Possible solution to HD-DVD/Blu-Ray war?
Possible solution to HD-DVD/Blu-Ray war?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/5364238.stm
Inventors have come up with a design for a disc that can store copies of films in rival high-definition formats.
A US patent has been filed for the discs that could hold both HD-DVD and Blu-Ray versions of movies.
Currently movie makers and technology companies are dividing into camps that back either one or the other of the two formats.
The creation of the discs could end the looming battle over the different high-definition formats.
Format wars
The design of the disc patented in the US would have three layers. One for a standard DVD version of a film and then one for each of the competing formats.
The innovation is thought to be possible because the rival formats store data on the discs at different depths.
Using reflective films should make it possible to store data for one movie format in one layer but to see through that, if needed, to the deeper layer which has the same movie in the rival format.
The engineers behind the idea reportedly work for the Warner Brothers movie studio.
The idea could end the potential confusion that consumers face as high-definition films in different formats start to go on sale.
Few movie studios are planning to release films in both high-definition formats the majority are backing Blu-ray. Only three are backing HD-DVD.
This week movie studio Universal announced it would not support the Sony-backed Blu-Ray format.
In late September Warner Brothers will release the first movie in both high-definition formats.
For consumers the issue is made more confusing because Microsoft and Sony have backed different formats for their next generation games consoles.
Industry analysts have predicted that the confusion could mean the market for high-definition movies is stunted until one format becomes dominant.
A US patent has been filed for the discs that could hold both HD-DVD and Blu-Ray versions of movies.
Currently movie makers and technology companies are dividing into camps that back either one or the other of the two formats.
The creation of the discs could end the looming battle over the different high-definition formats.
Format wars
The design of the disc patented in the US would have three layers. One for a standard DVD version of a film and then one for each of the competing formats.
The innovation is thought to be possible because the rival formats store data on the discs at different depths.
Using reflective films should make it possible to store data for one movie format in one layer but to see through that, if needed, to the deeper layer which has the same movie in the rival format.
The engineers behind the idea reportedly work for the Warner Brothers movie studio.
The idea could end the potential confusion that consumers face as high-definition films in different formats start to go on sale.
Few movie studios are planning to release films in both high-definition formats the majority are backing Blu-ray. Only three are backing HD-DVD.
This week movie studio Universal announced it would not support the Sony-backed Blu-Ray format.
In late September Warner Brothers will release the first movie in both high-definition formats.
For consumers the issue is made more confusing because Microsoft and Sony have backed different formats for their next generation games consoles.
Industry analysts have predicted that the confusion could mean the market for high-definition movies is stunted until one format becomes dominant.
Originally Posted by SwervinCL
Neither..... Thats my solution
That is probably going to be my solution as well, at least until a clear leader emerges and there is a variety of movies available in either format from all studios. Till then, it makes no sense to buy a player for a technology that only a handful of studios are supporting, whether it's Blu-Ray or HD-DVD
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It won't make much difference because various studios are only supporting one format, so this doesn't really compensate for that.
On the other hand, I would consider buying a HD/Blu-ray combo disk since I am pretty much assured it won't go 'out of date' suddenly. But as it stands now, I'll just keep renting from netflix.
As far as if it makes sense to buy a player/drive - The bigger the screen, the more noticable the improvement. On my friend's 50" DLP, the difference was already pretty obvious (1080i). Even if HD-DVD loses, for a couple hundred bucks, it'll be fun renting them in the
meantime.
On the other hand, I would consider buying a HD/Blu-ray combo disk since I am pretty much assured it won't go 'out of date' suddenly. But as it stands now, I'll just keep renting from netflix.
As far as if it makes sense to buy a player/drive - The bigger the screen, the more noticable the improvement. On my friend's 50" DLP, the difference was already pretty obvious (1080i). Even if HD-DVD loses, for a couple hundred bucks, it'll be fun renting them in the
meantime.
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Wise words.
