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Sunday, November 4, 2007

HD DVD VS BLU-RAY DISC


DVD is very successful, and would definitely be around for quite sometime. However, as implemented. It is not a high definition format instead its just a typical output video. With the new technology it is now being enhanced to provide people the best quality of entertainment they ever wanted.

All the actions, all the adventures that we have right now can definitely make you say I've got everything I want in an entertainment. But what if there is something your eyes is missing, something perfect, with 6 times resolution of standard dvd. You are about to enter to entire the new world. Collect clips of your favorite scene while the movie is playing. Go behind the scene. Change camera angle High def and fully connected online that allows you to download contents. The future of high definition is here. Everything yow want just got a whole lot better, spectacular high definition feature. You can now own the movies you want with the entire new level of interactivity. Below are the difference between Blu ray disc and HD DVD,

Blu-ray DiscIt is the next generation optical packaged media disc format. It was named as Blu-ray for the reasons that the laser beam which reads the data from the new discs is blue violet instead of red. This so called blue laser disc technology has a shorter wave length than a red laser, that makes it possible to read data with greater precision. The format was developed to enable recording, rewriting and playback of high-definition video, as well as storing large amounts of data. Great privilege of watching

HD DVD

The HD (High-Definition) DVD standard is designed to be the successor to the standard DVD format, and is derived from the same underlying technologies. It is a next-generation optical disc format, featuring a significant increase in storage capacity facilitating support for high definition (HD) video and audio. The HD DVD name is derived from its origination as a high-definition extension of the DVD optical disc format.

Technical Specification

Storage capacity

Blu Ray Disc

25GB single layer

50GB double layer


HD DVD

15GB single layer

30GB double layer


Laser wavelength

Blu Ray Disc - 405nm (blue laser) HD DVD - 405nm (blue laser)


diameter

Blu Ray Disc - 120mm

HD DVD - 120mm


Disc thickness

Blu Ray Disc - 1.2mm

HD DVD - 1.2mm


Protection layer

Blu Ray Disc - 0.1mm

HD DVD - 0.6mm


Hard coating

Blu Ray Disc - Yes

HD DVD - No


Data transfer rate (data)

Blu Ray Disc - 36.0Mbps (1x)

HD DVD - 36.55Mbps (1x)


Data transfer rate (video/audio)

Blu Ray Disc - 54.0Mbps (1.5x)

HD DVD - 36.55Mbps (1x)


Video resolution (max)

Blu Ray Disc - 1920 x 1080 (1080p)

HD DVD - 1920 x 1080 (1080p)


Video bit rate (max)Blu Ray Disc - 40.0Mbps

HD DVD - 28.0Mbps


High-Def Market share

From the average consumer's stand-point, there is little difference between the two technologies. Both formats offer support for HD audio and video and they both have the potential to emerge as the sole successor to DVD. Some of the major differences are BD's higher production costs and superior storage capacity of 23.3GB per layer vs HD's 15GB.

Other Interesting facts:

* The Nichi Corporation, who holds the design patents to the Blu-ray's laser system, sits as an associate member of the HD DVD Promotion Group.

* Even though Apple sits on the Blu-ray Board of Directors, its DVD Studio Pro software supports authoring HD DVD media.

* Blu-ray, unlike HD DVD, requires a hard coating on its discs because it's 0.5m closer to the surface. The polymer coating it uses, called Durabis, was developed by TDK and is supposedly extremely resilient and fingerprint resistant.

* The Java platform is mandatory on Blu-ray as it's the standard for menus/multimedia (i.e. all Blu-ray systems must support JVM)

* DVD version of the Xbox 360 is rumored for the future.

* The first consumer Blu-ray device in the US market is expected to be the PlayStation 3.

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