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Microsoft Releases Xbox 360 HD DVD Emulator

Slimy   on 14 December 2007 - 01:26 · 16 comments & 23632 views

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Microsoft Corporation, one of the many backers of the HD DVD format, has unveiled its Xbox 360 HD DVD Emulator. The tool enables film studios and disc authoring companies to model the behaviour of HD DVD disc content, including encoded video and HDi interactivity, in a virtual environment, before burning the HD DVD disc. The emulator uses a combination of available hardware (the Xbox 360 video game and entertainment system and the Xbox 360 HD DVD Player) and specialized emulation software to ultimately enable playback of near-final assets from a network storage share, portable hard drive or optical disc. This eliminates the need for expensive hardware or time-consuming and costly trial-and-error processes for testing HD DVD titles, helping to ensure that titles ship error-free.

Detailed log reports from the Xbox 360 HD DVD Emulator deliver valuable tracing information to help quickly and easily pinpoint problems with advanced interactivity code that otherwise could take hours of manual debugging. Setting up the Xbox 360 HD DVD Emulator simply requires establishing a connection to Xbox LIVE, navigating to the Download Games menu, and adding the Emulator software to the hard drive of the Xbox 360 console. The one-time licensing fee is $2999.

We are committed to supporting and advancing the HD DVD ecosystem, and the new Xbox 360 HD DVD Emulator reflects these efforts by providing developers with the software-based tools they need to efficiently deliver the highest-quality content. Microsoft developed the Emulator to help save studios and postproduction houses time, resources and costs involved with the creation of HD DVD content, and let them focus on what really matters — pushing the envelope with the format,” said Jordi Ribas, general manager of HD DVD at Microsoft.

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(1 reply) #1 Kushan on 14 Dec 2007 - 02:30
Explain THIS one, Mr Bay!
#1.1 vetneufuse on 14 Dec 2007 - 15:27
Quote - (Kushan said @ #1)
Explain THIS one, Mr Bay!


It's OBVIOUSLY a HUGE conspiracy by MS to force you to digital only medium because it can emulate that hard copy medium digitally duhhhhhh!
#2 qwexor on 14 Dec 2007 - 03:00
I know what I want for Christmas this year!
(1 reply) #3 illz55 on 14 Dec 2007 - 06:47
This is great news. I can see almost no way someone can read this story and write negative commentary about Microsoft.
#3.1 TRC on 14 Dec 2007 - 18:44
Believe me they will find a way.
#4 Iamit2900 on 14 Dec 2007 - 09:12
Long live the Redmond Empire. That is of course, along with its Aircraft Carrier in Reading off the coast of Europe.
(5 replies) #5 PinkShirtGuy on 14 Dec 2007 - 12:43
Quote -
(the Xbox 360 video game and entertainment system and the Xbox 360 HD DVD Player)


Sooo, is this a 360 emulator? I don't understand what an hd-dvd emulator is... anyone able to elaborate?
#5.1 Brandon on 14 Dec 2007 - 12:56
same here!
#5.2 Pilsbury on 14 Dec 2007 - 13:01
It isn't really an emulator as such from how I read it.
It appears to use the hardware of 360 and HD DVD to test 'virtual' HD DVD's (from a network share, HDD, or disc) before they are mastered to disc - think of it as mounting an ISO...
#5.3 Kushan on 14 Dec 2007 - 13:44
Quote - (Pilsbury said @ #5.2)
It isn't really an emulator as such from how I read it.
It appears to use the hardware of 360 and HD DVD to test 'virtual' HD DVD's (from a network share, HDD, or disc) before they are mastered to disc - think of it as mounting an ISO...


Pretty much spot on, it's an emulator to test the HD-DVD's extra features, without the need to burn a disk (which takes time and money).
#5.4 and1direct on 14 Dec 2007 - 14:35
Quote - (Pilsbury said @ #5.2)
It appears to use the hardware of 360

So then it is a 360 emulator?

I think its a very important question.
#5.5 vetneufuse on 14 Dec 2007 - 15:26
Quote - (and1direct said @ #5.4)
Quote - (Pilsbury said @ #5.2)
It appears to use the hardware of 360

So then it is a 360 emulator?

I think its a very important question.


it is NOT console emulator it just emulates HD-DVD discs so the system can play them off a network share... the application is writen for a 360 and only runs on 360... would be kinda stupid to emulate a 360 on a 360 now wouldn't it?
(3 replies) #6 Sheppard on 14 Dec 2007 - 15:54
Why is everyone so excited about this, every commercial/enterprise HD DVD AND Blu-Ray authoring sofware includes this sort of "emulation" to test discs as you are authoring them.
#6.1 TRC on 14 Dec 2007 - 18:43
You work in the industry then? How do you know that and why would Microsoft be wasting their time with this if you were right? No offense but I really don't think you understand what this is or have the slightest clue as to what you're talking about. At the very least I think Microsoft may know a bit more about HD DVD production then you.
#6.2 vetneufuse on 14 Dec 2007 - 19:09
Quote - (TRC said @ #6.1)
You work in the industry then? How do you know that and why would Microsoft be wasting their time with this if you were right? No offense but I really don't think you understand what this is or have the slightest clue as to what you're talking about. At the very least I think Microsoft may know a bit more about HD DVD production then you.


Yes the industry DOES have stuff like this, MS is just making it easier for people who do it on a smaller scale to afford this kind of thing
#6.3 TRC on 14 Dec 2007 - 19:43
He implied that everyone producing HD content already has something that does this (without providing any source at all for that claim) and basically dismissed this as completely unnecessary and not worth getting excited about. Pardon me if I'm of the opinion that Microsoft might know a bit more about what they're doing than some anonymous guy on a message board. Especially in light of all the Microsoft/HD DVD bashing that goes on and trying to spin good news for them into being worthless. As you said this is great for smaller studios, so why is that if every authoring program out there already does this? Do they all run on cheap Xboxes? Do they all have every feature this has?

Anything that brings the cost of HD DVD production down and may lead to cheaper prices for consumers is worth getting excited about. There, does that answer the original question?

Last edited by TRC on 14 Dec 2007 - 19:55

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