Fujifilm Blu-ray & HD DVD Media Mid 2006 110
Michael writes to tell us TheTechLounge is reporting that Fuji Film has announced the release of Blu-Ray and HD DVD media by mid 2006. From the article: "Consumers are driving demand for interactive gaming and entertainment applications that require enormous storage capacity," noted Steve Solomon, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Recording Media Division, Fuji Photo Film U.S.A. "Fujifilm coating technology will ensure the precision and quality of signal strength in these new media formats. The success of new recording technologies depends on the availability of affordable, reliable media and our scientists are already working to perfect next-generation storage solutions, long before they hit the market."
Cool (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:3, Funny)
/sarcasm
Re:Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:2)
Re:Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:4, Informative)
2,5 years ago I bought a DVD burner for 2200,- NOK
Now I bought a much better one for 400,- NOK
Some of us are willing to pay. Yes, we're quite probably insane. I expect to get a Blu-Ray burner too before most. My 1920x1200 LCD screen doesn't have HDCP though, so well... if they want my money, it's not hard to get. I'm sure there will be other options if they aren't cooperative.
Re:Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:2, Informative)
last week, I bought a DVD burner for $60 CDN
I think you got screwed.
Re:Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:2)
It might be wise to wait for some credible reports on the life and durability of the media though.
I have no plans to buy movies in that format, at least not while there is effective DRM.
If it won't do everything (including rip) that a DVD-R does, I won't pull a DVD-R drive to install Blu-ray.
For now I'd rather see some cheap dual-layer DVD media. $2 a disc is still too much
Of course my interest might be perked up a bit if Apple announces a c
Re:Consumers Driving Demand? (Score:1)
Cool MEDIA!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Cool MEDIA!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Good thing (Score:5, Informative)
With mainstream adoption of high definition (HD) content, television sets and recording devices, consumers and retailers will need new storage technologies to handle ever-expanding digitized files. For example, a two-hour program in HD creates a digital file roughly 15-25 Gigabytes in size, or the equivalent of more than 13 hours of standard-definition TV.
I got a HDTV for the purpose of watching high definition television. True I can get HDTV cable, satellite, etc. however if I want to watch my favorite documentary, I would prefer it HD then standard, same goes for all the other movies I love to watch.
Re:Good thing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good thing (Score:1)
Re:Good thing (Score:5, Informative)
They are lying through exaggeration. When most people talk about HD, they are referring to the ATSC standard which is MPEG2 at roughly 8.5GB/hour, tops - and is often null-padded to maintain a constant-bitrate, making the effective bitrate substsantially less than 8.5GB/hour. So a full 2 hour program is 17GB.
When you look at the newer HD formats like Europe is going with, ones that implement MPEG4 or even some of the funky things that Microsoft has already released (Terminator2, bunch of IMAX, and some other hollywood/foreign movies in Europe) then it is relatively easy to get 2 hours of "HD content" on a regular single-layer DVD.
So, if MPEG4 were used to record to permanent storage, regular recordable DVD's would be sufficient.
Re:Good thing (Score:4, Informative)
In fact, arnt they using H.264 for blu-ray? Id be interested to know how large a file would be for an hours HD content (on average). Roughly 2 GB would be my guess....I may have to actually try it
Re:Good thing (Score:4, Insightful)
So, given that, for HD equivalent, we are talking 5 to 10 Mbps for h.264 for HDTV. 10 Mbps = 4.5GB/hour. So a 2 hour movie in h.264 might fit on a standard DVD, but you wouldn't have room for anything but the video track. You still need to get audio on there which is another Gig (assuming you only have one). Extras and everything else will still need to be on a second disk.
Re:Good thing (Score:5, Informative)
When you look at the newer HD formats like Europe is going with, ones that implement MPEG4 or even some of the funky things that Microsoft has already released (Terminator2, bunch of IMAX, and some other hollywood/foreign movies in Europe) then it is relatively easy to get 2 hours of "HD content" on a regular single-layer DVD.
While you are correct, the ATSC standard is also quite heavily compressed compared to current DVDs. Notice that 1920x1080 = 6x 720x480. 54GB Blu-Ray = 6x 9GB DVD. If we are going for MPEG4 in Europe, I missed it completely. TV broadcasts in my country are none OTA, none cable, I think one pan-european on satellite. The first people see of HDTV will probably be the PS3. I don't think you can tell the difference between Blu-Ray and a 9GB WMV on a 1280x720 or 1368x768 TV though, and that's what 99% of the marketed HDTVs have. On the other hand, for example Terminator 2 was released 2,5 years ago and Microsoft has completely failed to bring HDTV movies to the mass market.
Right now I don't think it's about the technology be it HD-DVD, Blu-Ray or WMV DVDs, it is about getting a solid player base deployed. Xbox 360 doesn't have the market share nor HD-DVD, Intel VIIV doesn't have enough consumer appeal, and where the fuck are the WMV DVDs, except a few "proof-of-concepts"? It all depends how long the PS3 will drag out though, they don't want to say anything at CES meaning it's quite a while off. All in all it seems to me they've all dropped the ball.
Re:Good thing (Score:1)
I saw an article that SONY had decided to stick with MPEG2 initially for HD DVD releases (of course they will use Blu-Ray format). Their thinking was that th
Re:Good thing (Score:1)
Re:Good thing (Score:2)
You ever see a Superbit DVD? They run the video at almost 9Mbps and use the other ~1Mbps for a DTS (754Kbps) and Dolby 5.1 (384Kbps) stream. There is nothing else on the disc.
The Terminator 2 HD DVD does something similar: it use WMV9 for the video and audio, meaning much more quality for the same 10Mbit data rate, and the movie is the only thing on the disc.
Re:Good thing (Score:1)
I for one.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Good god (Score:5, Funny)
I mean, it's nice to know that they predict mid 2006 for the arrival of the media, but that's really the only nugget of news in both the article and
Re:Good god (Score:5, Funny)
That's not marketing speak! That's honest journalism.
Re:Good god (Score:3, Interesting)
I expect something like "Unlike VHS and DVD, you'll be able to see the pimples on your yo
WHA? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WHA? (Score:4, Informative)
The 125 GB thing is as purely bullshit as the 30 Hz vision thing (it's a guideline, not a rule, and vision has nothing to do with scanning rates unless you're a computer) and should be disregarded completely. No one has any fucking idea what the upper limit on human information storage is.
Re:WHA? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not saying that 125GB is by any stretch of the imagination accurate, but I don't think it's meant to reflect a maximum capacity.
Re:WHA? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:WHA? (Score:2)
This sentence does not evaluate well. Putting a word in quotes (or in this case, ticks) is not valid when the meaning of that word is what has to be established by your sentence!
If you measure analog storage, then it's time-based and you have to have an idea
Re:WHA? (Score:2)
Re:WHA? (Score:4, Informative)
Sony engineers moved to 44.1KHz to make their president happy. It was as high resolution as they could get with the amount of time they needed. There were also battles to keep it at 16 bits as numerous entities wanted to use 14 bits. Thank goodness they didn't do that as that difference would be much more noticeable to the average listener than dropping from 48k to 44.1.
Not true (Score:2, Interesting)
Whoa, what's that you say? (Score:2, Informative)
1) "quantum fluctuations" - there is no sizeable portion of the neuroscience community that believe this. Quantum effects are considered negligible for neuronal behavior.
2) "calcium dendrites which are attached to neurons" - dendrites are PARTS of neurons (the part that gets input from other neurons), not something attached to them. Yes, certain dendrites are sensitive to calcium. But other neurotransmittors are just as import
Re:WHA? (Score:1)
Re:WHA? (Score:4, Insightful)
http://www.geocities.com/rnseitz/The_Great_Gray_R
"Robert Birge (Syracuse University) who studies the storage of data in proteins, estimated in 1996 that the memory capacity of the brain was between one and ten terabytes, with a most likely value of 3 terabytes. Such estimates are generally based on counting neurons and assuming each neuron holds 1 bit. Bear in mind that the brain has better algorithms for compressing certain types of information than computers do."
"The human brain contains about 50 billion to 200 billion neurons (nobody knows how many for sure), each of which interfaces with 1,000 to 100,000 other neurons through 100 trillion (10 14) to 10 quadrillion (10 16) synaptic junctions. Each synapse possesses a variable firing threshold which is reduced as the neuron is repeatedly activated. If we assume that the firing threshold at each synapse can assume 256 distinguishable levels, and if we suppose that there are 20,000 shared synapses per neuron (10,000 per neuron), then the total information storage capacity of the synapses in the cortex would be of the order of 500 to 1,000 terabytes. (Of course, if the brain's storage of information takes place at a molecular level, then I would be afraid to hazard a guess regarding how many bytes can be stored in the brain. One estimate has placed it at about 3.6 X 10 19 bytes.)"
Both from Google Answers [google.com]
Re:WHA? (Score:2)
Re:WHA? (Score:1)
All the relevant information can be found here. [imdb.com]
Re:WHA? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Easy way to read (Score:2)
Step 1: Go to Library Of Congress
Step 2: Start reading...
Step 3: Tell us when you are done.
Re:WHA? (Score:1)
Re:WHA? (Score:1)
What Would Bob Metcalfe Say? (Score:5, Funny)
So I'd, you know, save my money for now. (You'll probably need it for a new operating system anyway, based on some other stuff he was saying.)
Re:What Would Bob Metcalfe Say? (Score:3, Funny)
Its gots us a New Meme.
Sincerely,
the Slashdot Hive Mind
"ensure the precision [...] of signal strength" (Score:1, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
How about... (Score:5, Interesting)
...giving us reasonably priced dual-layer DVD-R first?
Re:How about... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How about... (Score:1)
Re:How about... (Score:1)
In the case of a factory, typically factories operate at a profit in order to recoup the cost of building the factory plus a little more. When the product being produced has a "better" replacement available, the owners of the factory are going to continue to produce until the cost at which they can sell the goods goes below t
Re:How about... (Score:1)
What you completely ignore is that the OP states "How about...giving us reasonably priced dual-layer DVD-R first?" (my emphasis). This implies that they would like market prices of Dual Layer drives to drop BEFORE the advent of HD DVD's, completely circumventing the market forces you describe in your post.
Given that, the OP does relate to production costs (ie. the c
Re:How about... (Score:1)
This is the qustion I was answering. The question was followed by an analogy speculating that the price of regular cars would not be effected by hybrid cars entering the market, which, according to economists, is false.
My response does address the OP's question that you have quoted. He is dissappointed that the price of DVD Burners isn't going to be as cheap as he wants them to be *before* a competin
Re:How about... (Score:2)
Why? If it's easier to produce single layer discs, bring them on. And if you skip the 54GB Blu-ray DLs too and go straight for single layer UV discs or whatever, I'm fine with that too. The economics of pressed and burned discs are different, and there's no reason why we have to go through exactly the same stages.
Re:How about... (Score:1)
New formats won't play in current DVD players. Dual layer burners are the norm but the media is still far too expensive for everyday use.
Fuji and the Brain (Score:4, Interesting)
It's funny that the same human brain that created this breakthrough can't match its capacity, but it is still smart enough to create a device that can.
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:3, Interesting)
This is the entire human/machine paradox wrapped up into one sentence. We posess the innovative genius to eventually create machines which are for all intents and purposes, smarter than we are. Even though these machines are smarter, will they ever match human ingenuity? Are we as a race ready to accept man-made devices that become smarter than the man w
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
Machines will never be as innovative as humans simply for the fact that they can't love, feel pain, or get drunk.
See? I did learn something from all those years of watching Star Trek.
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:1)
Yet. I'm not sure I want to underestimate human ingenuity that much. I'm not prepared to say "never." If life follows science fiction there will indeed one day be artificial humans that can do those things.
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
Blade Runner (Director's Cut) fan I see
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
My Mac OS 9 box had no trouble acting drunk.
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
So, we've used levers and machines that are much stronger than our weak bodies that can lift hundreds of tons. Even a baseball bat swung by someone is more likely to kill them than their bare fists
Even though these machines are smarter, will they ever match human ingenuity? Are we as a race ready to accept man-made devices that become smarter than the man who created them?
Again, the bat
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:2)
Just like we have nutcrackers that can do what our fingers alone cannot. The more we understand our brains, the less astonishing it would seem to beat it. Remember, we already have cheap machines that can outplay almost every last human at chess, as well as even cheaper machines that can multiple big numbers faster than any human can*.
* note that human-ca
Re:Fuji and the Brain (Score:1)
WARNING: Do not attemt to watch this whole disk it will cause you to forget everything you know.
No we aren't (Score:4, Interesting)
"Consumers are driving demand for interactive gaming and entertainment applications that require enormous storage capacity,"
Eh? What is this guy going on about? The number of pieces of media, excluding films, that come in DVD format is tiny. I admit that I haven't bought many games recently but I don't own a single one in DVD format and I don't remember seeing any that did. As for music - well enough said. So I ask you: what are there entertainment applications (not it's plural) that require massive storage?
The other thing I have a problem with is the way they bang on about perfecting the media before it hits the market. Isn't that what's supposed to happen anyway? Perhaps we have all just become used to things not working for the first couple of releases.
Re:No we aren't (Score:2)
Apart from a few hundred million PS2 and Xbox games sold over the last 5 years.
I admit that I haven't bought many games recently but I don't own a single one in DVD format and I don't remember seeing any that did.
Part of the reason could be that you're living in the US. e.g. from what I've heard Civ4 ships on 2 CDs in the US and 1 DVD in Europe (well at least I've got a DVD and I didn't
Re:No we aren't (Score:2)
Nope, I'm in the UK. I hadn't realized that Civ4 shipped on DVD (I was looking at buying it the other day as well). Yes there are a few games that ship on DVD but compared to the number that ship on CD it's tiny. Even when it does ship on DVD I'll bet that it only uses around half the space available. That then brings us round to my original question: what needs all this extra space? If most games now fit easily into 4GB why do we need 40 or more?
I'm not trying to say 4GB should be enough for anyone forev
Re:No we aren't (Score:2)
I doubt that aside from a few Japanese RPGs and some very extensive simulations (GT4 iirc was a tight fit and it uses a
Re:No we aren't (Score:1)
You might want to take a look something called the "video game console" market. The most recent home system devices (read: the last 5 years) release a significant portion of their games on DVD. As a multi-billion dollar business, it could be something worth investigating.
HVD due Q3 2006... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:HVD due Q3 2006... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:HVD due Q3 2006... (Score:2)
However, an HVD reader currently costs approximately US$15,000 , and a single HVD disk currently costs approximately US$120.
READER costs 15k? I'm sure burning a holodisc is far more complex than one/two layer discs, so I wouldn't dare to ask how much that costs. Blu-Ray burners have already been shipping in Japan at $5k range for special interest markets. Estimated cost for the PS3 BD-player is $100. HVD is off
Re:HVD due Q3 2006... (Score:2)
Re:HVD due Q3 2006... (Score:2)
So what (Score:1)
http://www.stockmarketgarden.com/ [stockmarketgarden.com]
first videos to be released on Blu-ray (Score:2, Informative)
Rings, Harry and Kong to go high-def
As studios dish slate news at Consumer Electronics Show
By Scott Hettrick 1/3/2006
JAN. 4 | The Mission: Impossible and Lord of the Rings trilogies as well as Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and Peter Jacksons King Kong all will be released on high-definition digital discs this year.
At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week, almost every studio is expected to announce the first slate of high-def digital d
See ya in '08 (Score:5, Interesting)
Balancing between DVD+ and DVD- is a pain enough as it is; having worked at both Best Buy and Wal-mart (in Electronics) for a short amount of time, the most asked question about writable media is "What's the difference between + and -?" followed by "Which one should I get?". It helps that most DVD burners are dual-format, so there isn't much of a worry about which one to buy, so after the initial explanation it isn't that much of a problem. (DVD Recorders, for TVs, tend to stick to one format for the cheaper ones, though I've found that some can record both even if they only list one.)
If HD DVD and Blu-ray are a format war, I'm living in Switzerland. Unless they create at least a reader that can read both formats (I haven't heard of one, yet), one will come out on top. In the mean time, I am not going to spend my money on media and a player that may quickly go defunct, especially if the various Hollywood studios split on which format to use (assuming they don't do both.)
I can see this being a big headache for stores- so many ill-informed (or just ignorant) consumers are going to buy one of the new discs, take it home, and be utterly miffed that it won't play on their player. They'll take it back, throw a tantrum, then pick out a different movie to exchange- and it will be in the same format as the one they just returned.
I figure it will take about two years for one of these formats to come out the winner. Unfortunatly, Sony's Blu-ray will probably take the cake, as it's being incorporated in the PS3, which could sell like the PS2 at its release. Hello, Mr. DRM!
In the mean time, since most companies will probably be wary over the format war, most movies/series will still be released on regular DVD, to the delight of myself and most consumers. It works great. The quality of DVDs are fine, in my opinion, and I don't have to worry about buying a new player (or three).
The best ending would be that both formats fail, and I don't think this is out of the question. While the "hipsters" out there may want bigger and better, middle America is a-ok with DVDs, and will probably still be by 2008. With both formats failed, either the various companies will realize that they need one standard and work together on that, or we'll just replay the whole thing over again.
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:1)
If HD-DVD wins, you don't need buy a new player. Just play the HD-DVDs in your current DVD player. Then in 2008 when the HD-DVD players are cheap, you can buy a new HD-DVD player and you'll already have a nice collection of HD-DVDs.
Blu-Ray REQUIRES a new player, HD-DVD is backwards compatible (it contains a non-HD-DVD layer)
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:2)
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:2)
Was a story here a few months ago where the "DVD compatible layer" idea was discussed...
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:2, Funny)
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:1)
Re:See ya in '08 (Score:1)
Right now, the TV equipment is similar to the broadcast/media quality. To enjoy HD-DVD/Blu-Ray, you'll need a new TV.
Some gadget freaks will pay up, but most people won't want to put down a grand just to watch films in higher quality. They'll wait until their TV dies and then get a new one.
I don't think the takeup is going to be like DVD was.
DRM and The BluRay (Score:1)
Ram Doubler (Score:1, Funny)
I wonder. (Score:3, Interesting)
Worthwhile (Score:2)
I have a very nice home theatre and a huge HDTV, but I am not going to pay out the nose for something JUST because it will be in HD (*coughXbox2*).
First off, these first gen players are going to suck. First gen DVD players? They dont upscale, they dont have any advanced features, you wont find any with DVI or HDMI, and the PQ is sorely lacking in comparison to even a cheap DVD player today. It WILL be the same with these new HD players.
truth...? (Score:1)