Combined DVD Burners Coming Soon 299
MonMotha writes "Sony recently announced plans to make a DVD burner capable of supporting both the - (DVD-R and DVD-RW) as well as the + (DVD+RW and DVD+R) standards for burnable DVD media. This move could spur the adoption of DVD burners, which have been poor sellers so far, partly due to the lack of a single standard for writable and rewritable media. The drive will not support the older DVD-RAM due to it's plastic casing."
ahh, cost (Score:1)
Re:ahh, cost (Score:5, Interesting)
In comparison I have seen CD-RW drives for $80 and media for under $1 a disk. The price differential is simply not justified by a mere ten-fold increase in capacity. It is pretty obvious that the price of the drives will be slashed to reasonable levels before they catch on on a scale large enough to make the media affordable.
The big problem is that there is absolutely no backup media on the market that is as cost effective as an IDE hard disk drive! An IDE drive with a capacity of 120Gb can be bought for just over $1 per GB and requires only a $20 caddy to make it into a removable medium. If they would make them hot swappable there would be no reason to use anything else. They are faster than and have a higher capacity than tape drive systems costing tens of thousands. Best of all even if a drive fails entirely you have a chance at recovery - try that with a mag tape that has been chewed in a faulty drive.
I tried to explain this idea to the Iomega investors some time ago when they were convinced that everyone would be queuing up to buy Jaz and the clik! disk would be taking over the world. DVD-RW still suffers from the same sort of economics as the Jaz drive - media too expensive to use as a backup, drive system too expensive.
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
Something about the math is not working out for me here.
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
CDs are out of the question (can you say 170 CDs!!)
A DVD-R drive (right now) costs the same or more than the drive, then you have to buy the media, and you don't want to buy the cheapest right, because it's a backup. And it still takes like 24+ disks to do a backup.
So the only viable option for backup is DDS tape. Which you need like $4000 just to get going. So the backup costs over 10x the media?!?! Most places simply CANNOT affort this, it's not an issue of will not. You can buy like 4 whole systems for that.
So what do you do. Well you just buy another drive for $300, put it in another machine, and work up a system whereby it's mostly isolated from the system it's backing up. (off-site being ideal.) You could even buy 2 or 3 and not even come close to the price of the DDS solution.
At some point DDS becomes economical, say if you have 15 120GB drives to back up, but if you only have one sometimes you just can't justify it. Also there is some breakpoint in how much that data is worth. If it's worth enough, yes you should probably have it on tapes in a saftey deposit box or something.
Don't forget Firewire. (Score:2)
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
Now a hard drive on the other hand, Bill says to Sally from accounting, "take this to Ted in IT while you're headed over there"
Sally drops the drive "Oops, I better not tell Bill or Ted"
Of course, Ted get the drive and its dead. Tape on the other hand, if Sally dropped it, would be fine, even if the case cracked, so what, open another tape, switch the reels, no biggie. Hard drive platters don't take switching quite as well, and data recovery, in a clean room, ain't cheap.
This also is the reason that backing up to optical media makes sense a lot of times, most of my real serious backups have at least one copy on optical (meaning CD) media.
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
Lets go over the many things wrong with your "arguement".
The original discussion was using IDE hard drives as opposed to DVD. So we should be discussing this in relevant sizes (around 4.7gigs)
5gig tapes fly for around $5
new 5gig hard drives aren't available anymore so you're likely to buy at least a 40gig, smaller ones are too hard to find. So I can understand why you choose that.
But, what if your project is only 5gigs? So you've got 8days worth of backup on your single drive. I've got 8 days on 8 tapes. Which is more reliable from your standpoint.
I'm also amazed at the amount of time you spent on CDW, seeing as how you choose the cheapest IDE hard drive and the most expensive 50gb tape.By the way why did you choose 50gb when 40gb tapes are more common and cost so much less?
So let me correct your error by supplying you with the least expensive 40gig tape:
Verbatim 40GB 4MM Data Cartridge, single: $18.21
I hope they don't have to correct these sort of errors at your place of employment too often
You seem like a cost sensitive guy, so you're probably not paying for offsite storage of your backups, maybe you bring them home with you, I know plenty of people that do. Bill does it.
Have you seen Bill's driving, the guy is a nutcase. I don't even want to imagine how many times those tapes have flown around his backseat or trunk. I'm not about to trust IDE hard drive backups to Bill's driving.
And have you met Sally in accounting? Have you seen how Sally treats her floppy disks? She doesn't treat my tapes much better. Yeah, I've dropped hard drives too, but not as much as I've seen tapes abused.
Tapes are easier to store as well. I also like how you didn't touch the fact that data recovery on a broken tape is worlds easier and less expensive than that of a hard drive. I don't know about you, but if the guy doing data recovery on my hard drive isn't grounded in some way, I'm pretty annoyed.
Btw, DVD-R/RW writters got for $300 and sometimes less. Media is $5 a disk.
But hey, you use whatever you want for backup.
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
But who would do that (one week on a single HD) and consider it a backup? Of course, MORE MEDIA is more reliable than less media, which is why you mentioned having mirrored backups on Optical in your last post. *Unless that's not SUPPOSED to be a question ;)
I'm also amazed at the amount of time you spent on CDW, seeing as how you choose the cheapest IDE hard drive and the most expensive 50gb tape.By the way why did you choose 50gb when 40gb tapes are more common and cost so much less?
So let me correct your error by supplying you with the least expensive 40gig tape:
Verbatim 40GB 4MM Data Cartridge, single: $18.21
Err. There's no such thing as a 40GB 4mm tape. That's COMPRESSED. 4mm only goes to 20GB, which is why I COMPLETELY ignored that section, and picked the cheapest AIC tape, (Since you can just select 'lowest price first') which DOES have >20GB capacity, and compares nicely with the cheapest 40GB hd. My current position requires me to backup 20GB. I don't assume that I'm going to get ANYTHING other than what the media is rated for. Why should I get caught in the morning, with the drive beeping for a second tape? So going to AIC/DAT tapes is just logical (unless you want to get into multiple tape drives, what are those again, $500 each? Or 6 HD's?)
Tapes are easier to store as well. I also like how you didn't touch the fact that data recovery on a broken tape is worlds easier and less expensive than that of a hard drive.
I just find that odd. If a single days worth of data is THAT valuable that it can't be recreated, it's not just on the RAID and on tape, it's in another location. Then you don't HAVE to worry about data recovery...
I don't know about you, but if the guy doing data recovery on my hard drive isn't grounded in some way, I'm pretty annoyed.
We won't get into the security/liability issues of Bill and Sally wrecklessly handling your company data (I mean, if you KNOW Bill is a drunk, why'd you let him drive the truck for the glass company?)
Re:ahh, cost (Score:2)
For my purposes shutting down the machine to mount and dismount backup media is perfectly OK. And yes I would use the same strategy in a production environment, only I would use a couple of high end EMC storage cluster devices. Thing is that tape backup is even worse value when you go to the real high end stuff. I have used multi-million dollar tape robot systems and they tend to suck.
I believe the drive caddy makes it so you can plug the "backup drive" in and out without rebooting the server
Well you can get a caddy that does that but why the drive manufacturers can't get a clue and just fix it is beyond me.
What I want is a 120Gb removable drive in my PVR. Then I will store all my movies on it.
CD? (Score:1)
---
Re:CD? (Score:2)
Floppies (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Floppies (Score:2)
DVD's are really nice for recording. My biggest problem though is the lack of standard and the lack of support in older DVD players (especially cheap ones).
My DVD player will play VCDs (but not CDRs, CDRWs, or any recordable DVDs). What's the point? If I shell out $400+ for a recorder am I going to be stuck w/something that I am only going to be able to use on limited hardware? Will we have to forever deal w/this?
Re:Floppies (Score:2)
Can't find a floppy? (Score:1)
Re:Floppies (Score:3, Informative)
You know, I had this same problem. I was trying to install Linux on an ancient HP Omnibook laptop, and of course its floppy drive had long since bit the dust. Proprietary laptop floppy drives, if you haven't noticed, are very expensive, even on eBay, even for 5+ year old models.
At first I just boot-strapped my way up to Linux from dos, which worked until I managed to get the computer into an unbootable state. Then I bought those laptop-ide to normal-ide adaptors (whatever they're called) and plugged the old hard drive into my desktop when necessary.
But alas, at long last, I found Smart BootManager [gnuchina.org]: a flexible bootloader that allows you to boot from floppy, cdrom, and hd, regardless of your BIOS. This thing is perfect for old PCs. Heck, it will even adjust the year on your bios, for those stupid Award bioses that turn anything from 2000 up into 1994 (i.e., my old 486).
I found out about this from Debian [debian.org] (yay Debian!) which includes it on their install cdrom.
There may be better solutions out there, but this works perfectly for me. Also, the site doesn't seem to have been updated since Feb 2001, so it's probably a dead project.
Anyway, you dd it to your MBR (or use the install program?), make sure your lilo/grub/whatever is installed to the boot block of your root partition (instead of the MBR), and you're set. Boot from a cdrom on a 486!
Hm, it suddenly strikes me that this is probably off topic...
Re:Floppies (Score:2)
(Even my XT's clock card and my 286s know the right year. What's Award's excuse??)
modern floppies (Score:1)
with the "keychain USB flash storage thingys" multiplying size every couple monthes or so, why DO you need to shell out that much dough for DVD burners?
i mean, i can get 512MB worth of go-anywhere storage on a key chain. OR i can get credit card sized CDR worth 30M or so for a quarter or so each. so... what's the benefit of a 5 dollar DVDR disk again?
i'd say money is better spent on wireless connectivity, bluetooth and the like, which is more convenient, less hassle, and no ongoing maintainence cost (media).
for archival purposes (the above has been regard to data-sharing), get a second hard disk. i am willing to say that everyone (personal use) has the CRITICAL data which would all fit onto about a CD, maybe two. kids who do video editing or whatever may need more, but then they already got DVDR and stuff already anyway... me as average joe, i am sticking with floppies.
Re:Floppies (Score:2)
Re:Floppies (Score:2)
Lots of people quote this, but no one can back it up. I seriously doubt that Bill ever said it.
I'm not an admirer of Bill, but there are plenty of legitimate reasons to criticize him rather than by putting words in his mouth.
The 640K limit is almost certainly due to design decisions by the IBM PC design team, not by Microsoft. MS-DOS did not have a 640K limit; some early 8086- and 8088-based computers ran MS-DOS with as much as 896K of RAM. IBM was just a little short-sighted in the addresses they assigned for video cards. But to be fair, back in 1980 (when the PC was being designed) it wasn't obvious to anyone that this would be a serious limitation. Most personal computers in 1980 had no more than 128K of RAM.
confusing for consumers? (Score:4, Insightful)
can you imagine? This guy wants to burn a dvd, but when he hits burn, he has 4-5 choices to pick between( DVD-R, DVD+R, etc...). While this is good for more technical people, I can't see this being a feature normal consumers would buy this for.
I personally think there needs to be one standard.
Re:confusing for consumers? (Score:1)
Re:confusing for consumers? (Score:2)
Think about it, if you are looking at buying a DVD writer, with all these confusing formats, now sony can just say "one burner that supports all dvd writing standards". If someone is looking for a dvd writer, this really is their only option to make sure that its compatible with everything.
Re:confusing for consumers? (Score:3, Insightful)
can you imagine? This guy wants to burn a dvd, but when he hits burn, he has 4-5 choices to pick between( DVD-R, DVD+R, etc...).
I think it'll actually be easier. The +/- difference is in the discs themselves - or at least, there's a difference in the discs themselves - so the chances are this burner will be able to detect what kind of discs they have and burn accordingly.
This seems like a Good Thing for non-tech users. Buy whatever disc you like, and away you go.
One can hope.
--Dan
But what about DRM? (Score:1)
i.e. preventing the drive from recording in raw mode
cost (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:cost (Score:2)
I have a 10G and a 20G HD in here. They are both hurting bad. Between SHN music and AVIs I am toast on space.
I would love to have a DVD burner and have two movies per DVD to play later. That would make my life a lot easier. I wouldn't have to be sitting there counting the MBs like I was still using my 44mb drive in 1991.
Re:cost (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:cost (Score:2)
Re:cost (Score:2)
Yes, but you can get DVD+Rs for well under $2.50 US, and DVD-Rs are even cheaper. That's under 55 cents US per gigabyte. The fixed cost (the drive itself) becomes irrelevant when dealing with any real quantity.
Besides - if the motor dies on the hard drive, or the head crashes, you're out all your data. Not good, especially for a backup storage medium. And that's not even getting into the whole DVD-Video aspect of the game =)
Re:cost (Score:2)
It really depends on how much data you have to store. If you have a lot, to recover your initial outlay of the drive won't take much doing. I do feel safer when I have thinks on optical media as well as hard drives - even entire RAID arrays can be completely trashed, and I usually end up just clearing backups on the hard drive to make room for more stuff I need..
Re:cost (Score:2)
Maybe this guy want's to enjoy near DVD quality, with the convience of fitting more movies per disc.
Speaking of which, even if you're willing to compress an hour and a half or more of video into a 700 meg package, you can then fit 7 movies per DVD instead of having to tote around a spindle of CD-r to even carry around a small movie archive.
Yes, you need a PC to play them back, but if you have a HDTV a PC is the only device that can send full resolution HDTV images to it's display currently. (as no 1080 scanline DVD players are even made, since you'd need FSAA to make the 720 scanline convervion look any better at 1080 scanlines, and only a $300 PC graphic card can do that, with 1080 scanline HDTV output.) and yes, you'd have to pay the full price of yoru DVD-r drive in media (and use it all probably right away) But to a quality freak DVD-r provide a practical solution to a problem (storing video content at good quality at a low price) for everyone else they're worthless though.
Re:cost (Score:2)
Besides, is a CD not big enough to store a PDF? It takes a huge ammount of data to fill a CD. Short of backing up my 100GB hard drive (which I do to another 100GB HDD) I don't have any single file, or groups of files that need more space than a CD can provide.
Re:cost (Score:2)
But if you eg want to save tv series then DVD-R is a great medium. One or two DVD's and you have an entire anime series. (Well in most cases at least.) Or two for a serie in higher quality.
Re:cost (Score:2)
The ponint when a new medium gets adopted, is about when a single file (or group of related files, such as in a program) is too big for the media. That's why iomega had success with Zip, and then CDs replaced Zips.
Hey, even if you completely disagree with that aspect, DVD media is still grossly expensive (compared to CDs), and not enough people have DVD drives yet.
Re:cost (Score:1)
yuck-o. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't wait for the day we standardize. Don't really care which wins the "war", but it needs to be one or the other.
Nobody is going to look at the label on a 50-pack in the store to see if it's a DVD-R or DVD+R. DVD recording won't take off till Bill the Accountant can walk into CompUSA and ask for a pack of DVD discs to put his stuff on without having to worry about brands and standards and all that jazz....
We just need to pick one and let the other one die off
Of course, I'd +prefer+ it to be DVD-R, just 'cuz my Apple SuperDrive^W^WPioneer DVR-A03 is a DVD-R.
Re:yuck-o. (Score:2)
As I read it, that's exactly what this new drive will be good for -- if you have a drive that can read and write both formats, then you won't care what kind of discs you're picking up. The only situation where you'd care is if you depend on some feature that only one format supports (e.g. interruptible writes on a DVD+R disc) which I suspect won't be a factor in the vast majority of cases. For Bill the Accountant who just wants to burn a backup of his PC's hard disk (or a collection of his pirated movies) one format is just as good as the other, so it'll come down to price per disc.
Re:yuck-o. (Score:2)
DVD-R's and DVD+R's are incompatible with some drives in different ways.
If one out of every 3 discs that Bill gives to Fred works in Fred's computer, he's going to assume that Bill's machine is broken. Bill will think that too, not knowing that the difference is the DVD-R or DVD+R disc he used.
*sigh* we really need to pick one and stick with it.
Standards are great. Everyone has one.
Re:yuck-o. (Score:2)
The only issue would be if Fred wants to add to Bill's rewritable DVD format. Your stated concerns would be fully addressed by this solution.
Unless Fred the Landscaper taked on double duty as Fred the Digital Media Editor.
Re:yuck-o. (Score:2)
Let's see... You can make Playstation discs, Sega Dreamcast discs (also SegaCD and Sega Saturn), Video CD's, Super VCD's, DivX versions of movies, ROM CD's for emulators, pr0n, CD-R's full of MP3's for the MP3-CD players. There are lots of uses for CD-R besides making ordinary music CD's.
Lower price will speed adoption not this (Score:2, Interesting)
But many people have CD-Rs.
DVD-R and CD-R media both cost $.2 per gig now.
The startup cost is so much it seems better
to buy a few IDE drives and wait till the price
comes down. The only good thing is the (linear)
rewriteable -RW which are as cheap as -R which is
great.
And why not include -RAM? Its media is cheaper
than +RW (the most similar), and it is so established.
Re:Lower price will speed adoption not this (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Lower price will speed adoption not this (Score:1)
AMEN! (Score:1, Redundant)
Just when you thought it was safe.. (Score:1)
Got lucky on Philips under $100 (Score:3, Interesting)
Front Line Reason (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm serious. I've owned three different CD Burners going back to the days when they started to become remotely affordable (as DVD burners are now). When I first got them, truth be told, it was for the purpose of creating mix CDs (completely legal) and burning MP3s found from the various FTP sites (this was around the time when Napster was just barely registering on geek radar, much less the public's eye). My current unit hasn't ever written a single CD with music on it (at least not for the purpose of playing in a CD player... I've probably archived an mp3 at some point). I use it heavily for backing up data, particularly TV shows that I time shift and digital photos.
But this isn't what the average Joe user uses it for. I know, I talk to them every day. They want it for music, almost exclusively for music. In fact, a lot of Joe Users aren't aware that CD burners can be used for anything else (seriously).
From Joe User's perspective, copying a CD is easy. Converting and burning an MP3 is easy. It's all done with fun, easy wizards. Drag and drop songs until the wizard says the CD is "full". Press start.
doing the same with DVDs isn't easy. First, I have to contend with running DeCSS and ripping the video off of the DVD. Assuming the source is a single layer, single side DVD, all I have to do is write and go. Assuming it isn't, now I have to split the source file into two different DVDs or recompress into a tighter space. See, all the
DVD Burners do have many great uses, just as CD Burners do, even to Joe. But for him, the gateway use is copying movies, just as his gateway use on the CD burner was copying CDs. Would he discover cool uses for his DVD burner just as he did his CD Burner? Sure. But right now it's too difficult for him to use it for what he perceives to be it's primary purpose.
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2, Insightful)
yeah, they were (Score:2)
Nobody does that with DVD-R drives currently, because it's not really possible to copy a DVD to a DVD-R and have it play in standard DVD players. So very few people want them.
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2)
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2)
but you need a hacked drive (Score:2)
Not so. (Score:2)
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2)
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2)
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2, Insightful)
As DVD burners are aimed more and more at the non-geek, so will the software. Burning your own videos to disk with easy to set up menu structures isn't too far away...
lack of piracy is still a problem (Score:2)
You can't do that with DVDs. You can't take a DVD, copy it to another DVD, and have it play in the vast majority of DVD players. It'll only work if you burn your own videos to DVD, or if you have a hacked player of some sort.
So in a way, the copy-protection thing is working. Sure, you can defeat it, but most people don't bother. They want a DVD that plays on their player, and it's hard to get a pirated one that does, so they just buy a legitimate copy.
Re:Front Line Reason (Score:2)
The burner/media that you can get in a standard PC cannot store CSS keys. You can't do a full bit-by-bit copy.
About damn time ... (Score:2)
And besides, Sony is the best darn electronics company on the planet (:
Maybe now I can upgrade my Sony 12x to a DVD writer. What are the speeds up to these days?
~LoudMusic
Well isn't that all nice and great... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Well isn't that all nice and great... (Score:2)
After paying over $500 for this burner, I don't see the reason to spend an additional $99 to attain the functionality that was promised with the first burner. Now, I'm sure HP is expecting us to all be used to paying more money for functionality that was promised in an earlier product (listening, Mr Gates?), but I'd like to see a little truth in advertising for once. I'm not some cheapskate looking for a free ride, I'm one of the folks who financed the R&D for the 200i with my high-dollar purchase of their first-gen product. It was advertised as being able to burn DVD-r's with a future firmware upgrade. I understand that they probably can't be held legally accountable for not owning up to that, but at least Phillips chose to take the moral high road by offering a free (as in beer) trade-in for first-gen purchasers of their own DVD+RW product. I wouldn't even mind paying the shipping to send the drive to HP, where they could either modifiy the drive (with a warrantee of course) or send me a new drive with the promised functionality. You know, advertisers should really be jumping all over this kind of thing, as it hits them the hardest. If you cannot believe the advertisement, then it has little or no effect on your purchasing decisions. I've bought many products from HP, but as it stands right now, this will be the last. I'm not much revenue to HP by myself, but I'd imagine they've lost a large number of people who usually buy first-gen products over this.
Standards (Score:2)
If there is more than one, how can it even be standard? Sure, I realize that they individally have their own protocol [dictionary.com] , but having more than one nullifies the word standard right? Or no?
What Copyright Protection Scheme Will be Used? (Score:1)
Bad Move (Score:1)
I bought an HP... long live +R.
A good site that outlines the differences is vcdhelp.com [vcdhelp.com]
obligatory regex joke (Score:2)
"the new Sony DVD(\+|\-)R(|W) Foo2002! Now super-easy for you and your family!"
Even funnier, this won't help much with limiting the playback confusion - some of these formats are data-centric, others video player-centric... and do _any_ of these encompass the Audio standard?
Let's not forget Sony's anti-copying technology (Score:5, Informative)
It's up to you to decide whether you will support a company that is trying as hard as possible to prevent you from transfering music from your CD to your Rio or your car, or for backup purposes, etc.
It's up to you to decide whether Sony is acting in your best interest, or their own selfish interests by setting up a tollbooth on the digital highway that is becoming harder and harder to avoid.
How many of you knew that Sony was building anti-copying technology into their CD-RW burners that they are currently selling? I certainly didn't know, but since I refuse to purchase any Sony products due to their stance on "digital rights management", I am somewhat protected. By avoiding the companies that are pushing hard on drm, I am mitigating some of the damage they are doing to my ability to backup my property.
btw, have you unchecked the drm box in wmp before burning that CD? If not, you burned drm anti-copying abilities into your CDs.
See NYFairUse [nyfairuse.org] for more info.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Let's not forget Sony's anti-copying technology (Score:2)
I'll bet you can't download that MP3 to another computer, using the player as a drive to transport music.
No, I don't know this, but since it's from Sony, I'd be willing to bet that's how it works.
Yes, Sony is a big believer in DRM.
Re:Let's not forget Sony's anti-copying technology (Score:2)
Re:Let's not forget Sony's anti-copying technology (Score:2)
Sony could make a pretty convincing case that the PlayStation 2 does not compete, and is not likely confused with the computing platform PS/2. If you could copyright two letters and a number, we'd have much more serious problems on our hands.
Limited Demand, or Lack of Standards? (Score:3, Interesting)
I disagree that the lack of a single unified standard has had a significant depressive influence on the sale of recordable DVD drives. I think that it's rather a lack of demand.
In other words, how many people actually have a driven requirement to burn DVDs? While most of us geeks would think that it's an immensely desirable thing, in actuality, the average PC user doesn't have a need for DVD-R technology.
While the media has been making it sound like all the rage, home-producing video DVDs is actually not yet widespread. It's great use of quality technology, but the average Joe doesn't do it...yet.
Storage space is extremely cheap -- $100 for 120 GB IDE drives. To the average user, that's an immense, almost dauntingly large amount of space which they'll probably never use. Why spend extra on a DVD recordable drive, and several bucks each on DVD media when you don't need that much space (4.7 GB per disc, usually) in a transportable form?
The fact is, most people don't need DVD-recordable drives. If they did, they'd purchase one regardless of the lack of a single unified standard, as long as the product does what it needs to. That's a fairly typical consumer mindset with computer technology recently -- "who cares about the standards, because they'll all be different in another month!"
On the Apple side, it's profitable for them to offer DVD-R technology as a standard, because their users are typically more multimedia-centric, and have suitable user-friendly tools for the most basic to the most advanced users to utilize the technology to its fullest. For most PC-users, it's merely purchasing a machine with superfluous technology.
The great thing about standards (Score:1)
The Name? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Name? (Score:2)
Easy... Regex (Score:2)
Convert SVCD to DVD? (Score:2)
Anyone know some good software to convert SVCD to DVD Vid?
Prices,,, (Score:2, Informative)
My guess it that the price point for wide purchase of DVD Writers is $179...why $179? Well, this suggests that the $199 point would have already been reached...but most think "That's just $200"...no one want's to pay $200 for a drive....And $189 would have also been broken...but some won't buy there...and when you get to $179, you already have 3 choices under $200 and this suggest a good selection. And at the $179 price point, this suggests that there is likely to be a $169 drive in the near future...and you're no longer talking ~$200, but ~$150.
For some, media cost is a problem, but it's likely to go down as soon as ppl start buying burners.
The real problem is, lack of cheap drive manufacturers...you know, the Lite-Ons and the Pacific Digitals (Mostly repackaged Mitsumis).
The real use for DVD/R (Score:5, Interesting)
The best part about this situation is that free software already exists which can rip a DVD and compress it to fit on a 4.38Gb (4.7G) disk at the push of a button. Just hit start, flip disks 2 hours later, and hit burn. If you have a second DVD-ROM, you dont even have to hit burn - insert the two disks (original and blank), and just hit Start.
Of course, the MPAA will catch onto this soon, but its too late to introduce new counter measures. The cat is out of the bag.
Re:The real use for DVD/R (Score:2)
If you rent DVD movies at the video store...can you not simply stick it and a blank in the drive and do a straight DVD-DVD duplication? Why the ripping bit?
Re:The real use for DVD/R (Score:2)
The other prospect is to encode the movies with DivX
Re:The real use for DVD/R (Score:2)
What's the problem
Re:The real use for DVD/R (Score:2)
At this price, I will not invest on a DVD burner.
Do you here me? RIAA? No need to create a policial state. Just price your stuff right!
Way too much effort (Score:2)
Watch for Sony to introduce SVDVD... (Score:2)
The SVDVD signal will, of course, be recorded on a special third layer that cannot be seen, let alone read, by any device sold as a computer peripheral.
Re:Watch for Sony to introduce SVDVD... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, the DVD Consortium, in its "wisdom", has decided to push a competing high definition format that uses the current DVD physical layer (book 1 of the DVD spec, ECMA-267 [www.ecma.ch]), but with higher compression ratios. This seems rather short-sighted.
My experiences... (Score:2)
This summer, I was put into a position where I had to distribute about 3.2 gigs worth of material to numerous people by mail.
Borken up into somewhat logical chunks, the material took seven CD-Rs.
The solution, obviously, was to burn DVD-Rs. I was amazed at how easy it was and how effectively it worked. At 2x, I burned the material in a little over 20 minutes per disc.
In the end, I am glad I ended up paying the extra for the Superdrive. The ability to assure that most everyone would be able to read the discs in their DVD drive equipped PC was very nice.
My big comment: I see no reason for RW for most material. CD-Rs have gotten so cheap that I do not mind burning 30 megs worth of pictures to take to the local print shop for printing. I just throw the disc away after that.
I do not see a strong reason to deal with slower burn speeds and more expensive media just to be able to reuse what I now consider to be disposible media.
That might just be me.
Compatibility? (Score:2)
Don't Buy From Sony, because: (Score:2)
They add 'regioning' to their Playstation 2 games, so you can't play games from different regions on the 1 playstation. They are a member of the DVD cartel who are forcing the same regioning on DVD consumers.
They are trying to sue people for buying AND selling Playstation MOD chips.
They are the most expensive brand, but lack the quality to justify the premium.
Go with a more consumer-friendly company. They aren't hard to find...
About freakin' time... (Score:3, Insightful)
CDroms, 1x, 2x, 3x, 4x, 6x, 8x, 12x, 16x, 20x, 24x, 32x, 40x, 48x, 56x, (and the blowing one from a previous slashdot story?
CD-R, same pattern.
Guess what, yes when they did the 1x they probably didn't have a 48x machine working off the bat, but in all of the steppings you've seen above, probably only 3 stepping were required and the rest were physically locked with a firmware, etc..
Where I am going with this? Well, simple. In some cases, it's acceptable and even good to hold off technology for a buisness model to work and for a company to have enough time to do R&D and accumulate enough revenues to sustain the operating costs, that's the goal of this maneuver.
But this is where I get upset:
DVD-RW (or +RW or anything for that matter) we were promised double layer double density double sided. The only thing we got is double-crossed. Right now we're sitting on a 4.7GB medium that was supposed to be 4x that amount (or at least 2x with the double layer and you'd have to turn the disc). DVD's been around for quite a while, yet, I'm not remotely impressed by this technology anymore. I've recently picked up a 99$ dvd player (about time they came down to that price) and why did Y buy it? because it was playing CD-R, CD-RW, VCD/SVCD, MP3 and mpeg-1 video burned on joliette CD. That was the interresting part about it.
I would have been an INSTANT adopter at an overpriced range if they would have brought the technology they had promised. When the VHS VCD came out, and tapes were costing a bundle, I bought them, I loved the technology, I loved what it could bring me, and I didn't get lied to or hyped with what it would be and got 1/2 of it.
DVD, when it got out, should have been 9.4GB-ready from the start, more expensive units should have had 2-sided reader/writer and cheaper units needing to turn the disk or buy a 1sided disc. They could have segmented the market like this for the home and pro. They could have kept the readers-only for cheap for mass-adoption and everything would have worked out just fine and probably taken off more seriously. They've had to retain, and now you get technology like TIVO that records a lot more, manages better than handling 30 dvds, and just plain rocks.
Of course when they'll hit 99$ they will become interresting, but probably Hollywood will unleash that incompatible 2layer-blue-2sided-blabla laserdisc format...
Anyways my rant isn't about this stuff comming out, it's about WHEN it comes out (blattantly retarded) and how it comes out, the cutdown features, and the fact that it's almost obsolete with other technologies on the edge. Too bad they aren't getting as much competition as the microprocessor sector is getting, because today you'd have HDVD that would support full HDTV signal with full quality and not only READ about it or have one prototype if you got 5 digits to spare. oh well...
Re:About freakin' time... (Score:2)
I'm not saying it's impossible, but the technology used for CD-R/RW, DVD-R/RW, and DVD+R/RW does not lend itself well to writable double-layer media. The writing techniques would tend to affect both layers simultaneously.
Double-sided media does exist, at least for DVD-R. It's more expensive and harder to find.
What we really need is a high-density rewritable removable media that isn't pushed by the consumer electronics and motion picture industries. If we're lucky, such a thing could slip under the radar without as much pressure from Hollywood to include nasty DRM crap.
Re:About freakin' time... (Score:2)
Otherwise one of them would have done it.
I want one! (Score:2)
So far, though, I've been pretty satisfied with my Pioneer DVR-A03. It supports DVD-R/RW and CD-R/RW. I can't really say that I've missed DVD+R/RW capability.
However, having more vendors shipping DVD-R/RW drives will obviously help drive down the price.
What I really want (aside from the aformentioned sharks) is a laptop DVD-R/RW, CD-R/RW drive that will fit in my Fujtisu Lifebook P-2040 subnotebook. It came with a Toshiba SD-R2102 combo drive that can read DVD and DVD-R media (I haven't tried other DVD formats), and write CD-R/RW. But being able to burn DVD-R on the go would be a nice improvement.
Even though laptop DVD-R/RW drives have been announced, I'll probably have to wait until Fujitsu offers one for a Lifebook, because they use a custom bezel. Unless maybe I can use the bezel from the SD-R2102. Time will tell.
Market uptake has little to do with standards (Score:2)
Gee. Here was I, thinking the reason I didn't buy a DVD burner was primarily the cost of the media, compared to CD-R. As long as I don't need to master a DVD, but just need data backup, CD-Rs come at 35 cents a gig, whereas DVD-Rs are around a dollar a gig still.
So my question to myself is "Would I pay three times the money for a disc burner, and three times the price for the media, to get them on DVD format instead of CD?". My answer to that question is "no".
I don't care too much about the competing standards - both DVD-R and DVD+R can be read in a regular DVD reader, and as long as that's the case, the media format would be a non-issue when selecting a DVD burner, as far as compatibility goes.
I cannot imagine I am the only human on Earth to reason this way.
Re:Market uptake has little to do with standards (Score:2)
What, you're HUMAN? That would explain the biohazard sticker on your fridge, you inferiour member of a squeamish species! (Say THAT out loud quickly ten times!) ;-)
Re:But what about (Score:1)
WRONG:
I do agree on that it would have gained more market acceptance if it had been just one format
Re:But what about (Score:1)
WRONG:
Says who? It is used internaly by a wide variety of applications, quite handy. Just because the end user does not save stuff to it does not mean that it is not used.
Re:DVD-RAM Casing (Score:2)
Furthermore, DVD-RAM has a projected lifespan of 100,000 read-write cycles, compared to about 1000 for DVD+R/-R. So it's really an attractive format and it'll be a shame if Sony doesn't include it in their combo drive.
Re:DVD-RAM Casing (Score:2)
DVD-RAM makes for excellent jukebox archivers though.
Re:Do you really need to burn both formats ? (Score:2)