New Blu-ray Details Emerge
Specifics have been murky about how the Blu-ray Disc format can succeed DVD by enabling the recording of high-definition content. But the companies behind the format have recently tipped their hand to their strategy, including future enhancements.
Source: PCWorldDVDs don't have the storage capacity to accommodate an entire movie in high-definition format but Blu-ray Disc does. That's largely because it uses blue lasers to read and write data on the disc, rather than the red lasers used by DVD. A blue laser makes a smaller spot on the disc surface, which means the space required for one bit of data is smaller--and more data can be fit onto a 12-centimeter disc. Another format, HD-DVD (High Definition/High Density-DVD), is being promoted by NEC and Toshiba for the same application and is battling with Blu-ray Disc for the market. Players based on that format will be available in 2005, the two companies said at a seminar in Tokyo in July.
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Who do you think's going to win now?
KF
(For those who don't know, Betamax was the technically superior format, but VHS won anyways..)
License-free media is what wins, and as usual, Sony doesn't have it.
and i'm liking the open standards that sony is famous for ignoring
Dual laser drives for reading/writing CD's and DVD's have been around for awhile now. What makes you think drive companies can't build drives with a blue laser and a red laser in the same drive?
My money says this is going to be like the DVD+/-R format war. Neither will win, both will coexist.
-drasnor
It could be possible that the new blue-ray drives will have a seperate red laser to read older discs.
However from a marketing standpoint, I simply think Sony would rather prefer to corner the market on the new technology, leaving "Legacy equipment" behind because it means more people purchase Blu-Ray gear.
BTW: Sony is notorious for trying to lock in technology. They will ultimately fail in that regard if they continue to ignore it. I laughed when they came out with MD digital players.