Blu Ray Disc: The Next Generation (1 Viewer)

KB824

Senior Member
Sep 16, 2003
31,789
#21
Umm, actually, blue ray players can't play HD DVD's. It would sort of defeat the purpose of having competitive formats if one player could play them both. And for the record, Samsung make some of the best DLP projection HDTV's on the market. I'm a proud owner of a 56" 1080p DLP HDTV, and its fantastic.
 

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KB824

Senior Member
Sep 16, 2003
31,789
#23
Blu Ray does look slightly better than HD-DVD, especially on a TV running at 1080p. Where I think Blu Ray will have a distinct advantage over HD DVD is cost efficiency of the discs themselves. You would be able to put a whole season of shows on a single dual-layered Blu Ray disc.
 
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Rhizoid
Oct 3, 2004
1,121
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #26
    MrsPado'sShoes said:
    Umm, actually, blue ray players can't play HD DVD's. It would sort of defeat the purpose of having competitive formats if one player could play them both. And for the record, Samsung make some of the best DLP projection HDTV's on the market. I'm a proud owner of a 56" 1080p DLP HDTV, and its fantastic.
    Actually from what I've heard/read is that Blu-ray machines will be backwards compatible so that people wouldn't have to throw away their existing DVD collection.

    As for your Samsung, as much as it is a quality product, you must repent for your sins :D

    Seriously, not being bias...but re HDTV's Panasonic's image quality is slightly better than Samsung's. Especially when viewing things from different angles. (anti glare)
     

    mikhail

    Senior Member
    Jan 24, 2003
    9,576
    #28
    Long term, holographic data storage will cap both of these. They're talking tens of Tb per disc.

    It just happens to be my area of research. :biggrin:
     

    KB824

    Senior Member
    Sep 16, 2003
    31,789
    #30
    Rhizoid said:
    Actually from what I've heard/read is that Blu-ray machines will be backwards compatible so that people wouldn't have to throw away their existing DVD collection.

    As for your Samsung, as much as it is a quality product, you must repent for your sins :D

    Seriously, not being bias...but re HDTV's Panasonic's image quality is slightly better than Samsung's. Especially when viewing things from different angles. (anti glare)
    It actually doesn't play HD DVD's. Does it play standard DVD's?? Absolutely, just not the HD ones.
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    #31
    Rhizoid said:
    Seriously, not being bias...but re HDTV's Panasonic's image quality is slightly better than Samsung's. Especially when viewing things from different angles. (anti glare)
    Right, because when you want to know about technical issues, the best person to ask is the sales department :p :D
     

    Cronios

    Juventolog
    Jun 7, 2004
    27,519
    #32
    mikhail said:
    Long term, holographic data storage will cap both of these. They're talking tens of Tb per disc.

    It just happens to be my area of research. :biggrin:

    how can you translate this "long term"
    year/decade/generation?:D
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    #33
    mikhail said:
    Long term, holographic data storage will cap both of these. They're talking tens of Tb per disc.

    It just happens to be my area of research. :biggrin:
    Holographic storage, isn't that what Blueray does? I thought it was..
     
    OP
    Rhizoid
    Oct 3, 2004
    1,121
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #34
    MrsPado'sShoes said:
    It actually doesn't play HD DVD's. Does it play standard DVD's?? Absolutely, just not the HD ones.
    I'll ask our expert in the office, and get back to you on that one tomorrow...:) (I'm in charge of Digital/Video cameras)
     
    OP
    Rhizoid
    Oct 3, 2004
    1,121
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  • Thread Starter #35
    Martin said:
    Right, because when you want to know about technical issues, the best person to ask is the sales department :p :D
    Or someone who works in their marketing department ;)
     

    mikhail

    Senior Member
    Jan 24, 2003
    9,576
    #37
    Martin said:
    Holographic storage, isn't that what Blueray does? I thought it was..
    No. The big deal about blu-ray is the wavelength of the laser used is shorter (blue, in fact!) and that lets you pack data in tighter. HDS stores data in the volume of a disk, unlike the stuff people use now (CD -> Bue-ray/HD) which store it on the surface (well, under a protective layer, but still on one plane, if you get me).
     

    Martin

    Senior Member
    Dec 31, 2000
    56,913
    #38
    You know I remember reading an article about this Hungarian? scientist who basically invented a new method of storage all on his own (website didn't mention any other names or entities), which I *think* was supposed to be holographic. Many years later, I heard about Blueray and somehow connected the two, but it's a span of maybe 6-7 years so my memory is rather hazy on the specifics.
     
    OP
    Rhizoid
    Oct 3, 2004
    1,121
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #40
    RIght, I know I said a couple of days, but I've got the definitive answer. Blu Ray machines can NOT play HD-DVD.

    The aim of this is to completely eliminate that part of the competition from the market so that Blu Ray replaces all other formats, while still backward compatible with the initial DVD format.

    This is the ideal Blu Ray home theater system. :touched:



    The best quality Blu Ray disc covers will look a little sum'in like this. :D

     

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