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Sunday, April 22, 2007
Sony, DRM, and the Casino Royale DVD

 

We watched Casino Royale recently via NetFlix. It was such a good movie that I thought I'd like to own it. Then I started reading about how the disk had problems with a number of DVD players - what I read said that Sony had on purpose introduced subtle errors into the disk that trips up programs like DVD Decrypter.

Guess what? Some people can't play the movie on legitimate DVD players. I'm not going to pay money for that. I'm sure the Blu-Ray version has no problems.

Anyway, a couple of news items on this below. When a studio pulls this, they should not be able to call their product a DVD let alone put a DVD logo on it. You'd think after the rootkit CD problem that Sony would have learned a lesson.

Sony Recalling New DVDs
18 April 2007 (StudioBriefing)
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment has discovered the source of a problem in their recent DVD releases that prevented them from being played on some players, including some manufactured by the consumer electronics division of Sony itself. The company said the problem was caused by an update of its copy-protection system, which it continually updates in order to derail potential hackers. Among the DVD movies affected were the new James Bond film Casino Royale, The Pursuit of Happyness and Stranger Than Fiction. Sony said that anyone who had purchased one of the discs and has experienced problems playing it may receive a replacement disk free of charge by phoning 800-860-2878.

Sony Films Won't Play on Sony DVD Players, Say Reports
16 April 2007 (StudioBriefing)
Complaints have begun appearing on some tech websites that copyright-protection coding on new releases from Sony, including Stranger Than Fiction, The Holiday, Casino Royale, and The Pursuit of Happyness, has made them unplayable on certain DVD players. One person complained on an Amazon.com discussion board that when inserted in Sony's DVP-CX995V player, the disks "load up to the splash title screen and then load no further, then after about 60 secs the player turns itself off!" The writer said that when he contacted Sony he was told that the company was aware of the problem and that it was working on a firmware update. The writer then asked Sony, "Would it not be a good idea to test changes you intend to make on your DVDs at least on your own equipment so that if you find a problem you could have the firmware update available instead of not only inconveniencing, but alienating your own customers?"

Source: Casino Royale (2006) - News

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Saturday, April 07, 2007
Must Print - I Want You...

 

Thanks Long! I look forward to printing these up: I want you for Office 14. I want you for Windows 7. - istartedsomething .

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Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Ahem... Your Words Can Show Up in the Strangest of Places

 

So I forget just what the heck it was I was looking for when I stumbled across Long Zheng's post: Microsoft job teases Office 14 and new Office Workspaces team - istartedsomething.

First of all: Love the Uncle Sam graphic! I'd be very happy to have a hi-res version of that to put on my wall at work.

Secondly... sigh. Them's my words. Reworked. I helped out with the Office Workspaces hiring for a bit, specifically doing some buzzword razz-ma-jazz for the developer openings we had. This job posting is a bit of editing over those developer postings I wrote, working my team intro into the SDET (super-smart tester) openings.

Though "intuitive cinch" was courtesy of my boss at the time. Very nice, I still think.

Hmm, how spread around in this? Just a touch. Just a touch.

And that's all I have to say about that.

Well, one more thing. Long mentions a concern over the mention of shell integration. Let me be clear: we know where the line is. Any team outside of Windows looking to integrate their product into running within the Windows Shell knows they only do so following public, documented APIs.

There is no other option. Integration, in this case, means hooking up interfaces to be called through public APIs. That's all. Hard to work that into a job description and still sound razz-ma-jazz.

 
Eric Richards' place of techno (as in technology) happiness, rants, and corporate love. I work in Microsoft Office as a development lead.

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