- P&G in Advanced Talks For Drug Business
- Two Biggest US Pension Funds Suffer Huge Losses
- Apple Profit Tops Forecasts on Strong iPhone Sales
- Singapore Sovereign Wealth Fund Loses New CEO
- AMD Posts Wider-Than-Expected Loss; Shares Tank
- Wall Street Analysts Are Wrong, But Is the Market Right?
- Earnings on Crash Diet of Cost-Cutting, Weak Revenue
- Happy Days Are Here Again, Or Are They?
- Starbucks Profit Tops Expectations; Shares Soar
- Apple Wallops Wall Street
- Morgan Stanley Earnings Preview: What to Expect (Video)
- Apple On Deck for Another Dinger?
- How Will You Spend Your Furlough?
- Watergate is a Steal
- So Much For That 'Watson Bump'
- Expect Apple to Report Strong Earnings: Strategist
- Stock Strategy: Techs That 'Trade Beautifully'
- Pros Say: Recession Will End in 1-2 Quarters
- China wants stable US economic policies
- China promises solar subsidies to boost industry
- Canadian oil giants closer to completing merger
- Kohler Co. sues American Standard over trademark
- Health bill a boon to doctors
- Do Obama’s deals with hospitals break pledge?
- Iron ore shipments dwindle in Duluth-Superior
- Inspectors say Pentagon didn’t break war rules
- FEMA: Time running out for ND disaster aid
TOKYO - After losing its battle to make the HD-DVD the successor to the DVD, Toshiba Corp. is considering making products in the winning format, Blu-ray.
Although Blu-ray is backed by Toshiba competitors such as Sony Corp. and Panasonic Corp., Toshiba has little choice. It no longer makes recorders and players in HD-DVD. The Blu-ray alliance was more successful in wooing Hollywood studios.
The Yomiuri, Japan's biggest newspaper, reported Sunday without identifying sources that Toshiba plans to enter the Blu-ray market. Toshiba spokeswoman Yuko Sugahara would not confirm the report.
"It is true that we are being flexible in looking into such possibilities. But at this point no decision has been made," she said Tuesday.
The move would be reminiscent of Sony's strategy after its Betamax videotape standard lost to Panasonic's VHS in the 1980s. Sony ended up making VHS products.
The Blu-ray market could be too lucrative for Toshiba to pass up. The Japanese electronics maker racked up its biggest loss ever, 344 billion yen ($3.7 billion) in its last fiscal year, which ended in March.
Apart from home entertainment products, Toshiba is also a large maker of PCs, in which Blu-ray drives are slowly supplanting DVD drives. Without Blu-ray drives, Toshiba laptops could lose out to other manufacturers.




