Format war

A format war describes competition between mutually incompatible proprietary formats that compete for the same market, typically for data storage devices and recording formats for electronic media. It is often characterized by political and financial influence on content publishers by the developers of the technologies. Developing companies may be characterized as engaging in a format war if they actively oppose or avoid interoperable open industry technical standards in favor of their own.

A format war emergence can be explained because each vendor is trying to exploit cross-side network effects in a two-sided market. There is also a social force to stop a format war: when one of them wins as de facto standard, it solves a coordination problem[1] for the format users.

19th century

1900s

1910s

1920s

1930s

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

2010s

See also

References

  1. Edna Ullmann-Margalit: The Emergence of Norms, Oxford Un. Press, 1977. (or Clarendon Press 1978)
  2. Quentin R. Skrabec, The 100 Most Significant Events in American Business: An Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO - 2012, page 86
  3. AC Power History: http://www.edisontechcenter.org/AC-PowerHistory.html
  4. "Paramount jumps on DVD wagon; Fox, DreamWorks still out".
  5. Bob Johnson (January 19, 2014). "The Ongoing Memory Card Battle".
  6. Shankland (November 27, 2013). "SD Card: Too bad this format won the flash-card wars".
  7. "E-commerce and Video Distribution:DVD and Blu-ray".
  8. "Warner backs Sony Blu-ray format". BBC News. 2008-01-07. Retrieved 2010-05-02.

External links

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