DivX acquired by Sonic for $326 million
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 2 June, 2010
Sonic Solutions has announced today that it will acquire digital media company DivX, merging the operations of the company into its own.
Under the terms of the agreement, Sonic will pay about $326 million in cash and stock, with DivX stock holders receiving 0.514 shares of Sonic and $3.75 cash per share. DivX closed the day trading at $8.79, after closing at $6.95 on Tuesday.
Sonic ... [ read the full article ]
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ivymike
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2. June 2010 @ 17:10 |
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Nooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Junior Member
1 product review
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2. June 2010 @ 18:46 |
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In this evening's news update, a recent poll shows that the majority of the masses still has no clue what DivX is, and the nerds who are aware of it's existence and capabilities, are, well, aware of it's existence and capabilities. That's about it.
Turning to other news, XviD, Matroska and the Pirate Bay related activities on the interwebs are continuing along in their regularly epic fashion...
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Junior Member
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2. June 2010 @ 18:53 |
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Originally posted by ivymike: Nooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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ivymike
Member
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2. June 2010 @ 19:52 |
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Personally, I like DivX. I DO NOT like Sonic. Leave it up to a company like Sonic to ruin a good thing.
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lissenup2
Suspended permanently
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2. June 2010 @ 20:46 |
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Sonic is a good company that makes comprehensive burning programs. I use it on an occasion when I need to burn something more intricate but maybe only once a year. Granted.......it's designed for the nincompoops who don't know what and how to burn vids, pics, etc.
I used to use Divx a lot but not so much anymore; how widely used is it anyway nowadays?? How many vids are actually encoded in Divx as opposed to Xvid or others? Isn't Divx kind of 'not much used anymore'??
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 2. June 2010 @ 20:47
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ivymike
Member
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2. June 2010 @ 21:08 |
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I've always had good disc burns with NERO. Sonic/Roxio on the other hand is a completely different matter. I guess I'd be just as PO'd if Sonic were to buy Ahead Nero. DivX is still widely used. You don't see any DVD Players that are XviD certified or 3ivX certified do you?
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Senior Member
5 product reviews
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2. June 2010 @ 21:31 |
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Originally posted by ivymike: I've always had good disc burns with NERO. Sonic/Roxio on the other hand is a completely different matter. I guess I'd be just as PO'd if Sonic were to buy Ahead Nero. DivX is still widely used. You don't see any DVD Players that are XviD certified or 3ivX certified do you?
Yeah, i agree with you ivymike, NERO is been an outstanding product, in terms of use, and I have seen any players with XviD/3ivX. Now, w/DivX yes, Philips has one @ Walmart for about $40, and I bought one (sadly), but reliability on it really sucked, so none since then have I even see w/DivX nowadays.
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AfterDawn Addict
1 product review
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3. June 2010 @ 00:54 |
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Yup...nero is good at burning audio CDs...that is all it does, and there are freeware apps that do it better...but nero can do it as well.
DivX sucks...there are better, open-source codecs...and most of them can read DivX files anyway.
Down with DivX, down with Nero, down with MS Office, down with all the crummy commercial bloatware that can easily be replaced by open source alternatives that work better.
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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3. June 2010 @ 07:47 |
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Originally posted by blueboy09: Originally posted by ivymike: I've always had good disc burns with NERO. Sonic/Roxio on the other hand is a completely different matter. I guess I'd be just as PO'd if Sonic were to buy Ahead Nero. DivX is still widely used. You don't see any DVD Players that are XviD certified or 3ivX certified do you?
Yeah, i agree with you ivymike, NERO is been an outstanding product, in terms of use, and I have seen any players with XviD/3ivX. Now, w/DivX yes, Philips has one @ Walmart for about $40, and I bought one (sadly), but reliability on it really sucked, so none since then have I even see w/DivX nowadays.
If it is DivX certified, then it will play Xvid usually. Unless of course the author of the encoded file has no idea what there doing..I used to have an DivX DVD Player and watched 99% of xvid files on it just fine. Just because it is advertised as DivX Compatible/Certified, doesnt mean its highly used. And the few instances I see DivX file floating around are usually older hacked versions of DivX like "DivX ;-)." How many people do you hear say I want to buy an DivX DVD Player to play DivX?
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IguanaC64
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3. June 2010 @ 09:49 |
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That was my primary criteria for purchasing a portable DVD player...yay, Philips!
You're right I don't hear anyone else talking about it being an important feature, but I also don't get involved in many discussions about divx with people...
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Xplorer4
Senior Member
4 product reviews
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3. June 2010 @ 11:35 |
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Originally posted by IguanaC64: That was my primary criteria for purchasing a portable DVD player...yay, Philips!
Its a buying factor, for geeks atleast, theres no arguing that, but the question is are people utilizing this for DivX playback or Xvid playback. My guess is the second unless of course your encoding your own movies with DivX which gives horrible results anyways.
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Ben79
Junior Member
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3. June 2010 @ 11:59 |
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I have yet to see a DivX/AVI video show the same clarity as a compressed h.264/AVC video. I'll take MKV and M4V over DivX any day. I see this as no big loss for the av-philes out there.
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ivymike
Member
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4. June 2010 @ 07:58 |
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I'll admit that the DivX codec has gone downhill over the past few versions. It does give good results but you have to know what you're doing first.
I'll probably wind up switching to 3ivX...
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TMitch
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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5. June 2010 @ 11:26 |
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I have 4 DivX certified devices, Philips is a little fussy, Samsung is a little better but i still get the odd Xvid file that will not play in these players, also have a portable Sony, convering to DivX has not failed me yet with good results. If it wasn't for the DivX standard we wouldn't have any DVD players that could play avi's (Xvid & DivX) through USB connections, etc, and they are starting to push the mkv format also (which as far as I'm concerned is to large a file for mass downloading when you have to pay for bandwith these days). I just hope Sonic doesn't ruin DivX. As far as nero goes, bloatware.
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hermes_vb
Senior Member
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11. June 2010 @ 16:03 |
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I still prefer h.264/AVCHD.
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