Bollywood Rumors > Digital Bollywood
[Keywords] In the United States, a digital roll-out has stalled while Hollywood studios and theater owners fight over who pays for top-quality computer-based projection systems that cost $80,000 to $100,000 per screen. But in the Mumbai-based film industry known as Bollywood, entrepreneurs are willing to settle for a bit less quality at one-third the cost.
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[Furdlog] Digital Distribution: Bollywoods Reaction: But in the Mumbai-based film industry known as Bollywood, entrepreneurs are willing to settle for a bit less quality at one-third the cost. They use cheap digital cinema in remote towns to cash in on blockbusters –
[Work In Progress] E-cinema: But in the Mumbai-based film industry known as Bollywood, entrepreneurs are willing to settle for a bit less quality at one-third the cost. They use cheap digital cinema in remote towns to cash in on blockbusters -- and in the process, beat back video pirates, too.
[ContentSutra :: Main Page] Bollywood And Digital Revolution: In the United States, a digital roll-out has stalled while Hollywood studios and theater owners fight over who pays for top-quality computer-based projection systems that cost $80,000 to $100,000 per screen.
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[Infoworld.com] Digital revolution set to sweep India's Bollywood | Reuters | News ...: In the United States, a digital roll-out has stalled while Hollywood studios and theater owners fight over who pays for top-quality computer-based projection systems that cost $80,000 to $100,000 per screen.
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[Techjunkeez.com] Latest tech news headlines | Tech Junkeez: But in the Mumbai-based film industry known as Bollywood, entrepreneurs are willing to settle for a bit less quality at one-third the cost. They use cheap digital cinema in remote towns to cash in on blockbusters -- and in the process, beat back video pirates, too.
[Weblog.foopee.org] Graham's weblog » 2002 » June: “The consumer electronics industry and Hollywood are struggling to come up with an answer to the question of how to keep high-quality digital television broadcasts from being shared Napster-style on the Internet, but to judge from a report issued this week, there’s still a long way to go.” [Link]
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[Cinematech.blogspot.com] CinemaTech: The Slate pieces (under the rubric of "The Hollywood Economist") are truly enjoyable reading for anyone who wants to know more about the inner workings of the movie business. Epstein sifts through all of the industry's conventional wisdom, to find quite a few surprising truths, like why Pixar can't leave Disney.
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