The Most Compatible DVD Format: DVD-R 269
jbridges writes "CDR-Info tested eight types of media (two examples of each media type) using five different recorders, then tested compatibility in twenty-seven standalone DVD players and twenty DVD-ROM drives.
They determined that DVD-R is clearly the most compatible DVD recording format on the market. To assess the compatibility level of DVD Formats they created video content on a DVD writer using DVD-R/RW and +R/RW media. These discs were then played back in other DVD players and DVD-ROM drives -over a 1,000 combinations of drive, media and player were tested."
mmm (Score:3, Funny)
Re:mmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:mmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Why is there no excuse? Here is one:
DVD+R/RW is a proprietary patented format invented by Sony corporation to push DVD FORUM's DVD-R specification out of the market. They did this by making a drive (and patenting it and licensing it) that is capable of burning both formats, but crippling the DVD-R capability to half speed of the DVD+R on the same drive (4x +, 2x -, or 8x+/4x-).
Re:mmm (Score:5, Insightful)
I would want any player I buy to be compatible with Sony and Philips as well as Panasonic for the same reason that I want any memory card reader I buy to be able to read Compact Flash and Secure Digital and Smart Media AND Memory Stick.... Because I can't control what people write things on or with, but I can control whether I can read them or not.
Stop wasting your time trying to kill a format that will not go away and just embrace what is and make sure it won't cost you the ability to watch a DVD because you are stuck on your principles.
Use your $$$ to buy the writer/media you prefer and let that be your vote in the format war, but refusing to push for readers that don't choke on one disc or the other is silly. They're just readers. Panasonic making their readers choke on DVD+R discs is no better than M$ making Netscape choke on content from its website. Be better than that.
Re:mmm (Score:5, Funny)
I would say the biggest incompatibility is the author's grasp of the English language.
I have the most compatible format of all. (Score:5, Funny)
To date, I have yet to find a computer that these tablets are incompatible with.
Of course, the only thing I *do* with these computers is smash them to bits with my stone tablets when their owners owe my boss money, but you know how it is.
Maybe we will se a market standard somewhat sooner (Score:5, Insightful)
I would really hate to buy now, and in a while be the guy with that "weird" DVD that lost the market war so long ago.
Re:Maybe we will se a market standard somewhat soo (Score:2, Interesting)
In my case, the life for hardware is usually at maximum two years. So in two years I would buy a new burner anyway. I believe that this mess isn't clear until that two years has passed.
And hey, it's under $200 now anyway. The article said something about $300, but the cheapest drives are already under $200.
Re:Maybe we will se a market standard somewhat soo (Score:5, Interesting)
I , however , am a poor poor college student. I can not spare 200 Euros as easily as most people. Plus, i don't REALLY need stuff like that (even though i REALLY want it).
And the 2 year limit is relevant. I mean, my main box that i am writing right now is brand new, only 2 years old. and my other box is a 486 which , acting as an X-terminal , is perfectly ok. So, to me 2 years is nothing. To others 2 years i a life time.
(Well 2 years is a lot to me too but i pretend i don't mind
Not to mention that i will have invested time and money in the media (the disks) that in a worst case scenario will be totaly useless once my device breaks and i can neither find support nor buy a new device.
Pioneer (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Pioneer (Score:3, Interesting)
You don't know how far from the truth you are...
DVD-R media is cheaper because there are no royalties attached. DVD+R is owned by Sony corporation and they charge outstanding patent royalties on the drive technology and media manufacturing process of DVD+R/RW.
DVD-R v2.0 is the official DVD Forum Specification. The same people who created the DVD-ROM and DVD Video specification wh
Re:Pioneer (Score:4, Informative)
There are royalties on DVD-R media and DVD+R isn't owned by Sony. It's got patents from many companies combined, (like -R/-RW) but is mostly owned by Sony and Philips with Philips having the larger half. (Just like the CD).
+R is hardly a cheap knockoff, it's designed to be superior [cdfreaks.com] to -R for multiple reasons, like listed in the link, including hardware defect management and being less prone to error.
by the way, minidisk is still amazingly popular. just not in the US. japan and asia, for example, you can find almost as many minidisk products as cd products (including media). just the cd media is larger.
DVD-R/RW Is Dying. (Score:4, Funny)
This Is Because DVD-R/RW is dying.
i saw five people buying DVD+R/RW media this week. this is unequivocable data that shows DVD-R/RW is on it's way out. alan greenspan was once questioned about DVD-R/RW. he accidentally farted at the time, which can only be construed as a negative opinion. if you lay out all the DVD-R/RW discs sold since it's inception, it only covers half the area of Rhode Island. shortcomings like these are why nobody uses DVD-R/RW anymore.
Absolutely wrong - DVD-R will be here a long time. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Absolutely wrong - DVD-R will be here a long ti (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Pioneer (Score:2)
Re:Pioneer (Score:2, Informative)
I just bought a Pioneer A06 which is multiformat.
For those keeping count at home of the multiformat drives, that gives us Sony's dru500/510 series, Pioneer A06, TDK's indiDVD multiformat burner [tdk.com], and Memorex's dual format burner [prnewswire.com]. Seems like most companies are jumping on the 'both' wagon.
Re:Pioneer (Score:3, Insightful)
plus (Score:5, Funny)
Re:plus (Score:5, Funny)
Hmmm...
Me DVD's be jolly swashbucklin' sorts, matey. Arrr...
Nah...
Re:plus (Score:2)
Plus what?
"Arrrrrrrrr!"
... Hm. On second thought. No, sorry I apologize for that.
Re:plus (Score:5, Funny)
Real music pirates use DVD-Arrrrrrrr!
Re:plus (Score:2)
Re:plus (Score:3, Funny)
I don't even know how to pronounce that first word. Or did you mean to say "dee vee dee plus arr"?
Sony good (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately, that's not the creator of the player I just bought...
Does it matter? (Score:5, Informative)
The only problem with that is laptops, but slimline DVD-CDRW combo drives to retrofit to laptops are now under $200 (last time I checked, which was several months ago) and I can't immagine that a DVDRW is that much more.
Even if your drive doesn't work and you don't want to throw it away, it's possible a firmware upgrade will let it read all -R and +R media - worked for my NEC laptop. In fact it seems that some -R[W] and +R[W] writers might be upgradable to multiformat, like the Pioneer DVR 105 (identical hardware to the 106) just as soon as the hackers finish working out what needs changing in the hex image.
Re:Does it matter? (Score:4, Insightful)
The whole idea is burning discs others can read. Or are you going to buy all your clients, relatives, friends or customers new DVD drives when they cannot read your DVD+R discs?
The review was much more negative about DVD+R than the upfront review numbers say. The consumer DVD players that wouldn't read DVD+R were not obscure, but some of the most popular brands!
Re:Does it matter? (Score:5, Informative)
Do you think the results from DVDHELP are also rigged? They give pro DVD-R results as well.
DVD-R
1492 DVD Players support DVDR 90%
158 DVD Players do not support DVDR 10%
DVD+R
1057 DVD Players support DVDPLUSR 85%
182 DVD Players do not support DVDPLUSR 15%
Re:Does it matter? (Score:3, Informative)
Mine (Inspiron 5000) refuses to read disks marked as DVD+R, but has no problems with disks marked as DVD-ROM, even though they are the same in every other respect.
See "DVD+RW/+R for Linux" [chalmers.se] for more details.
Standard Answer #6 (Score:5, Funny)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=71465&cid=646
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=70097&cid=637
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:5, Interesting)
[1] And before people accuse me of piracy, I am only backing up DVDs I've purchased. I've been the victim of multiple RSDL Rotted DVDs, and had I backed them up prior to the layer separation, I wouldn't have had to re-purchase the discs.
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm all for being able to back them up; I'm not trying to make an anti-piracy/pro-MPAA point. But I am curious if the cost is currently worth it.
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:5, Insightful)
Bzzzt! Wrong! (Score:2)
I wouldn't go that far. Future generations will want to know exactly how information was extracted from Camp X-Ray prisoners so effectively.
I'm betting that they'll be a big demand for copies of that disc in history faculties and military academies in the not too distant future.
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:4, Informative)
Finally, once you start the initial backup, it's under two bucks to make a backup for each DVD you purchase. I don't think that's horribly expensive, particularly when discs go out of production all the time.
Just a matter of preference and priorities, some people might not want to pay that extra, and that's ok.
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.allmediaoutlet.com/P-DVD-R-4XP100.ht
G
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2)
Could you explain what this means a little further? Does the firmware circumvent CSS decryption allowing you bitwise access? Or is it something else?
Also, where could one find such unauthorized firmware?
Google for 'css a05 firmware'. (Score:5, Informative)
--grendel drago
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:5, Informative)
Actually there is. the DVD-R v2.0 specification specifies 4x write speed in both the drive, and the media.
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:3, Informative)
DVDShrink [dvdshrink.org] allows you to shrink any given video stream on the disc and strip out some audio streams. Sometimes you can compress the extras on a disc enough so that the main movie isn't compressed at all, yet the entire DVD (including structure) still fits on one DVD-R. Failing that, you can pick and choose Titles (basically video streams) to use, but then you lose the disc structure, menus, etc. Yo
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2, Insightful)
Personally I'm drowning in CD-Rs. Being able to cut down on my pile into 1/6th would be a big gain
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2)
Re:Standard Answer #6 (Score:2)
Sony DVD +RW/-RW (Score:5, Informative)
"The bad: No Mac support." Opps, nevermind.
Re:Sony DVD +RW/-RW (Score:3, Informative)
Link to info [iomega.com]
Re:Sony DVD +RW/-RW (Score:2)
Re:Sony DVD +RW/-RW (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Sony DVD +RW/-RW (Score:5, Interesting)
Today's lesson is that when some companies say "No Mac support," they mean, "It works, but we're too fucking cheap/lazy to support Mac users."
I put three of these drives in graphite G4s at one of my clients, and they work fine. The only problem is that stupid thick front plate on the drive tray that prevents the Mac's spring-loaded, swing-down bezel panel from closing fully. You can just carefully remove the moving portion and the spring, unless you're one of those mythical Mac users who buys the Mac for its looks instead of what you can do with it.
~Philly
DVD-RW (Score:4, Informative)
DVD Plus R (Score:5, Interesting)
DVD+RW media is (was? I don't even know since I don't buy it) expensive and significantly less comptable than DVD-R, so anyone looking to write something that could actually play in their set top dvd player pretty much needed DVD-R. I think the DVR-106's inclusion of +R and +RW is just a matter of making it look more competitive on paper. Thus I end this with a question... for anyone who owns a drive that supports both -r and +r, how frequently do you use one kind of media over another? I wouldn't be surprised if most people that own a -r/+r drive rarely use +r.
Re:DVD Plus R (Score:2, Informative)
You're spot on. I've got a Sony DRU-500A that can burn DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW and 9 times out of 10 I use DVD-R/RW. I've got a few friends that have DVD players that won't play -R/RW so occasionally I'll burn +R/RW if I'm buring something for them.
Re:DVD Plus R (Score:2)
I've copied^H^H^H^H^H^Hbacked up 35 DVDs since I got the drive. I have a Pioneer set-top player that I'd guess is 4 years old anyway, and a Playstation 2, and both play the movies without
The Washington Post's Comparison (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A
discussing his recent experiences testing a few consumer DVD recorders. He notes that the current contenders in the non-PC market are DVD-RAM/-R and DVD+RW/+R, while DVD-RW is outside contention "thanks to still-insane prices". He notes that even though DVD-RAM has better features, "The most important factor, however, is compatibility, and here DVD+RW beats DVD-RAM soundly".
So are we going to end up with consumers buying +RW/+R standalone recorders, while computer users line up behind -RW/-R based on comparisons like CDR-Info's? I really thought this coming christmas would bring DVD recording to the masses, but with this standards war continuing, I'm not so sure anymore
Re:The Washington Post's Comparison (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They wasted their time (Score:2)
Not to mention the fact that neither the numbers in the article or at dvdrhelp.com are particularly decisive as to format. 85-90% vs 90-95% compatibility is probably not the most important factor in the -R/+R decision, and the -RW/+RW compatibility data is inconclusive. I found the media cost data in the article more interesting: that's a major factor in my purchasing decision right now.
Misleading statistics (Score:2)
The first is that if you take a weighted average by player market share instead of just a straight numerical average then the numbers lean much more heavily in favor of DVD-R. In fact under such a weighted average I would expect even DVD-RW to beat out DVD+R.
The second flaw is that averaging across disc brands is completely irrelevant for most users' actual usage patterns. Most
what about DVD-RAM!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:what about DVD-RAM!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Spoiler: DVD-R=96.74% DVD+R=87.32% (Score:2, Funny)
In the future, either both numbers will go UP, or, both numbers will go down (depending on how far in the future...)
Eventually all computer media becomes an obsolete format.
Although my paper tape seems to be holding up rather nicely. Anyone have a working Teletype? It Think it might be some really good ASCII porn!
Re:Spoiler: DVD-R=96.74% DVD+R=87.32% (Score:2)
I had a full system Burroughs B700 and a full B730, terminals, drives, cpu's, manuals, everything.
You booted it from punchtape so you could then load the OS from those UFO sized disks..
I saw someone had written an app to scan papertape in on a flatbed scanner and decode it to a readable format.. So, someone did find a way to timetravel and get papertape ascii art back from the otherside.
(someone also figured out a way to scan LP's in on a flatbed scanned an
Recordable DVD tech is outdated ??? (Score:2, Informative)
could'a told you a long time ago (Score:2)
For example, an easy prediction to make today is that within 2 years, nearly nobody will be producing stand-alone USB/USB2 web cams. Virtually all web cams will be 640x480 30fps firewire web cams.
---gralem
Consider book type (bit setting) (Score:5, Interesting)
See this link. [dvdplusrw.org]
My old Toshiba SD2100 is that way. So it wouldn't play DVD+R disks that I made on my Memorex 4X DVD+RW burner (actually a rebranded NEC) until I reflashed the NEC firmware with HP firmware (written for HP by NEC). The HP firmware causes DVD+R disks to be written with a DVD-ROM bitsetting (for maximum compatibility). Those DVD+RW drives that default to a DVD+R bitsetting cause problems with old home DVD players. For what it's worth, I bought a DVD+RW only because that's what I have to use at work and I wanted to avoid compatibility issues.
Ed.
For gods sake, PLEASE, someone (Score:2)
All those tests written up for windows are utterly useless for Linux people.
Please, someone show us where these drives are tested under Linux!!!
Damn!
Re:For gods sake, PLEASE, someone (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For gods sake, PLEASE, someone (Score:2)
Re:For gods sake, PLEASE, someone (Score:2)
Besides... it's more about testing the format than the platform. Windows has far more tools available than Mac or Linux. Sad fact
I love my Mac Powerbook... even has the superdrive (DVD-R)... but there is about 10 times more software available for Windows... and it's easier to use... so that is what I use.
I watch DVDs occasionally in Linux on my x86 box with mplayer, but haven't even loo
Linux tests (Score:3, Informative)
I do all my DVD burning in Linux (in fact I have never burned a disc in Windows), and I cannot see how the system OS matters at all for compatibility testing.
The mmc optical writing command set has been standardized since forever. A drive running in a Linux system sees the exact same data coming down the wire as the same drive running in Windows. From personal experience I can attest that my own observations match up exactly with the
Re:For gods sake, PLEASE, someone (Score:2)
I get pissed when I am discriminated against by websites or businesses that say "windows only", it makes me want to sue them for discrimination.
No shit. It's the way I feel about it.
Very thorough (Score:3, Insightful)
What about media longevity? (Score:2, Insightful)
If that's the case, what kind of archival life can we expect out of the other brands? 4.7 gigs is a lot of data to go missing if a disk goes bad. I've read that burned DVD's are more fragile than CD's and just bending them while taking them out of the case can ruin a disk.
Are we going to have to re-burn all our data every 10
Marketing... (Score:2, Insightful)
DVD-R/W is the best format to use with other DVD-players and DVD-ROM, and has the cheapest media.
The companies behind DVD+R/W has done better marketing, and have got bigger companies with them, like Microsoft.
And we shall not forget that most people are stupid when it comes to technology (!). This is exactly the same that happend when "we" choose VHS instead of Beta.
Just look at the history of Microsoft. They was allways a step behind on everything but marketing. People saw
Re:Marketing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Marketing... (Score:2)
The problem with your argument is that +R/RW is the better technology. The only thing -R/RW has going for it is that Apple picked it.
Argh!!! (Score:2)
Interesting (Score:4, Interesting)
Never! (Score:2)
The most famous home movie ever filmed (Zapruder) was 8mm B&W, so... so... so... THERE!
ObHa: Ha!
Note to future equipment testers of the world (Score:2)
They're virtually impossible to tell apart in rapid scanning.
Use "PASS" (not "PASSED") and "FAILED". The length differences alone will provide ample visual cuing to reviewers.
Re:Note to future equipment testers of the world (Score:2)
I too had a lot of trouble reading the player breakdowns because "OK" and "NO" look too similar (especially with the microscopic fonts most websites use nowadays).
bogus (Score:3, Informative)
They only used two -R/RW recorders, two +R/RW recorders, and one that can do all of them.
Not for long. DVD+RW will eventualy win. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't care which one is more compatible (Score:2)
Booktype field + why DVD+R/RW is becoming popular (Score:5, Informative)
Most DVD writers have the ability to let you force the writing of a certain booktype field. Many of the players in the test which failed to read +R discs are likely to have done so because their firmware refused to play based on the booktype field. Setting the booktype of a +R disk to DVD-ROM or DVD-R would probably narrow the compatability gap significantly.
An excellent technical discussion of this and other issues appears on this page [chalmers.se], near the bottom of the page.
Second point - DVD+R/RW is becoming more popular because, outside of just compatability, there are some other subtle (or not-so-subtle, depending on your application) technical advantages. The biggest one is the ability to do fine resolution (a few bit-times) lossless linking in all recording modes.
Again, the above page has an excellent technical discussion of this near the bottom (section labeled "What does the + in DVD+R/RW stand for").
The bottom line is that due to the way lossless linking is performed in DVD-R in DAO mode (the most video-compatible mode), compatibility is dependent on linking data being "corrected away" by the ECC, whereas in +R/RW, the links are physically so small that a +R sector with a link is logically indistinguishable from a DVD-ROM sector.
The primary importance of all this is that it allows real-time low-bitrate MPEG data, say from a capture card or from the internet (which will inherently cause buffer underruns due to it's low bitrate), to be directly written to DVD with compatability as high as if the data were first all written to a file and then written to DVD at once. Companies like Dell, etc., must feel that this will become a big consumer advantage because of the large amount of disk space and added inconvenience required to first store the MPEG in files and then write them to DVD.
There are also some other subtle techincal advantages which can be seen from the above document.
So, for consumers who want to do things like capture video from their camcorders and copy it to DVD in a simple manner, +R may be the best choice as long as their player is compatable (which it likely is since the compatibility gap isn't that big), whereas for someone who is producing DVDs which are to be distributed to many people with no knowlege of which player they have, -R may be better, although they could always increase compatability of +R by using the booktype field.
Re:Booktype field + why DVD+R/RW is becoming popul (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Booktype field + why DVD+R/RW is becoming popul (Score:4, Insightful)
I wondered when somebody would mention the technical advantages of DVD+R and DVD+RW. There are good reasons why Philips and partners have taken a different route.
Mount rainier support could - when implemented correctly (grumble grumble, stupid writer programs cannot get _anything_ right) revolutionize the PC world. Finaly a large size format that you can burn easily and take to friends, modify and take back.
Maybe the DVD-R is slightly more compatible and more cheap, but are we going to make the VHS mistake all over again? With the next protocol already?
Cmon guys, vote for the better one of the two!
Re:Booktype field + why DVD+R/RW is becoming popul (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't help but feel that your comparison of the DVD format situation is a bit backward.
DVD-R is the VHS in the situation yes? DVD+R is the Beta right? Well which won that one? VHS won, not because it was better, it clearly wasn't, but because it was cheaper and more compatible. Beta was better, but more expensive and quite proprietary.
I keep hearing from p
Why VHS=DVD-R (Score:4, Informative)
DVD+R/RW has some subtle technical advantages that may turn out to give it a similar edge for consumers, like the ability to directly record variable bitrate MPEG in real time in a mode that is still highly video compatible. It's still a gamble for Phillips et al - nobody really knows whether this will end up being a big consumer advantage, but folks like Dell apparently think so, potentially enough of an advantage to overcome the slight compatibility gap. In addition, that compatibility gap is only going to get narrower (actually, better for both formats), because virtually all players being made now can play anything, and what gap exists is largely solvable with the booktype field
Still, If I were producing DVDs for distribution to many people, and I didn't want to worry about setting booktypes, it makes sense to choose DVD-R/RW at the current time. This may change though in another few years when almost everyone has replaced their really old players and the compatibility gap has narrowed to statistical insignificance.
Out of curiosity (Score:2)
Provably DVD*R
or DVD^R
Re:Duh? (Score:2)
Re:Duh? (Score:2)
Re:Duh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Everything they tested was new, modern toys. Did they bother to mention how much of that stuff was explicitly designed to read DVD-R/RW discs? No. They didn't test compatibility; they tested supportablity.
Re:DVD-R most compatable?? (Score:3, Flamebait)
Your specialised knowledge doesn't make this general article less relevant for us--only for you.
Re:DVD-R most compatable?? (Score:5, Informative)
+R/RW proponents seem to think that +RW is more compatible than -R/-RW, and that it will be the standard that wins. OTOH, CDRINFO seems to be saying that *both* formats seem to have wide backing in the industry, and that the -R and -RW formats are more compatible than their + counterparts. The media for both are widely available cheaply, but -R/-RW being slightly cheaper than +R/RW
The article also points out that there seems to be a group of +R/+RW fanboys out there. Whether these guys are really zealots, or it's just astroturfing from Phillips, one can only guess.
CDRinfo has been fair and objective, and their methods seem fairly scientific. I applaud them, and say "It's about frickin' time!"
Re:Funny disc (Score:2)
Re:Funny disc -Try this site before you buy (Score:2)
It saves the repeat visits to the store returning devices [techtv.com] that will only do 1/2 of what they lead you to believe they do.
Re:Funny disc (Score:2)
It's not universal. My DVD player will read CD-R but not CD-RW.
Re:Personally... (Score:4, Funny)
;-)