Dolby secures global 3-D deals
Europe, Asia and the Americas purchase screens
|
More Articles:
Most Viewed:
'New Moon' shines at box office(8026 views)'New Moon' takes opening day record(1398 views)Weitz digs 'Gardener'(935 views)Oprah gets steamy with HBO(735 views)ABC adopts 'Find My Family' show(664 views)Few frontrunners for revamped Oscars(654 views) |
It expects most of those screens to be ready when Warner's "Journey to the Center of the Earth" -- aka "Journey 3-D" -- and Belgian 3-D toon "Fly Me to the Moon" bow later this summer.
Dolby still trails far behind market leader Real D in installed screens and future commitments, but it is preferred by some exhibs, especially in Europe, because it does not require theaters to install an expensive silver screen in each 3-D auditorium, as the Real D system does.
Unlike Real D, which collects a royalty on 3-D ticket sales, Dolby sells its system outright, often to aggregators who install digital projection systems in theaters. As a result, Dolby cannot track exactly where its systems have been installed.
In another announcement made in conjunction with the Cinema Expo confab in Amsterdam, Dolby also unveiled a licensing program for d-cinema server manufacturers to support Dolby 3-D Digital Cinema playback.
Manufacturer XDC has already signed on for the program, which aims to let exhibitors put Dolby 3-D on their existing servers.







