HP Backs Blu-ray Disc Technology 185
neutron_p writes "Finally HP announced plans to include Blu-ray Disc drives across many of its product lines, including select consumer desktop and notebook PCs, personal workstations and digital entertainment centers. They will start selling PCs equipped with Blu-ray Disc drives in late 2005. An optical disc technology, Blu-ray Disc is poised to replace current DVD technology and become the next standard for personal computing data storage and viewing high-definition movies. More than 70 of the world's leading technology and entertainment companies have committed to the Blu-ray Disc format. Recently, Sharp unveiled Blu-ray disc recorder with Hard Drive/DVD which will be introduced on the Japanese market in December."
Real Wikipedia Link (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Real Wikipedia Link (Score:1)
Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
How the heck could you know what to use, but not know what a Sharpie is?
Re:Uh oh (Score:3, Insightful)
not...
an...
American...
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Re:Uh oh (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
And, yes, you are an American, or at least you spell your words that way...
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
SHARPIE.
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
Re:Uh oh (Score:2)
If you just say "marker", somebody might think you're talking about one of those short, thick things you hold like a piece of chalk. If you want to get pedantic, call it a "marking pen", to distinguish it from a fountain pen, a ball-point pen, or even a quill pen.
Digital tuner included? (Score:1)
Re:Digital tuner included? (Score:3, Funny)
CS110 is a beginners entry level computer programming course.
The implication is that whether you are an expert on computers or not, you can use this product.
Re:Digital tuner included? (Score:1)
Re:Digital tuner included? (Score:2)
Punching it into google gets me a lot of hits for satellite pages, so I suspect that it means that it can be used with a satellite signal as well as terrestrial signals.
Re:Digital tuner included? (Score:2)
OTA HD is only broadcast from Tokyo and Osaka for now. BS reaches the
Re:Digital tuner included? (Score:1)
Actually, it does not. People use the term 'terrestrial' to refer to OTA (over the air) broadcasts, but that word does not mean 'over the air'. Terrestrial means 'of or relating to the earth'. This is because its root is 'terra' which is (was) Latin for Earth. There are a few other, less well-known meanings for 'terrestrial' as well; in biology it means 'living or growing on land, not water' and as a noun, it can be used to describe a deniz
My cynical side squirms... (Score:5, Funny)
With all that storage George Lucas will still find a way to re-re-re-release the bastardized Star Wars movies one-per BluRay disc and people will still buy them. "More Ewoks! More pouty Anaki! More lifelike JarJar! All in THX certified Dolby Megadigital 24+3 Digital Sound!"
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:1, Offtopic)
He's already preparing for and HD release. When he set up for the current DVD set, it was all produced in HD for subsequent release.
Sorry, but the current DVD release of Star Wars (original trilogy) will definitely NOT be the last o
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:2)
Now put the LOTR trilogy on one Blue Ray and that will be slammin.
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:1)
A typical movie DVD can store up to 8.5 GB.
These new Blu-Ray discs can store up to 54GB.
That's roughly six times the storage. The LOTR: The Motion Picture Trilogy (Special Extended DVD Edition) [google.com] - no, I'm not making that name up - is 12 discs. Looks like you'd still need two BDs.
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:2)
Re:My cynical side squirms... (Score:2)
And people will over-analyze each change and bitch bitch bitch!
HP Hacks Blu-Ray (Score:5, Funny)
Oh! (Score:2)
Same here! In fact, it wasn't until I just read your comment and looked back at the title, carefully, that I realized the word wasn't "Hacked". Here I thought there was some fancy reverse-engineering going on, and I just didn't see it in the blurb.
Could HDDVD/BR acceptance be a bad thing? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Could HDDVD/BR acceptance be a bad thing? (Score:2)
Re:Could HDDVD/BR acceptance be a bad thing? (Score:2)
Re:Could HDDVD/BR acceptance be a bad thing? (Score:2)
HD-DVD (Score:4, Interesting)
studios letting their short-term lead slip (Score:1)
Re:HD-DVD (Score:2)
IIRC, those three make up for the majority of DVDs being released.
When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's how it's always been, really, from Beta v VHS to DVD-R vs DVD+R, the latter of which resolved itself by having everything read/write everything else (+/- is pretty much irrelevant).
That's how it will be with the next gen. Whoever gets their stuff out there will get bought.
The PC market desperately needs some sort of cheap media that stores in the 10s of gigs. Even if it's only useful as an affordable/practical backup/archive system for home users.
By the time I could afford a DVD-R, it's paltry 4.5 gigs was too small to be useful backing up 160gigs of drives.
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:5, Informative)
Technically there are some differences ...
+R media has better multisession support. With many sessions, it uses only 2 MB overhead on the disc (per session) for whatever data they use to link sessions. In contract, -R media uses much more data in the border zones. (It varies per session, but 3 sessions will have up to 132 MB of overhead.)
Most people don't know that a -R disc holds slightly more data than a +R. It's about 5.5 MB. I was astonished when I found out. Go look up the specs and you will see that this is true. This is not too relevant unless you are trying to back up a DVD that has so much data in 1 layer that it goes into this 5.5 MB limit.
Optical Issues: There are weaknesses in the design of the optical properties. The explanation is long and I really don't understand everything [cdfreaks.com].
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:1)
The +/- thing is only an issue to folks burning discs for their modded XBoxes or PS2s, the way I see it (PS2s tend to prefer -, or XBox prefers +).
For most all real life purposes, I can just buy whatever pack of discs are cheapest, make sure they have the letters "DVDR" in that order, and not worry about the technical differences.
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:2)
Personally, I have never had problems reading either format, but I have clients who have had problems giving DVD+R masters to duplication houses, where DVD-R masters are fine.
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:1)
Still, I don't think that makes much of a difference, if at all, in the consumer world. I mean, the entire TV industry always used Beta, but it didn't make a bit of difference in the marketplace.
When it comes to burning your home videos or
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:2)
Agreed. And agreed.
"For most all real life purposes, I can just buy whatever pack of discs are cheapest, make sure they have the letters "DVDR" in that order, and not worry about the
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:2)
That would be Pioneer. Have fun importing their discs that are sold only in Japan. :P
My advice for purchasing DVDR media is the following:
1) Made in Japan = Taiyo Yuden, Ricoh or Pioneer = Excellent media, regardless of the name brand. Usually at retail it's sold as Fuji or Maxell.
2) Made in Singapore = Genuine Mitsubishi Chemicals = Very good media, usually sold as Verbatim
3) Made in Taiwan =
Re:When are you going to get your info right? (Score:2)
Re:When are you going to get your info right? (Score:2)
Yeah, I didn't state that clearly enough. DVD-R stores about 5.5 MB *more* than a +R. I was certain it was a lie/hoax when someone first told me, but it is the truth.
For reference, a DVD-R stores 4,707,319,808 bytes and a DVD+R stores 4,700,372,992 bytes. This is in actual usable user space. Try googling for these numbers, you will see. (OK, I did the math, it's more like 6.6 MB difference as op
Re:When are we going to see it on the shelves? (Score:2)
DVD is the standard and will be for 5 to 10 yrs (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:DVD is the standard and will be for 5 to 10 yrs (Score:2)
May help in choosing formats... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:1)
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
You are implying that the DVD+RW format was somehow superior to DVD-RW. What makes you believe that?
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
DVD-RW is like writing to a CD.
DVD+RW uses a random-access disk-like structure.
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
With almost identical features.
Last I checked, CAV recording was not supported by any current hardware. Plus, it's not possible for DVD+R. It's also not a major advantage (or DVD-RAM would have beaten them both).
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:2)
The two continually leap-frog each other. Neither has an advantage over the other in speed. I think it's rose-colored glasses that make you think so.
Found by some, contradicted by others. The fact is, both are very close in compatibility, even in old players.
Re:May help in choosing formats... (Score:1)
There was no winner, just a tie.
Neither was clearly a "better technology". They're both about the same, slightly different. Everything else you heard was marketting hype, which is what HP was apparantly good at (convincing you they chose the better technology).
why blue ray is necessary (Score:4, Insightful)
2. DVD video just doesn't scale. Sure, dvds look great on your 10 year old 30" behemoth tv set in the den, but try watching them on a new million inch HDTV... you can see with your own eyes that the MPEG2 compression just isn't so great. even with fancy progressive scanning and other image enhancement algorithms, the quality just isn't there especially when compared to higher resolution HDTV. whats needed is less compression and higher resolution video. and that requires more storage space. HD-DVD is one solution and Blue Ray is another. which spec is better is an academic debate for another post.
you want to know where the early adoption will be? home theatre. not computers.
backups (Score:4, Insightful)
By the time backup media that is large enough to back up your current hard drive is cheap, you will have upgraded to a new hard drive with a capacity such that it will no longer be practical to back up with that media.
Ok the phrasing needs some work, but thats certainly been mycase. When I had a hard drive that was only four gigs, cd-r's looked perfect. It would only take six of them. By the time I got one I had a 30 gig hard drive. But then it looks like dvd-r's will work as a back up. By the time I get one my hard drive is 250 gigs. So by the time I get a Recordable Blue Ray that stores 500 gigs I'm sure I'll have a 30 terrabye drive.
Re:backups (Score:2)
By the time backup media that is large enough to back up your current hard drive is cheap, you will have upgraded to a new hard drive with a capacity such that it will no longer be practical to back up with that media.
How about:
The available size of inexpensive, removable backup storage media will always be insufficient to conveniently backup one's data.
Re:backups (Score:2)
Re:why blue ray is necessary (Score:2)
If you want to save time, then buy a large hard drive, format it with a cross-platform readable file system and copy all the data over. Remove the HD and store somewhere safe. With a removable SATA HD caddy thingy, yo
Re:why blue ray is necessary (Score:2)
4.5 GBs is enough to be a backup medium if you have a smaller hard drive. It's not a problem if your drive is 40+GBs. By the time Blu/HD comes out, hard drives will be far larger, making them unsuitable as a backup method. Buy one extra drive for backup, or spend the money and get a tape drive.
Actually, MPEG-2 compression is very good. The problem is that
Get vendors to use it first (Score:3, Insightful)
And with Blue-Ray coming out it wont make much of a difference if the distribution channels still stick with CDROM.
Re:Get vendors to use it first (Score:1)
Re:Get vendors to use it first (Score:2)
If you could find one.
Which you couldn't.
So I bought HL2 on Steam. Didn't want to swap discs.
Re:Get vendors to use it first (Score:2)
Re:Get vendors to use it first (Score:2)
Re:Get vendors to use it first (Score:2)
Not good ones, and some of us refuse to buy crap.
Umm, no. When was the last time you saw a game box that was only as big as the minimum it needed to be? Never! They are packed in boxes that are 10Xs larger than they need to be, to hold the CD-ROM and manual.
Saving shelf space is obviously not a compelling benefit for
PR + Marketing... and a side of reality (Score:2, Informative)
Technology, especially for home theaters(as one poster put it), Will always be moving forward. But it is not the baby steps that make the majority change, it's the leaps and bounds.
A VCR to a DVD = Better picture, sound, content, and navigation. It was innova
Thermal printing? (Score:2)
So, any bets as to how they're going to do this?
My guess is they just going to put thermal printer [wikipedia.org] paper on the backside of the disks and use hardware/software like Yamaha's DiscT@2 [giles.com]. Either that, or some kind of substrate embedded in the disc on t
Re:Thermal printing? (Score:2, Informative)
A pointless stopgrap (Score:3, Insightful)
This is just not worth the effort and cost, especially when there are holographic alternatives in development that have the potential to offer over 100 times the storage capacity of a DVD.
Re:A pointless stopgrap (Score:2)
BlueRay is 25GB, or about 5x (maybe 6x).
The holographic stuff is nice, but show me a working prototype. Or better, show me something where I can buy a drive for under $500 and media for less then $5. Until then, it's just all pie-in-the-sky and I refuse to get anxious about it.
Re:200 GB / 18 GB = ~11 (Score:2)
Why do we need this (Score:2)
Re:Why do we need this (Score:2)
HDTV resolutions.
that doesn't mean that they will start putting movies on them
Sony has already committed to doing that.
most TV's don't even do dvd's justice
My HDTV supports more resolution than DVD's contain (480i). About 20% of TVs currently sold are HDTV capable, and that percentage is increasing. People that own HDTV's are prime customers already for upconverting DVD players [crutchfield.com] with fancy deinterlacers so that DVD's don't look like crap on their HDTVs. Th
Re:Screw Blu-Ray (Score:1)
Blu-Ray does not use cartridges (Score:3, Informative)
Re:backwards? (Score:3, Informative)
nope all worthless...... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:backwards? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Re:backwards? (Score:4, Informative)
If you mean backwards compatible video format, then it depends on the players hardware and not on the drive. HD-DVD has MPEG2 in the spec. MPEG2 is what DVDs use. So they will still work assuming the MPAA doesn't try to pull a fast one.
Re:backwards? (Score:5, Informative)
The DVD and CDRW units use a 'red' laser, where's blueray uses a (get this) blue laser.
Because of this, the whole focus/pit-size differences ensure that the units will not be able to read DVD/CDR. Though I'm sure someone will make a unit which supports both.
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Check it out. [findarticles.com]
Re:backwards? (Score:1, Funny)
WRONG! The blueray unit uses a higherspeed red light in it's laser!
Death toy ou!
Re:backwards? (Score:1)
Either that, or you were joking and it went completely over my head.
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Jul 15, 2004 - Philips Develops All-in-one Optical Pick-up Unit
Philips announced that they have developed an optical pick-up unit (OPU) that will be able to read and write CD-R/-RW, DVD+R/+RW and the next-generation optical disc format Blu-ray Disc (BD). With its new OPU81, Philips has created the first important building block of the all-in-one recorder that can record and playback all popular consumer optical formats. By integrating the infrared, red and blue wavelength lasers and
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Oh come on... (Score:1)
...anyone?
I know what you're thinking, but that whole Betamax thing really wasn't our^H^H^Htheir fault...
Re:backwards? (Score:2)
Re:Format bloat? (Score:2)
Except it probably wouldn't be able to read Advanced Optical Discs [wikipedia.org]. Yay for format wars!
Re:Format bloat? (Score:2)
CD - 3 formats (CD, CD-R, CD-RW)
DVD - 6 formats (DVD, DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-RAM)
A simple extrapolation means we have to expect 9 formats for the blue ray disk.
Re:Format bloat? (Score:2)
Phart (Score:1)
Re:Phart (Score:2)
I still have an 8" floppy drive in the closet...
Just in case, you know...
Re:Phuq (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Slow Adopter (Score:2)
Ah, I get it, you mean a double density 5.25" floppy!
SCNR
Re:PlayStation 3 (Score:2, Interesting)
Who knows what that means, exactly. It would be too expensive to set up facilities to create a physically different drive and press non-standard discs, who knows what writing technology they'll use.
No doubt it'll be high-capacity.
Nintendo (Score:2)
However: The Gamecube optical discs and disc drives, developed by Matsushita/