a movie will have to spend 9.99 or 14.99 dollars.

And, of course there is Apple TV. So far, Apple’s device failed to be a success, but in January at MacWorld, Steve Jobs introduced a new, cheaper, version, along with the introduction of movie rentals on iTunes.

Apple TV Take Two has new software that ensures a seamless integration with Movie Rentals, allowing movie fans to rent and watch movies right from their widescreen TV, with no computer required. A 40-gigabyte model is sold for only $229, while a 160-gigabyte model costs $329.

Apple has added the movies to its iTunes catalog in September 2006, but due to the lack of initial support from the movies studios, the business was going slowly, compared to the sales of digital music. However, earlier this year Steve Jobs managed to convince all the major Hollywood studios to join iTunes and last month the Cupertino company said that iTunes customers are buying 50,000 movies per day.

In May, Apple has announced that it would sell movies through its iTunes on the same day as the titles are released in DVD form. Studios previously gave DVD releases a head start of as much as 30 to 45 days over other distribution outlets to help preserve a major income source.
Also, in April there were rumors that Blockbuster is secretly working on a device which will allow video content to be streamed directly to a TV. Apparently the content will be provided by Movielink, a former joint-effort of MGM, Paramount, Sony, Universal and Warner, which was acquired last year by Blockbuster. Movielink has a library of 6,600 movies.

Also earlier this month, Amazon announced a new video on demand service called Amazon VOD, which will offer 40,000 movies and television programs. Amazon’s VoD will be available through Sony Bravia Internet Video link, a $300 device for Sony’s high-definition televisions. In the future Sony intends to embed the Amazon VoD as a standard feature.

Source here

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Web TV’s fast growth confirmed

Web video, and TV services like YouTube and the BBC’s iPlayer, are no longer confined to PC users, according to “Digital Media Devices Global Market Forecast,” just published by Strategy Analytics. A wave of recent announcements from major players such as Sony, Microsoft and Samsung confirms that internet-enabled TVs, games consoles and peripherals, such as Blu-ray Disc players, will soon deliver web-based content to millions of TV viewers around the world.

According to Strategy Analytics estimates, by the end of 2008 some 186 million connected TV devices worldwide will be able to access some form of internet content.

“The web video explosion has so far been restricted largely to PC users,” says David Mercer, VP and Principal Analyst. “Now it is moving to the TV screen. While business model and content partner issues are still to be resolved, the floodgates are open – web video is set to become a regular part of the TV viewing experience.”

Connected TV devices allow viewers to access the internet using a home broadband connection. The technology can be integrated into the TV itself, or more often is available through devices such as games consoles, set-top boxes, digital video recorders (DVRs) and digital media adapters like AppleTV. Sony recently announced that all of its TVs would feature web connectivity within the next three years. In the US, Sony will offer the movie, Hancock, over the internet, to owners of its Bravia TV sets, using its Bravia Internet Video Link.

“Internet connectivity is becoming commonplace across a wide spectrum of consumer devices,” says Peter King, Director, Connected Home Devices. “By 2014 more than two-thirds of all products sold will integrate Internet access.”
Source here

Gadgets feed Web videos to TV

Damian Perez recorded digital video of his son, now 11 months old, when he was born, when he started eating and when he started crawling. Next, the Shoreham, N.Y., father and CPA wanted to watch the video on his living room TV.

Not so fast.

The Apple TV he had bought to view his digital video wouldn't support the format of the videos he had stored on his computer. So he had to first convert the files.

"It was definitely cumbersome, and I probably dedicated many more hours than I should have (converting)," says Perez. "All I want to do is show my videos, pictures and music on any TV in the house."

So in a bid to solve his file format problems, he preordered an upcoming device called a ZvBox. The gadget, from ZeeVee Inc. of Littleton, Mass., connects to a PC and the home's cable wiring. The device then displays whatever is on the PC screen onto an unused TV channel -- which can be viewed from any cable-connected TV in the home. ZeeVee expects to start shipping the $500 device July 31.

ZeeVee is just one of a number of startup companies that will be introducing set-top boxes or software in the coming weeks that will let consumers see on TV their digital photos, videos and other content from their personal computers or the Internet. While Internet-connected set-top boxes have been available for years, the companies say these latest products are sleeker, more affordable and easier to use. And many of the newer technologies claim to work with far more digital formats that existing devices.

Still, there are limits to these new set-top boxes. There are myriad formats and encryption methods for videos on the Web and on computers, meaning some videos may still not be accessible. And there's plenty of competition in the field, furthering the confusion.

Device makers are trying to tap into a small-but-growing market for Internet-enabled set-top boxes. The number of households with a device enabling Internet video on their TV is expected to increase worldwide to 300 million in 2012 from about 45 million last year, according to IMS Research.

Perhaps more important, they are responding to a desire among consumers to combine activities conducted online with watching television. A 2007 survey from market researcher Yankee Group found that nearly 62 percent of all people surf the Web on their computers while watching TV. But among 13- to 17-year-olds, the percentage is 73 percent; of the viewers between ages 18 and 24, 72 percent surf while watching TV, according to the survey.

Another set-top technology expected to be released this summer is from Icron Technologies Corp. The Burnaby, Canada, company plans to sell a chipset to set-top box manufacturers and others that connects to the computer's high-speed USB port to display the PC screen on a TV set. The box would transmit the data wirelessly or over the electrical wiring in the home. Robert Eisses, chief executive of Icron, says a device using the chipset should sell for about $300.

And a set-top box called the Pod bypasses the PC altogether, for those who mainly want to watch Web video. It will allow viewers to search the Internet and stream online videos directly onto their TV sets. Made by Verismo Networks Inc. of Mountain View, Calif., the Pod is expected to be available in August for $99. Prakash Bhalerao, the start-up's chief executive, says the Pod comes with a program guide and search functions to help viewers find and play almost any video on the Internet.

Instead of set-top hardware, some companies are introducing software that lets viewers use a remote control to easily see their videos when their PC is connected to their television.

A New York-based start-up named Boxee last month started letting consumers download a version of its free software for Apple Inc.'s Macintosh computers. Consumers who download the software and connect their computer to the TV using a special cable can play personal digital content, such as movies and music, as well as see content on the Web. Boxee says its software will be available on PCs running Windows later this year.

Similar to Boxee is OSXBMC, a free, open-source software program designed for Macs. In April, Chris Pirvan, a San Francisco-based engineer, downloaded OSXBMC and installed it onto a Mac mini, a compact and low-cost personal computer that is connected to his TV. Pirvan says he mainly wants to access digital copies of television shows he has stored on a connected storage device as well as Google Inc.'s popular video site YouTube.

Developers of Boxee and OSXBMC, which this month was rebranded Plex, say the programs play more formats than rival products directly from Apple, such as Front Row and Apple TV. Apple declined to comment for this article.

For those who already subscribe to set-top services, expansion to the Internet is on the way. TiVo Inc., which makes digital video recorders, has been steadily adding Web content to its set-top boxes since the start of this year, including YouTube, which it added last week. In March, TiVo released its Desktop Plus software for $25 that when installed on a PC can translate many formats of Internet video to play on TiVo and then send it to the set-top box.

Netflix Inc. and Vudu Inc. both use set-top boxes to stream movies over the Internet to a subscribers' television, but the titles are restricted to the companies' movie databases. This month, Netflix and Microsoft Corp. inked a deal where owners of the Xbox 360 can use the videogame console to stream movies and other programming from the Internet to their TVs.

Research still indicates that the idea of connecting a PC to the TV seems a daunting and cumbersome task for most consumers. According to a 2007 study of 2000 U.S. homes conducted by Parks Associates, a market researcher, just 2.5 percent had a PC connected to a TV in the living room.

That's one of the reasons television manufacturers are making the sets themselves Internet accessible. Companies such as Panasonic Corp. of North America, Sony Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. in recent months have added Web content to their Internet-connected TVs. Panasonic launched a series of flat-panel TVs in May that can access YouTube. Since the start of the year, Sony has added YouTube and CBS to its list of Internet offerings for TV owners.

Source here

Monday, July 28, 2008

Peeking Inside The iPhone

Apple has the entire semiconductor industry wrapped around its little finger.

The 3G iPhone is out. Soon after, analysts scrambled to take the phone apart to pinpoint the major component suppliers for the device.

According to iSuppli, Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) is spending $174.33 on components plus $50 in intellectual property royalties per unit. That hefty chunk of expenses doesn't even include the cost of assembly or a margin thick enough to pay all those Apple engineers. The unsubsidized selling price of the new iPhone is $399 for the 8 gigabyte model and $499 for the 16 gigabyte device.

Join the discussion: Whom do you see benefiting from the booming iPhone sales? Will hardware or software vendors become the iPhone's prime beneficiaries? Tell us what you think in the Readers Comments below.

Teardown analysis shows Infineon Technologies (nyse: IFX - news - people ) and Triquint Semiconductor (nasdaq: TQNT - news - people ) as the two biggest winners. Infineon provides the digital baseband processor, a Universal Mobile Telecommunications System transceiver chip, a power management chip and a global positioning system chip--an amazing total of four sockets. Triquint provides three power amplifier chips.

Samsung still provides the application processor; Broadcom (nasdaq: BRCM - news - people ) has the touchscreen controller chip.

Samsung will, likely, eventually lose this socket since it is viewed as a potential competitor to Apple in the smart phone market, but for now it remains a key beneficiary of the 3G iPhone. Intel (nasdaq: INTC - news - people ) is after this socket with its Atom chip. So, too, is long-time rival Advanced Micro Devices (nyse: AMD - news - people ). This week, AMD's new chief executive announced his intention of going after the customers Intel hopes to woo with its Atom chip.

And don't forget about Broadcom.

Broadcom currently has a touchscreen controller inside the 3G iPhone, as it did in the phone's first version. But it also indirectly benefits from Infineon's design win with its the GPS solution.

The Hammerhead II GPS chip was developed by Infineon in partnership with Global Locate, which was bought by Broadcom. Since there is a revenue sharing agreement in place with Infineon, Friedman Billings Ramsey analyst Craig Berger expects Broadcom to reap between 3% to 4% sequential revenue growth in the third quarter from sales of the iPhone and iPod Touch. On July 22, Broadcom reported a strong second quarter that topped analyst estimates.

I pegged the Broadcom stock as a bargain back in March, and since then the stock has risen quite a bit. My guess: It will move further up as functionality starts to consolidate from the board to the chip. The stock is currently trading around $28 with a market cap of about $14 billion. Our valuation analysis pegs the stock at $39.30.

Going forward, there is going to be more consolidation of various functions now on the motherboard into single chips, and in that convergence device movement, Broadcom and Infineon are both strong contenders. Infineon announces earnings on July 25.

On the memory side of the equation, once again, Samsung seems to be the big beneficiary. Apple, which sold about a million 3G iPhones in the first weekend alone, has reportedly placed an order for 50 million 8 gigabyte NAND Flash chips with Samsung, following an order of 25 million chips in June.

Samsung has recently made efforts to reduce oversupply of NAND, and this huge order would lead to its reducing supply to other customers. The NAND market has been reeling under falling prices and oversupply despite increasing demand. There are reports that Apple might change this situation with the huge demand for 3G iPhones and its ripple effect.

The companies on our list are not the direct component suppliers to Apple, but, rather, those most likely are reaping royalties due to their intellectual property positions: Qualcomm (nasdaq: QCOM - news - people ), InterDigital and Tessera. (Full disclosure: Tessera is a stock I own. I have also consulted for the company.)

Interdigital licensed an undisclosed amount of intellectual property to Apple last year, but details are scarce. Interdigital reports earnings in early August. Tessera still owns patents for chip packaging that enable electronics miniaturization. I'd bet it is reaping royalties from iPhone sales too--and will until its key chip scale packaging patent expires in 2010.

Finally, Qualcomm may also be cashing a significant chunk of Apple's $50-per-unit royalty fees. I estimate that Qualcomm could be making as much as $20 on every 8 gigabyte (and $25 on the 16 gigabyte) phone. The company owns a substantial 3G IP portfolio, and stands to make royalty on every code division multiple access-based phone.

Investors cheered Wednesday when Qualcomm at last settled its long-standing patent dispute with Nokia (nyse: NOK - news - people ). Qualcomm is currently trading at around $45, though our estimated valuation is closer to $50. Qualcomm flew up to a new 52-week high of $54.51 Thursday morning, on the wings of the Nokia settlement and the 3G iPhone.

Many of these vendors planning their lives around the iPhone are also wondering what Steve Jobs has up his sleeves regarding Apple's own semiconductor plans. There has not yet been any hint from Apple about how it will use its $278 million acquisition of microprocessor design company PA Semi. Since the company still has a $20.8 billion cash reserve, Jobs could acquire a few other key component vendors.

And that's just the hardware side. Jobs himself has said that Apple's secret sauce is software. Apple's alliances with vertical application developers will become another important trend to watch.

Join the discussion: Whom do you see benefiting from the booming iPhone sales? Will hardware or software vendors become the iPhone's prime beneficiaries? Tell us what you think in the Readers Comments below.

Sramana Mitra is a technology entrepreneur and strategy consultant in Silicon Valley. She has founded three companies and writes a business blog, Sramana Mitra on Strategy. She has a master's degree in electrical engineering and computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Source here

How Stringer and Sony Beat HD-DVD

How Stringer and Sony Beat HD-DVD

Here’s a great article that Forbes did earlier this month about Howard Stringer and his success at Sony. There are also several relevatory paragraphs about how Sony worked together to crush HD-DVD. While there is alot of biographical information at first, the information at the end of this story is rather interesting. One must wonder if Louis V. Gerstner Jr. had never wrote Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance?, that Stringer and Sony would be as well off as they are today.

Three years ago Sony handed one of the business world’s biggest fix-it jobs to Howard Stringer. He had been running Sony’s U.S. operation for six years, but the choice was still unorthodox: Stringer was born in Wales, not Japan, and he wouldn’t be moving to Tokyo when he took over one of Japan’s most revered companies. The challenge was daunting: The electronics and entertainment giant was struggling with red ink and management paralysis. Stringer didn’t profess to have the answers. “Look, I didn’t know what I was doing,” he says today.

But he knew where to look for help. Before he started, he read Who Says Elephants Can’t Dance?, Louis V. Gerstner Jr.’s book about fixing IBM when it was a corporate dinosaur much like Sony. “You can read Gerstner’s book and see a pretty good game plan” for turning around Sony, he says. “It is blindingly obvious, and if it weren’t, I wouldn’t have been able to do it.” As Stringer works to transform Sony, he says he continues to tap Gerstner for advice: He’s hired the former IBM chief executive as his personal corporate guru.

The self-deprecating Stringer seems to be just what Sony needed. He’s relied on his sense of humor and personal charm–the kind that famously lured comedian David Letterman away from NBC when Stringer was president of CBS–to win over Japanese executives wary of an outsider but weary of the company’s turf wars and lagging performance. His hard work and relentless travel–between Tokyo, his home in New York City and the home outside London where his wife and two teenage children live–are starting to show results. Sony has $10.8 billion of cash on its balance sheet and a slew of new products on shelves, including PlayStation 3, a high-end digital camera and a superthin TV that will star in the next James Bond film.

For years Sony persuaded consumers to pay a premium for its gadgets by inventing them first–think Walkmans and camcorders. Today it loads them up with superior technology, which produces clearer TV pictures or tells digital cameras to shoot when the subject smiles.

Stringer’s goal is to connect its devices–televisions, music players, PlayStation machines–to one another and to a new Sony network for downloading movies, TV shows, games and other digital content. Downloading goes via the PlayStation 3 console, turning it into a home computer server that can handle movie rentals as well as play games. In addition, Sony’s Bravia flat-screen TVs will allow viewers to connect to the Internet and stream Hollywood hits without a set-top box or cable subscription; already the TVs can do this with YouTube and other free Internet channels. Sony will send the new Will Smith movie, Hancock, to Internet-ready Bravia TV sets in November, before it can be seen on DVD or on cable. In Stringer’s vision of the future, consumers will pay Sony first for televisions and other hardware, then pay Sony again to download movies, music and TV shows. “The battle for me is the networking of these devices,” he says. “I have to succeed at that.”

But how could Stringer get his devices talking to each other in a company whose executives were barely talking to each other? When he took over, Sony was so dysfunctional–and divisions guarded their territory so fiercely–that managers working for one division wouldn’t return phone calls from their counterparts in another division. Cheerleading, cajoling, schmoozing over soccer games, Stringer talked about how far-flung units must battle Sony’s competitors instead of one another. He pointed to the revenue Sony would reap if the company’s different arms would cooperate on marketing. It sounds obvious, but his predecessors had failed to pull it off.

For Stringer it would take a crisis to finally galvanize his executives into pulling in the same direction: In the battle to replace the DVD Sony would beat back an assault by Toshiba on Sony’s Blu-ray technology, the high-definition video format and the linchpin of just about every one of Sony’s business lines. To get the best available picture quality, consumers will need to replace almost every video device they own–televisions, video players and video cameras.

Net profit for the year ended Mar. 31 was $3.2 billion, triple the previous year’s, on revenue of $89 billion, up 6.9%. But the pretax, preinterest profit margin was just 4.2%, missing Stringer’s 5% target and lower than that of rivals such as Samsung Electronics. “He’s done a lot, but he’s got a lot more to go,” says Gerstner, who doesn’t coach any other chief executives and initially turned down Stringer (who flew down to Florida and arrived at Gerstner’s home holding a dog-eared copy of the IBM book before Gerstner agreed).

Two of the biggest messes inherited by Stringer–the TV manufacturing and PlayStation businesses–are still dragging down earnings, but he’s promised Wall Street that both will turn profitable this year. The TV operation got in trouble because it didn’t keep up with the latest technology and was slow to cut manufacturing costs by moving production to lower-wage countries. High development costs and missed deadlines have always plagued the PlayStation business as Sony’s engineers tinker endlessly with each model. The powerful PlayStation 3, which uses an IBM-Toshiba-Sony chip that can do 256 billion calculations a second, costs $400 and was late coming to market. Outside videogame outfits have still designed only a limited number of games for it. But one PlayStation-only game released in June, Metal Gear Solid 4, has been driving sales of the machine. Sony expects to sell 10 million in this fiscal year, while holding prices steady, enough to put that business into the black. Morgan Stanley says Sony might easily sell 14.5 million.

The company’s adrs recently traded at $40.90 on the New York Stock Exchange, up 17% from when Stringer took over in June 2005, and Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley all rate the stock a buy. “Sony remains our top pick in the Japanese consumer electronics sector,” says Goldman.

Stringer will draw on his unconventional background to implement his blueprint. A burly 66-year-old who studied history at Oxford, he immigrated to New York in 1965, only to find himself drafted. He fought for the U.S. in Vietnam, then returned to New York as a documentary TV producer for CBS News. After serving as Dan Rather’s producer, he rose to president of the network. He became a U.S. citizen in 1985, yet Queen Elizabeth II knighted him in 1999. After a stint leading ill-fated tech company Tele-TV, he took a vaguely defined job as president of Sony Corp. of America in 1997. He tried learning Japanese but gave up. Within two years he was running the U.S. operation.

By that time Sony had been sliding for years. Sony engineers invented Betamax, only to see the cheaper VHS become the standard for videocassette recorders. Sony missed the move to flat-panel TVs while it championed its dated Trinitron TVs. It dreamed up the Walkman, but Apple created the Walkman of the digital-download age, the iPod. Sony’s net profit margin slipped to 1.2% in fiscal 2004, and the company decided it needed a turnaround–and needed a foreigner to pull it off. A transplant boss (Carlos Ghosn) rescued Nissan. Why not Sony? “Strange people get jobs in strange times,” says Stringer. “I got this job in a crisis.”

He needed a plan, fast. Step by step, it’s all there in Gerstner’s book. Like Gerstner, Stringer leaned on a smart finance guy from outside (Chapter Three) and moved quickly to stop the red ink by cutting $2 billion in costs. To raise cash and realign the company’s strategy (Chapter Six), he sold $1.5 billion in noncore businesses, such as a semiconductor factory. Last fall Sony sold a $2.8 billion, 40% stake in its financial and life insurance company in one of Japan’s biggest initial public offerings. Like Gerstner, Stringer made a clear strategic choice not to follow Wall Street calls to break up the company, opting to try to turn Sony’s breadth into a strength.

Along the way, Stringer surrounded himself with smart people and didn’t micromanage them–partly because, like Gerstner, who had joined IBM from RJR Nabisco, the media executive didn’t know enough about many of the company’s business lines to do so (Chapter Two). “Given my background–which is either a strength or a weakness–I run things by people,” Stringer says.

While visiting Tokyo he catches up with colleagues in the Westin Hotel bar. He phones each of his direct reports a couple of times a week–sometimes at home on weekends–and often spends just half the time talking business. He invited a handful of executives to his Tokyo hotel suite at 4 a.m. this spring to watch the European Cup soccer final. One came in pajamas. Sir Howard was barefoot. They all took turns yelling at the TV, alternately cheering and consoling one another during the tense game. When his beloved Manchester United finally beat Chelsea in overtime, Sir Howard was on his feet, jumping up and down.

Following the boss’ lead, Sony has loosened up. A huge inflatable soccer ball dangles from the lobby ceiling in the Tokyo headquarters. “Okay, we’re good again, but we need to be great,” Stringer told executives at a management meeting in May.

Indeed, until last summer Sony’s turnaround was ticking along, but Stringer’s “Sony United” concept was still little more than a slogan. Suddenly Sony faced a crucial test: Its Blu-ray technology was in jeopardy. To contain the mass of bits needed to display movies in high definition, Sony and partners (including Philips, Samsung and lg Electronics) came up with Blu-ray–the discs are read by blue lasers–while Toshiba pushed a cheaper format called HD-DVD. A standards war was brewing–another Betamax-versus-VHS battle.

Retailers such as Best Buy and Wal-Mart didn’t care what the standard was; they just wanted consumers to feel confident enough about which format would prevail so that they would buy new videodisc players to go with their high-definition televisions. But with Blu-ray and HD-DVD players selling neck and neck, the two rivals were in a standoff, and many consumers were delaying their purchases. Toshiba and Sony each wanted the big Hollywood movie studios to pick sides.

Paramount announced last August that it was choosing the Toshiba technology over Blu-ray. Reports flew that Toshiba paid Paramount and its DreamWorks unit $150 million to clinch the deal, which Paramount parent Viacom doesn’t deny. Toshiba began selling HD-DVD players for $99, hoping to outsell Blu-ray players and lock in its advantage. The news triggered “sheer and utter panic” at Sony, says its U.S. chief financial officer, Robert S. Wiesenthal. Except in Tokyo. In Japan Blu-ray accounted for 90% of videodisc players sold, so to Sony executives there it seemed that Blu-ray had already won the format war. But Sony’s U.S. executives knew that the huge U.S. market was now up for grabs.

In Tokyo the night the Paramount news broke, Stringer set up a global conference call to brainstorm ideas for stopping Toshiba. He called on every division to play a part, seizing on the crisis to force the company to work together. A company changes its entrenched habits only when it is under stress. So says Gerstner, in Chapter Seven.

One suggestion was quickly implemented. Sony had wanted gamers to use PlayStation as a videodisc player more often. So if they found a Hollywood movie in the box when they bought the machine, they’d likely test-drive the film, not just play the car-racing games. “Howard rang me up and told me, ‘I really need you to pack half a million units of Spider-Man with PlayStation 3,’” says Michael Lynton, chief executive of Sony Pictures Entertainment.

This was a startling change from when Lynton joined in 2004: “The picture company didn’t talk to the music company, and we didn’t talk to the electronics company.” Divisions could haggle for a month before agreeing on, say, how much the Sony studio would pay for Sony TVs or cell phones used on movie sets. Not anymore.

For the studios and retailers, Sony’s big argument was that even though Blu-ray and HD-DVD were neck and neck in player sales, Blu-ray was really ahead by 1.8 million. That’s if you count the videogame fans who own PlayStation 3 players, because they play Blu-ray discs. So Sony executives went to work persuading Hollywood studios that Blu-ray wasn’t the next Betamax. It fell to Wiesenthal, Stringer’s U.S. finance man, to lobby one studio, Lionsgate, to make sure it didn’t agree to payments from Toshiba (which doesn’t own a studio). “The relationship between Sony and Lionsgate was going to continue a lot longer than the relationship between Toshiba and Lionsgate,” he argued, making cell phone calls from a boat while on vacation off Long Island, N.Y. “Toshiba was not going to cofinance one of their movies.”

Peter Dille, a marketing official at Sony’s U.S. games unit, suggested wooing rival Hollywood studios–Lynton’s competitors–by including snippets of their movies in PlayStation 3 ads. The free advertising would get the industry’s attention. Message to Hollywood: “This does more than play games,” Dille says.

With Toshiba cutting its price, Sony needed to sell more players. Its headstrong gaming division agreed to cut PlayStation 3’s price by $100, then began selling an even cheaper version with half the memory, even though it would crimp the division’s profits. Sony executives from Los Angeles, San Diego, New York and Tokyo converged on Best Buy headquarters in Minneapolis to spend a half-day in meetings. Sony offered to help pay for Best Buy ads in Sunday newspapers nationwide, to pay for Blu-ray store displays and to offer discounted Blu-ray packages–a Bravia TV sold with a Blu-ray player and five free discs, for instance. Sony execs also made pilgrimages to Wal-Mart, Target , Circuit City and other chains.

Despite rumors to the contrary, Sony executives say they did not pay movie studios to side with Blu-ray in the format war. But Sony did spend more than $60 million advertising PlayStation 3 from November to January in the U.S., according to tns Media Intelligence, bringing free attention to Hollywood movies and retailers alike.

The swing vote turned out to be home entertainment giant Warner Brothers. After scrutinizing holiday sales of players, Warner announced on Jan. 4 that it would adopt the Blu-ray standard. On Feb. 15 Wal-Mart agreed to sell Blu-ray machines exclusively. Four days later Toshiba said it was ending its HD-DVD business. In the first half of the year, the number of Blue-ray machines in use more than doubled, to 6 million. Stringer’s plea for unity had paid off. Says Andrew House, Sony’s marketing chief: “We have laid the ghost of Betamax to rest.”

Article courtesy of Forbes.