Taiwanese Company to Mass Produce Rewritable HD Discs 120
Lucas123 writes "Ritek Corp. plans to start mass producing BD-RE and HD DVD-RE next quarter. 'Initially, however, BD-RE and HD DVD-RE discs will be pricey. The average cost per disc will remain around $10 in retail outlets, despite production costs of around $5 per disc, said Eric Ai, a Ritek representative. Prices won't likely come down until other mass disc producers in Taiwan win accreditation to make the discs, and ramp up volumes.'"
Despite? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Despite? (Score:5, Insightful)
100% markup doesn't seem bad by comparison.
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5,840,000 results != "practically nowhere"
Taiwan is NOT "Thai" ! (Score:5, Interesting)
The headline implies that Ritek is located in Thailand.
Way to go, American geography experts!
Re:Taiwan is NOT "Thai" ! (Score:5, Funny)
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That said, I think the Mexicans pretty much forget all their SOUTH American compatriots on May...uhhh...7th, or whenever Mayonaise Day is...
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Americans forget the Canadians, Canadians forget the Mexicans, who is left for the Mexicans to forget?
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Rosie? (Score:2)
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The sad thing is (Score:2)
I'm not sure if you were being funny (à la the Canada comment above), or if you actually think Thailand is an island. :(
(I do think you were going for humor, but I'm just not sure!)
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SATA/PATA HD-DVD Burners? (Score:2)
$10 for 20GB+ R/W is cheaper than a thumb drive. (Score:2)
$10 for the ability to read/write 20GB+ of stuff at a time looks pretty cheap when compared to a thumb drive that could do the same thing.
Re:$10 for 20GB+ R/W is cheaper than a thumb drive (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yeah, you can take a whole 2GB worth of pics and movies.
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The reason I originally brought it up is that back when I bought my DVD writer (early 2003), my camera had a 256 MB card. It took quite a bit longer to fill a DVD with that, and thus backing up to DVD wasn't so painful. I don't have any other sources of data that generate gigabytes and require backup; video torrents may be that size, but you have a handy backup at piratebay...
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Still doesn't make any sense. You take more pictures merely because of the size of the media? Shouldn't you be taking the amount of pictures you want to take, regardless of media? This implies that you are either taking too many photos now, or you weren't taking enough photos back then.
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Actually, it's mainly longer mini-movies. And yes, back then I could only take 10 second ones with the camera I had, so I wasn't taking "enough" back then. The current camera allows me to take movies as much as the card will hold.
Also, the pics are somewhat higher resolution, and thus larger, with my more recent camera.
Re:$10 for 20GB+ R/W is cheaper than a thumb drive (Score:2, Redundant)
RW DVDs do not last as many cycles as thumb drives (Score:2)
Re:RW DVDs do not last as many cycles as thumb dri (Score:2)
Let's just take a random guess that this has 1000 w/e cycles. If you re-wrote to this disc every business day of the year, it would take 4 years to hit its limit. I appreciate your handleing care and frugality in trying to keep something around for that long in daily use, but I'm just not so sure it's a real issue for pr
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IIRC BlueRay and HD-DVD still use UDF which has a filesize limit of 1G. While some OS-es (pre-2.6.9 linux is an example) wrote 1G files to them that was in violation of the standard and these are not guaranteed to be interoperable and readable in the future. This is an extremely annoying limitation as far as any use for backup or "my own data" is concerned.
Compared to that a thumb drive or a USB hard drive can be formatted with a files
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What's to stop you putting another filesystem on it?
UDF may be the most common filesystem, but any unix OS will quite happily read a DVD which contains it's normal format (ufs, ext2 etc)..
It's only windows that has ridiculous restrictions on which of the supported filesystems can be used on which of the supported media types.
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--Yes, this is a somewhat little-known feature of *nix OS. You pretty much set up a loopback filesystem (ext2, since 4-8GB DVD-size filesystem fsck is negligible, and you don't need Journaling on something that's going on read-only media) -- copy your files onto it, dismount the loopback, and burn it like an
--If you need to migrate the disc data to Windoze, you can u
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1. UDF compared to ISO9660 is designed as a read-write system. It is one of it major advantages (and the reason why it is worth using it on RW CDROMs instead of ISO9660). You can actually write straight to the disks instead of having to maintain multi-gigabyte buffer space. By the way, your loopback approach does nothing at all regarding the 1G limit. Your ext3fs will be limited to 1G in size because the max file you can write to the disk is 1G. In addition to that as UDF supports
Taiwanese /= Thai (Score:1, Informative)
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Yay (Score:4, Insightful)
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External HD == ($139 / 500gig = $0.27gig)
BluRay == ($10 / 25gig = $0.40gig)
Plus if you have any large datasets (HQ video renderings, databases, chess egtb's, etc) burning a optical disc after optical disc to backup 100gigs takes a while.
So I guess it depends on how much data you
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Right, just like dual-layer DVD-R's are available for $12 a spindle... oh, except they aren't.
Bet the licensing fees are kept high to ensure that burning a copy of a 8.4GB movie DVD costs almost as much as just buying the DVD from MalWart.
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Are you even reading along with the rest of us?
The original post said "12 bucks for a spindle." Now, you link to someone selling 10 discs for $15.99, and think it's a good price? It's not. It's a rip-off. Note that when people say "spindle," they usually mean 50 or 100 discs, not 10. And even with your 10-disc "spindle" you still aren't getting it for $12.
But... (Score:2)
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Options (Score:2)
If you think about it, the volume of Blu-Ray drives and media being produced means costs should come down for that format much faster than with HD-DVD.
Soon, it won't matter (Score:2)
Until then, if you're in hurry, buy whatever format for which you can find the cheapest burner.
Ritek is Taiwanese - straight from their corporate (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Ritek is Taiwanese - straight from their corpor (Score:1, Insightful)
So can confusing Taiwan and China
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That is not true at all.
Microsoft:"We're fully committed to HD DVD and have absolutely no plans to support other optical formats." [gamerscoreblog.com]
Pricey? (Score:2)
That's not pricey compared with what it is now.
This just in... (Score:1, Insightful)
I dont have an account, didnt feel like creating one just to point out American idiocy.
Um, RTFA? (Score:2)
Nice but still needs to come down (Score:3, Informative)
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--DVD+R discs are good for semi-archival storage tho, like anime / mpg movies, pic galleries, 2-4GB backups, and the like. Just don't expect them to last 100 years.
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What about Dual Layer DVDs? (Score:1, Offtopic)
But, you almost never see dual layer disks available for purchase. The few times I have seen them, they were ridiculously expensive. I heard that this was because of the patent holder limiting production or charging too high licensing. But, I don't know if that's true.
Are Dual Layer DVDs an option? Will they be coming down in price, or will we be skipping right to BR/HD-DVD w
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RE why not RW? (Score:4, Insightful)
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No, it did look like that *before* rewritable CD's were labeled RW. Not anymore.
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Naw, naw! I wuz cunfiuzing it with Rite Wunce. Iem gledd thay ficksed it.
See? Nauw itz Rite Egen.
I'm not exactly jumping up and down (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm jonesin' for these (Score:2)
Price (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, the higher the price of media, the less likely people will make backups of their HD movies. At $10 a crack, it's not too much more to buy another copy of the movie. I'm sure that benefit to copyright holders is factored into the cost of the media to some degree. The story makes mention of an accreditation process, which the studios undoubtedly have influence over (they had a say in developing the standard itself). Thus if the media isn't sold at the price the industry wants, the manufacturer could suddenly have problems maintaining their accreditation.
Dan East
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Oh Great. Even less stable media. (Score:3, Informative)
Anybody who writes DVD's already knows that there are only a couple of reliable brands of blanks, Like Taiyo Yuden.
If you want to write dual layer DVD's, and expect them to read right on home DVD players, the only brand you can trust is Verbatim.
Now we're talking about HD discs, single and dual layer? There'll be one okay provider, and every third blank is gonna fail.
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I've burned hundreds of dual-layer DVDs from various generic brands and *every single one* of them has worked perfectly fine in my home DVD player.
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Then congratulations - you have the world's most forgiving DVD player. I've tried eight different brands, and four different DVD players, and they all choke on the layer break, except for Verbatim DL's.
A quick search of forums like CD Freaks will confirm that Verbatim is far and away the preferred brand for dual layer DVD
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no layer break failures yet. Though I am only burning at 2.4x
This is on 3 different burners.
BenQ DW1640 (Plextor OEM)
LG H-12N
Pioneer DVR-111D
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I used to use Fujifilm all the time, because they used Taiyo-Yuden. Then they switched to Ritek, and I unknowingly bought a spindle. The first clue that something was wrong was that things played and copied from the DVD at inconsistent speeds. And then a couple were completely faulty and cut out 100's of MBs of data, randomly. So I ran CD-DVD Speed's Disc Quality on it and got spikes of errors everywhere, and the maximum read spead varied from 2x
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The manufacturers with at least 95% reliability ar
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*raises hand*
I'm not sure how anyone serious about burning discs can not have heard of Taiyo Yuden. Or were you just being sarcastic?
By the way, it's "your hand." Writing "you're" is a contraction for "you are," while "your" is the posessive.
RW? (Score:4, Insightful)
I only occasionally see it in stores and have never seen actual discs used in the wild.
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The ultimate here is of course DVD-RAM, but I haven't got the single disc I have to work under Ubuntu. That format is real
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Honestly though, with hard drives as cheap as it is it's cheaper to just write a script / set up a cron job to backup over the network (within a home environment).
I use some CD-RW's for compatible CD-MP3 players, and occasionally DVD-RW for temporary file storage or transfers bigger than my 1GB USB drive.
Compare that to dual-layer or lightscribe.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Dual-layer discs were running about the same, sometimes more. So that would be about 4.3Gb or 8.6Gb'ish...
$1.72/GB for a lightscribe, or $3.44/GB on the dual-layer
Now compare that to single-layer HD-DVD discs with 25GB, that's about $2.50/disc again.
Not too bad, all things considered (and now the dual-layer or lightscribe stuff has gone down too).
I wonder how much a dual-layer HD-DVD or LightScribe HD-DVD disc will run? My personal hope is that the newer format discs push the price of existing DVD's (especially dual-layer or scribeable ones) down, since I'm sticking with standard DVD-players at the moment.
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BluRay refuses porn titles (Score:1)
Here [computerworld.com]is it.
HD discs? (Score:2)
Will DL ever take off? Or will HD be mainstream by the time it arrives?