





Holy disc shit, Sony-man, Y248,000 to Y286,440!

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Major Japanese filmmakers Toho Co. and Toei Co. will support the "Blu-ray Disc" technology developed by companies led by Sony Corp. and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. as the next-generation DVD format, the Sony-Matsushita camp said Tuesday. In a battle to win support from Hollywood studios, considered key to which technology will be the next-generation DVD format, both Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD have acquired nearly an equal share of the U.S. DVD software market. Walt Disney Co., Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. and other companies back the Blu-ray Disc format, while HD DVD supporters include Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures.
Apple Computer Inc said Thursday it will support the Blu-ray format for next-generation DVDs, which is being promoted by an alliance of companies led by Sony Corp and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co.
[...] TDK has announced a four-layer BD [Blu-ray Disc].
The disc uses TDK's Durabis coating, announced last January, which finally allows BDs to be used without a protective cartridge, though they remain rather less resilient to scratches than DVDs.
Getting discs up to 100GB and beyond - 200GB appears to be the limit - was always part of the Blu-ray plan. TDK has talked about making 100GB BDs in the past. Alas, today's announcement, made in Japanese-language newspaper Nihon Keizai Shimbun, gives no indication as to when these discs might actually appear on the market.
(Full Story)
gives no indication as to when these discs might actually appear on the market.
The storage specialist will initially offer a removable system based on 300GB media and capable of transfering data at a rate of 20MBps
However, the company said the technology, designed by InPhase Technologies, is capable of achieving 1.6TB per disk - and that's uncompressed capacity - with a 120MBps bandwidth.
Neo-Rio wrote:However, the company said the technology, designed by InPhase Technologies, is capable of achieving 1.6TB per disk - and that's uncompressed capacity - with a 120MBps bandwidth.
this makes me angry. Of course, they wouldn't make as much money out of product upgrade and release cycles if they just jumped to the full 1.6TB and didn't start at 300GB and work their way up there over a period of years.
Neo-Rio wrote:Still, 300GB is a LOT of space.
Over the holiday, unconfirmed Japanese reports flew around stating that Blu-Ray discs would have North and South America in the same region as Japan and the rest of Asia. Currently Japan and Asia are a seperate region from North and South America.
The Blu-ray format has gained the upper hand in the battle for next-generation DVD supremacy, Japanese press said Sunday, after Warner Bros. said it would only support the technology developed by Sony. The announcement dealt a hard blow to the HD-DVD format, promoted by a group led by Japanese electronics giant Toshiba, which the press said may now be hard-pressed to regain momentum among consumers. "With Warner Bros siding with the Blu-ray group, the battle over the next generation DVD standard is gradually becoming a one-sided game," said the Asahi Shimbun. Warner Bros., which previously supported both formats, announced on Friday that it would release its films exclusively in Blu-ray beginning later this year, "in response to consumer demand". Blu-ray will enjoy exclusive support from four of the six major Hollywood movie studios, with only Universal Pictures and Paramount Pictures supporting HD-DVD...Toshiba is now expected to further promote installation of HD-DVD drives in personal computers, targeting users who watch movies on their PCs, the Nikkei business daily said. "The core of its turn-around plan is to capture those who watch DVDs on personal computers, a popular practice in the United States," the newspaper said...more...
Toshiba is now expected to further promote installation of HD-DVD drives in personal computers, targeting users who watch movies on their PCs, the Nikkei business daily said.
American Oyaji wrote:I would like to see Blue-Ray get this, if only as vindication for the Betamax issue.
FG Lurker wrote:Sony shot themselves in the foot over Betamax and they have managed to repeat this fuckup over the years in much the same way. Trying to maintain too much control and force proprietary standards down the throats of the public.
I despise Sony. Besides the proprietary angle (Betamax, Memory Stick, MP3 players that don't play MP3s, etc etc etc), the overall quality of their products is horrific and their warranty service even worse. "It's a Sony"? "It's a Piece of Shit".
The two remaining studios backing HD DVD could switch sides soon, ending the high-def format war instantly. Daily Variety has confirmed that Universal's commitment to backing HD DVD exclusively has ended. And Paramount has an escape clause in its HD DVD contract allowing it to release pics on Blu-ray after Warner Bros.' decision to back that format exclusively...more...
Charles wrote:Well I'm for BlueRay because I'm always against Microsoft. The HD DVD format was an attempt by Microsoft to squash Java (again). They wanted their MS BDi interactive format instead of the BD-J format Java apps.
Also BD ROM video is based on the open H.264/AVC codec instead of the (Microsoft proprietary of course) VC-1 codec used in HD DVD.
But I think everyone is rooting for BlueRay because it's already been cracked.
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