TIF vs EPS: Commercial printing standard

I just started reviewing the Learning Photoshop CS4 Videos on Adobe TV, Specifically: 11 Saving and file formats. The person says something which surprised me when referring to file formats to save to... he referred to TIF format as the Commercial Print Standard.
I was told by printers in the past that EPS was the Commercial Print Standard because it is the language that Commercial printing devices speak. Has this changed? Or does this only refer to Commercial devices such as office color printers & laserjet printers as opposed to web, sheet feed printing presses?

>Maximum quality jpeg compression on EPS is still one of the most efficient ways to achieve much smaller file sizes, with no PRACTICAL loss in image quality. It doesn't seem possible to achieve the same thing in either jpeg native or compressed TIFF.
You have settings off if the JPG compression in an EPS file is better than the JPG compression in a JPG file. EPS (like PDF) is simply a container format. Your JPG compressed EPS files are simply
containing JPG files. Imagine losing a whopping 2-10kb if you broke that JPG free from the excess EPS wrapper! Your JPG files should be smaller.

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