14 Mar 2008 02:22:53 | Kenny Hemphill
Blu-ray is an optical disc format which is set to rival HD-
DVD in the race to be the de-facto standard storage medium
for HDTV. The HD-DVD vs Blu-ray battle resembles that between
Betamax and VHS and DVD+RW and DVD-RW.
Currently, the major Hollywood film studios are split evenly in
their support fro Blu-ray and HD-DVD, but most of the
electronics industry is currently in the Blu-ray camp. The key
difference between Blu-ray disc players and recorders and
current optical disc technology is that Blu-ray, as its name
suggests, uses a blue-violet laser to read and write data rather
than a red one. Blue light has a shorter wavelength than red
light, and according to the Blu-ray Disc Association
(BDA), which is made up of, amongst others, Sony, Philips,
Panasonic, and Pioneer, this means that the laser spot can be
focussed with greater precision.
Blu-ray discs have a maximum capacity of 25GB and dual-layer
discs can hold up to 50GB - enough for four hours of HDTV. Like
HD-DVD, Blue laser discs don’t require a caddy and the players
and recorders will be able to play current DVD discs. Codecs
supported by Blu-ray include the H.264 MPEG-4 codec which will
form part of Apple’s QuickTime 7, and the Windows Media 9 based
VC-1.
The BDA says that although blue laser discs and players are
already shipping in Japan, they won’t ship in the US until the
end of 2005 at the very earliest. It is likely that players will
be very expensive initially, compared to DVD players. In Japan,
they cost the equivalent of $2000. However, as with all new
technology, prices will quickly fall - particularly as Blu-ray
will be competing with HD-DVD for that space under your TV.
About Author :
Kenny Hemphill is the editor and publisher ofThe HDTV Tuner - a
guide to the kit, the technology and the programming on HDTV.