Apple Backs Blu-ray 491
zaxios writes "The New York Times is reporting that Apple has joined the Blu-ray Disc Association, and will use Blu-ray in upcoming versions of iMovie and Final Cut. The move puts Apple among Sony, Matsushita, Dell, HP and Walt Disney in supporting Blu-ray; companies including Toshiba, NEC, Warner Brothers, New Line Cinema, Universal and Paramount are pledged to adopt the competing HD-DVD format. Apple's support confirms Blu-ray's future dominance on the desktop, but the division in Hollywood and notebook manufacturers between the two HD videodiscs will ensure the bona fide format war we were all secretly pining for."
Lucky.... (Score:3, Funny)
um? (Score:5, Insightful)
Against the MS behemoth supporting HDDVD? Why exactly?
And mow for something completely different, who pays this site [dvdsite.org]'s bills?
Re:um? (Score:3, Insightful)
However - I would not rule out future devices that would support both standards, if they both gain good marketshare.
Re:um? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think now that Apple is supporting Blu-Ray, don't be surprised that Microsoft ends up supporting this format, too. The reasons are simple: MS wants interoperability with high-definition DVD discs created with a non-Microsoft OS, and I think Microsoft likes the higher recordable storage capacity of Blu-Ray discs, too.
Indeed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It doesn't matter (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It doesn't matter (Score:3, Interesting)
Fortunately MS is a champion of flip-flopping (Score:2)
We can expect and MS back BluRay with their new WMV codec any day soon.
Re:Fortunately MS is a champion of flip-flopping (Score:2)
Unfortunately, that will not decide the question of which standard will succeed. If IT history has proven one thing, it is that "technical merits" have no relationship with "chances of succeeding".
Maybe that will change, but I doubt it.
Re:Apple as an indicator of future dominance. (Score:3, Informative)
Today, Apple places DVD-RW drives in pro desktops and laptops. I don't know if that helps with +RW disc reading.
Re:Apple as an indicator of future dominance. (Score:3, Informative)
HD-DVD will win out (Score:4, Insightful)
Consumer: You mean this is a H D DVD. Wow I have been hearing so much about how good HD is so I want one.
Dont laugh VHS rolled of tounge better than Beta Max. One has to wonder what marketing genus wanted to call their product beta anyway
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:3, Insightful)
Beta tape was higher quality, with a crisper picture. Video professionals STILL use Beta. Objectively, it is a better tape format.
But at the time (late 1970's- early 1980's), Beta tapes could barely hold a full-length feature film. They crapped out at a little under 2 hours. Not so good for home taping.
VHS, on the other hand, had SIX hour tapes. They could easily hold an entire sporting event, several TV episodes, and a film, all on one tape.
Home Taping
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:2)
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:2)
Myth. Back in the early 80's when the VHS vs Beta wars were still hot, video stores had VHS and beta departments, both with adult film sections.
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:3, Funny)
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:3, Informative)
They use Betacam, not Betamax. It's a different format.
Video professionals aren't using Betamax (Score:3, Insightful)
Sony Professional has certainly made enough profit on those formats to make up for the Betamax losses by now.
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:3, Interesting)
It's certainly why I got an mp3 player. And a mobile phone. And a games console.
Oh no...wait...
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:5, Funny)
But you haven't seen the logo for BluRay yet. It's going to be a shark with a freakin' blue laser mounted on its head. In its teeth will be an HD-DVD.
This will scare consumers into thinking that they could possibly be attacked if they were to buy an HD-DVD.
Why betamax (Score:2)
Two reasons beta lost out to vhs, despite higher quality: Sony was restrictive in its patent licensing, and the tape couldn't record more than 2 hours.
Re:HD-DVD will win out (Score:2)
HD-DVD is more to say than Blu-Ray too, five syllables vs. two.
I do believe naming is sometimes a factor though, especially if the name has nothing to do with the technology. I was wondering what the big deal about Bluetooth was (at least it's only two syllables). Now I like the technology, for the average consumer, it's just a bit too
IBM (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:IBM (Score:2)
(Not to say somebody isn't gonna hack it and release a freedom-free version. I fully expect that to happen inside the first year.)
Re:IBM (Score:4, Funny)
BigBluRay and iBluRay.
Sounds like prison love to me.
Re:IBM (Score:2)
The invisible elephant (Score:5, Interesting)
The porn industry, which releases 11,000 titles a year, will likely silently decide which format "wins" (previous slashdot coverage [slashdot.org]).
And some of the bigger porn houses are coming down on the side of Blu-ray because of its capacity advantage over HD-DVD. That the porn industry would have such an influence comes as no surprise to those who know just how big [familysafemedia.com] the industry really is [pbs.org].
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:5, Insightful)
So, whether Hollywood likes it or not, Apple's just won the fight for Blue Ray... unless they get tricky, and simultaneously support HD-TV as well, which isn't beyond the realm of possibility.
SoupIsGood Food
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:2)
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:3, Interesting)
Also (completely different point), I see this as Apple giving support to Sony. Remember when they had the Sony VP on stage at the MWSF keynote? Now that Stringer is the new head honcho at Sony, I've been wondering if we'd see more of a patnership developing, or less.
And totally in the realm of
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:5, Funny)
Good heavens. Think about it. IBM is making the CPUs for Apple [G5] and Sony [PS3]. Could we see the ultimate mega media tech company?
Could this be end of all personal freedom?
Could Steve rule the world!
I have really got to stop watching the discovery channel.
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:5, Insightful)
Coffee spewed on monitor... (Score:2, Interesting)
Heck, she was still good looking, but somehow wasn't quite as "perfect" as the airbrushed version and I found myself definately prefering that "perfection
Re:Coffee spewed on monitor... (Score:2)
Pixar: Adult Video division.
Hmm...the Jobs conspiracy continues...
Re:Coffee spewed on monitor... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The invisible elephant (Score:2)
Great examples: the internet, computers, DVDs, VHS...
Remember laserdisc? RCA Selectavision (I hope I spelled that right)? Failed because of lack of pr0n support.
Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:5, Funny)
don't forget the MiniDisc! (Score:4, Insightful)
i type this as someone who has a few pieces of MD hardware and actually likes it.... though i think most people that use(d) minidiscs liked them. i never bought pre-recorded music but used it to replace cassettes.
Re:don't forget the MiniDisc! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:don't forget the MiniDisc! (Score:2)
http://www.answers.com/topic/atrac [answers.com]
don't forget Memory Sticks! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:2)
How about the CD, which Sony co-developed with Philips? I hear they're relatively popular.
Re:Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:2)
Re:Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:2)
Re:Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Sony & Blu-Ray (Score:2)
> I seem to remember a little thing called the 3 1/2 inch floppy diskette. I bet you think Sony really dropped the ball when they created that train wreck of a format.
And the computer on which this format made its debut was the Macintosh. (Everybody remember those lovable 5.25" floppies?)
About this... (Score:5, Insightful)
Am I on the ball here or is there really not a complete performance domination by Blu-ray?
Re:About this... (Score:2)
The whole reason why the hd-dvd standart was created in the first place was the fact that the manufactures didnt like the fab requirements for the very thin transparent layer of the blue-ray disc, so the inferior hd-dvd spec was created, which allowed for using older equipment from dvd production.
the short version...... (Score:2)
Re:About this... (Score:5, Insightful)
"One single-layer Blu-ray Disc can hold about 25GB or almost two hours of HDTV audio and video, and the dual-layer disc can hold approximately 50GB."
"HD-DVD has a capacity of 15 GB (for dual-sided HD-DVD, maximum capacity would be 30 GB)... The cover layer is, as in the case of the DVD, 0.6 mm thick (unlike the Blu-ray Disc at 0.1 mm). The numerical aperture of the optical pick-up head is accordingly the same as that of DVD player (0.65 mm). These factors mean that HD-DVD media is less expensive to manufacture than Blu-ray, not requiring the re-tooling of disc production lines (as is needed for Blu-ray discs)."
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Matsushita. (Score:2, Informative)
link [jvc-victor.co.jp]
shiny plastic (Score:2, Funny)
Re:shiny plastic (Score:2, Funny)
Well, duh! They'll be green, of course!
Re:shiny plastic (Score:2)
And maybe an LCD with multicolor backlites. But I could be wrong about that.
Re:shiny plastic (Score:2)
They'll either be white with a transparent layer of plastic over that to make it look more spiffy or they'll be brushed aluminum.
Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:5, Interesting)
Realistically, once the next-generation drives and discs are out, it will lower the price of DL media into something more affordable.
Re:Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:2)
Hardly. I read somewhere that the problems are not in the market but instead they are pretty fundamental to technology. It is apparently quite a tricky thing to do a second layer that will have the same response levels as a first one but being not just a layer of plastic away but two layers of plastic and the first reflective layer. So the cost of producing a two layer disk is much much more that producing two single-layer disks. Normal b
Re:Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:3, Funny)
Not to worry. 99% of the readership here has no other option.
"Mom, Dad. I'd like you to meet my right hand"
Re:Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:2)
And maybe an LCD with multicolor backlites. But I could be wrong about that.
Re:Sucks to be an early adopter (Score:3, Funny)
"I mean, not many girls in contemporary American society today would give their underwear to help a geek like me."
The diffrence that matters (Score:3, Insightful)
its the fact that there are going to be two _competing_ formats which means...
lower prices!
Re:The diffrence that matters (Score:5, Interesting)
As with DVD-R(W) and DVD+R(W). Prices will be similar, devices will have either singular-support, or very sketchy dual-support.
Current / Older home DVD-Players and DVD-ROM drives will either be incompatible, or very, very picky.
Prices will be in fact pretty high for a good time because take up will be slow until the 2nd gen of the technology comes through (reasonably solid dual-format writers, common and solid dual-format players).
Meanwhile, someone will have produced DivX++, that can re-encode the content of a HD-DVD or Blu-Ray DVD, allowing it to be written to a standard DVD, in a quality that is acceptable for the drop in price. It is these files that will be popular, downloaded from the net.
After a while of that, people will start to use HD-DVD or Blu Ray DVD to backup their multiple DivX++ images onto one big-ass disc.
At which point the tech companies will reveal their plans for SDD-DVD (super-duper-density DVD), and the competing standard Puce-Ray DVD. Which will be sony's concept. These discs will be the future because they hold such better-qualtiy movies, and the capacity makes piracy impractical...
And the big circle-jerk will begin again!
The Real Question (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The Real Question (Score:3, Insightful)
I always love it when people give names to products which whould seem to imply that they are "the greatest" only to surpass them within a year or three.
Sony & Apple (Score:4, Insightful)
You're all wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Format Wars (Score:3, Insightful)
So why, exactly, should I be pining for a format war?
All that means to me is several years of incompatible hardware, price fluctuation, and annoying-ass FUD campaigns ("Our discs last longer! HD-DVDs melt after three months!" "That's a lie, plus OUR discs have better color density on playback!" "Oh YEAH?? Well, OUR discs...")
A format war might drive prices down more quickly in the short term, but what good is that to me if I need to buy new hardware and don't want to get stuck with a lemon during those few years before either one format wins hands-down or dual-capability drives get introduced?
Re:Format Wars (Score:2)
Re:Format Wars (Score:4, Insightful)
The poster was being sarcastic since clearly, no one wants a format war if it can avoided.
Sony... (Score:2)
Oh Great (Score:4, Funny)
I'm really pulling for Blu-Ray. (Score:2, Interesting)
Blu-ray has several things going for it. . . (Score:5, Interesting)
Playstation 3 inclusion of Blu-ray would prove to be a massive boost for the standard as it automatically gives an instant installed base in the tens of millions. As initial players will likely be relatively pricey, it's usually difficult to start the momentum to get enough installed base on the market so that studios would want to produce content for it, and more content usually then convinces more people to buy into the standard. However, by PS3 being Blu-ray compatible automatically creates a massive installed that studios can produce content for to start the ball rolling.
Secondly, Blu-ray seems to be more scalable then HD-DVD with comapanies planning 4-layer 100GB and 8-layer 200GB multilayered disks. Also, Blu-ray seems to be getting more hardware on the market then HD-DVD, especially since Sony and Matsushita (Panasonic, Technic, Fisher, etc) are backing it. Sony has just annouced Blu-ray drive for the PC that can write to write-once 50GB disks or rewritable-50GB disks.
BLu-ray drive for PC [impress.co.jp]
My Concern Either Way is: (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is (and was/still is with DVD) that high data density makes the media far more succeptable to surface imperfections, be they scratches or dirt. Who hasn't sighed in irritation at rental DVD's that skip or blurt? And if you think DVD's are bad, just think for a minute about an optical media with 10 times the data density! Until synthetic diamond becomes cheap enough to coat consumer level optical discs with, I look forward to the return of our Caddy-Carrying Overloards.
Either that or there needs to be some SERIOUS error correction implemented. The average consumer just isn't going to want to handle a movie like it was a precious peice of china. Without some solution to this problem neither media will catch on with me. Maybe "they" are just planing on selling you a new copy of the disc every six months, but archivers and folks who use the media for data storage are not gonna like that.
Perhaps a format war is a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
By the time DVD burners reached a price point I could afford, all the format issues had been worked out. Sure, my first drive (Pioneer 104) was -R only, but by that point which format you had didn't really make difference.
Re:Not really... (Score:3, Insightful)
Just look at the history!
Re:Not really... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not really... (Score:5, Interesting)
And with something like this, it could become causation - Apple builds up a good track record of picking winners, other companies notice this, and when Apple makes their pick other companies start to mirror them based on their past performance, thus making it a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Re:Not really... (Score:3, Informative)
Yet, does anyone seriously claim that McDonald's has that much control over world events?
Yes and no. Thomas Friedman, I believe, put forth that idea years ago... but later admitted that it isn't true (after all, 19 McDonalds-laden NATO members bombed the crap out of Serbia, which has McDonalds). Interesting idea, Tom, but doesn't really pan out.
You are right that he wasn't saying that the presence of McDonalds prevented war between coun
Apple snubbing MPEG4 (Score:3, Informative)
Since when is Apple snubbing, or being snubbed by, MPEG4? [apple.com]
Re:And that is why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And that is why... (Score:2)
I seem to remember USB already being established in the PC universe when the iMac first came out. As I recall, Jobs incorporated USB because he wanted all the same cool devices available for the PC to also be usable on the Mac (with the suitable application of proper drivers, which cost little to produce). I could be wrong, but that is how I remember it.
I do know that Macs were the first computers to ship with FIrewire, as this was a technology developed by Apple.
Re:And that is why... (Score:5, Informative)
Apple was not the first to incorporate USB ports on their computers, that much is correct. However, until Apple introduced the iMac and essentially forced USB on their users, there were very very very few actual USB devices available. It was only after the iMac came out that you could begin finding USB devices in your typical computer store.
Re:And that is why... (Score:4, Informative)
The iMac was the first PC that shipped where you had to use USB because there was no other way to connect a mouse and keyboard.
Re:And that is why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Due to multiple hardware manufacturers in
Re:And that is why... (Score:3, Interesting)
-WS
Re:And that is why... (Score:2)
Try looking at anyone working with video or external hard drives - you'll find a huge preference for this 'seemingly dead' firewire. It's not dead, it's just not used for chump activities like keyboards and mice. You may be surprised to learn that basically all desktops invariably have an exte
Re:And that is why... (Score:5, Informative)
sigh...
Firewire is to multimedia as USB is to keyboards.
Seriously, Different purposes and it is the same reason that Firewire is part of every camcorder shipped today and USB is part of just about every keyboard or mouse shipped today. You could say that the floppy drive is one of the most successful devices in history because it shipped unchanged for so long, but that doesn't mean that you can use it instead of a hard-drive.
All DVDs use MPEG4? WRONG. MPEG2 is the standard DVD codec. While many newer DVD Players may support new formats such as MPEG4 or DiVX, studio productions are rarely encoded in these since they need the disk to play everywhere. Don't believe me about MPEG2... Look here [dvddemystified.com]. That is the first link I found to it, but it technically is the DVD FAQ that every site backs.
Re:Not really... (Score:5, Informative)
What are you talking about? MPEG-2 video is usually compressed somewhere between 8:1 and 30:1 [berkeley.edu]. And nobody uses it for (serious) editing. Video is often distributed in MPEG-2 just because there is a very good quality to compression ratio. It's portable, and fits on DVDs because it's compressed.
Re:Not really... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not really... (Score:3, Insightful)
What good is it to have a format, Mr. Anderson, if you have no software to edit it with?
If I had a dollar for every windows box at Pixar and Lucasfilm, plus 50 cents for every windows box at professional editing houses in NY and LA, I'd have about $4.50.
Film and TV professionals like Apple, trust Apple, and they use Apple.
Oh, and Sony has this little thing called a Playstation, which means (shazam) 50 million blu-ray boxes in
Re:Dell (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dell (Score:3, Insightful)
at some point what the masses buy will be important for burning discs, but i guess for now it is an issue what formats laptops
I'm sorry, you have a basic fact wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Now that DVD+/-R recorders have been out for 2 year, Apple is still pushing just the -R.
I know, I just bought an iMac G5 last month, and annoyingly, you have to buy blank -R's, not the more common and popular +R's.
Re:The cheap one wins (Score:2)
And -R as you saw was half the price, though they were slower
The reason +R survived was because everyone created +/- drives, as you say.
So if BluRay is like -R, it will be cheaper and more widely available and the only reason HD-DVD will survive is because dual format players will exist.
Apple DVD-R variation [bealecorner.com]
Apple finally adds DVD+R support in 2003 [com.com]
Re:The cheap one wins (Score:2)
Re:The cheap one wins (Score:2)
Re:The cheap one wins (Score:2)
Seriously, though. A single vendor (even a big, a/v production conencted one like apple) won't make or break a format. Consumer acceptance is bigger than that.
Make it universal, make it cheap, make it easy, make it good...in that order. (I toyed around with changing the order of the first two, but DishNetwork remided me tha