[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[dvd-discuss]New DVD Recording Standard Stirs Interest
- To: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Subject: [dvd-discuss]New DVD Recording Standard Stirs Interest
- From: "Michael A Rolenz" <Michael.A.Rolenz(at)aero.org>
- Date: Thu, 28 Feb 2002 08:09:46 -0800
- Reply-to: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Sender: owner-dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
Someone sent this to me...the tantalizing question will be what happens to
the old DVD standard and the CSS if the new standard simply tells the
DVDCCA to get stuffed.
==============================================================================
It doesn't have a name, and the standard is only roughly spec'd out as a
technology, but the agreement by major DVD player and recorder
manufacturers
to start building around a standard does offer a glimmer of hope that the
mess of competing DVD-recordable standards will finally be resolved. To
understand why you may not want to buy a new player or recorder for a
little
while, read the full analysis ..........................
New DVD Recording Standard Stirs Interest
February 22, 2002
By Mary E. Behr
Nine top companies have signed on to create a new DVD recording standard,
hoping to ease the current confusion in the market. Today, consumers must
sign on?by dint of the brand of recorder they pick?to one of three
standards: DVD-RAM (backed by Matsushita and Toshiba), DVD-RW (endorsed by
Pioneer), or DVD+RW (pushed by Philips, Sony, and others). Competing
standards and the still-steep prices of DVD recording hardware are serving
to hold back what otherwise looks like a breakout market.
The as-yet unnamed new standard will be cross-platform, encompassing
consumer set-top hardware and PC hardware. "The goal is to have one
standard and not have anybody jump ship on it," says Andy Marken,
communications coordinator for the Recordable DVD Council.
The nine companies are Hitachi, LG Electronics (maker of Zenith products),
Matsushita, Philips, Pioneer, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, and Thomson. Toshiba
is
not currently involved but is expected to join soon.
According to one estimate, the standard could be published as soon as
mid-2003. Whether the standard will be backward-compatible with existing
DVD formats is not yet clear.
The standard supports recording, playback, and rewriting of up to 27GB of
data. That may sound like a lot, but it boils down to 13 hours of
standard
TV, 2 hours of digital high-definition TV, or a backup of one of today's
gigantic hard drives.
In order to pack so much on a disc, the laser used to record the
information
will undergo a color change. Gone will be today's ruby laser; this new
laser is blue-violet. The format is being called Blu-ray Disc. The
blue-violet laser uses a shorter wavelength, which decreases beam spot
size
and increases recording density.
Corporate cooperation aside, blue laser production still needs to be
refined
and streamlined for better yields, says Marken. Then the market can take
off. By 2005, Jon Peddie Research predicts sales of 50 million Recordable
DVD drives worldwide, up from about 10 million units in 2002.