Industry Agrees On Next Gen Unified DVD Standard 339
scsirob writes "According to this press release the DVD recording industry will end the DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-RAM mess and standardise on a new technology called 'Blue Ray'. Blue lasers are used to record up to 27 GB on each side of the DVD. This initiative is backed by all major players in the industry. The article contains many technical details." Several other people noted that the BBC has coverage as well. Yah for non-company specific industry standards.
oOooO.. more fodder.. (Score:5, Insightful)
wonder how long it'll take for some 15-year-old to be tried as an adult and tossed in the pokey for cracking this one...
15 minutes.. a day maybe?
Re:oOooO.. more fodder.. (Score:2)
Don't CD-R(W)s already have unique IDs on them? IIRC, each writer is assigned one, and they are written to the disc.
Re:oOooO.. more fodder.. (Score:2)
Re:oOooO.. more fodder.. (Score:2, Insightful)
If this is progress, I don't want any, thank you...
Re:oOooO.. more fodder.. (Score:2)
Just patch the firmware in your standalone and replace the if-code with a few NOPs.
With future players running on more computer-like hardware and using Linux or Windows XYZ or whatever commodity operating system, you won't even need to have expensive electronics equipment.
Not for the casual copier (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, all a unique ID gets them is to know where the bulk coppier in question got the first DVD. I can see it now: "yup, we're certain that Mr. Smith bought this DVD with a stolen credit card from Amazon and had it shipped to a field in Thailand. We'll get right on it!"
Aaarrghhh.. (Score:2, Funny)
A new standard! Joy! (Score:2, Insightful)
My best friend was just telling me about how Blockbuster employees were smashing old VHS tapes with hammers instead of giving them away, just to keep the VHS/DVD market ratio more in favor of DVD. I wonder if they'll be doing the same thing for old DVD disks in favor of the new ones.
Yah? (Score:2)
Anyway, this is definetly a good thing for movies because... er... actually, I'm not sure what else can be fit on there. Perhaps more "control your own fate" type things like in those GI Joe books I read a long time ago.
Games could definetly take advantage of this (FF games could get really huge, and no 3 disc sets, although they sometimes give you nice indicators of how far you are in the game).
Maybe we'll start to see the games combined with the movies? Like you buy Gold Finger and it comes with 007 on it already? It seems like a logical leep - you get people to buy two products at once.
How much are these babies anyway? I didn't see any price tags, but I'm assuming they'd be quite a chunk of change righ now.
</rambling>
F-bacher
Re:Yah? (Score:3, Insightful)
HDTV.
Re:Yah? (Score:2)
Hmm, if this [bbc.co.uk] ever gets off the ground, it might be VHS vs Betamax all over again. This one will be won or lost on backwards compatibility, but it's not as cut and dried as that. Availability is also important in capturing market share, but then again, I'd rather wait out DVHS because the random-access of a disc is inherently better than the serial access of a tape for most users.
These could be excellent backup devices. (Score:4, Informative)
Currently, my only solution for backups of my drives are other drives. Sure, tapes work, but they take far too long. Being able to dump the essentials from my hard drive (being a 3D designer, that's easily 30 gigs of textures, models, etc) onto one disc would be a lifesaver.
Let's just hope these things aren't so crippled by the time we get them that their apparent benefits aren't overshadowed by idiotic "protection" schemes.
Re:These could be excellent backup devices. (Score:2)
Tell me what the problem is with tape again?
ostiguy
Re:These could be excellent backup devices. (Score:2)
Tell me what the problem is with tape again?
The problem is that SuperDLT drives are $4800 each. [pricewatch.com]
I want a cheap, large capacity, and fast storage medium. The only thing that even remotely fits that bill right now are other hard drives.
Re:These could be excellent backup devices. (Score:2)
Re:These could be excellent backup devices. (Score:2)
Economy of scale.
These next generation DVDs will have drives made in the millions and there will be an attempt to push them into every home. That means that within a few years of introduction, the drive will cost $100 for a cheesy model and $300 for a high-end superdeluxe version.
If SuperDLT had some kind of "dual use" to make it appeal to the mass market in addition to people who bother to backup, it would be good. But it's just used for backups, which means it's sold in the thousands instead of millions. That makes it expensive.
Heh, I remember when the whole point of tape was that it was an inexpensive way to back up... I was so smug and happy, having a $600 drive which could hold 4 Gigabytes (wow!!) on a $15 tape -- enough to backup my whole system in less than an hour. Nowdays, a suitable tape drive would cost more than all the other components in my machine(s!), combined. I wish tape guys could keep up with the hard disk guys...
FMD or Blu-ray first to market? (Score:4, Interesting)
Either way, I think that whoever is first to get a really high-capacity (tens of GB) consumer-level removable optical storage format on the market will be the one who defines the new standard, unless the later competitor is a lot cheaper or better.
Sorry, disagree Re:FMD or Blu-ray first to market? (Score:3, Insightful)
Alot of companies forget when they introduce a new technology, that it is better to agree on the standard that is going to be used and to compete on the final hardware. Good examples here are the GSM-standard and VHS-standard. There are competitors of these standards, and sometimes they are even technically better, but companies or countries investing in these rival technologies have found they lost money. This was only because the winning technology was backed broader and offered more services. (yes VHS offered a premium service that some other didn't, Pr0n).
Re:Sorry, disagree Re:FMD or Blu-ray first to mark (Score:2)
How do you explain the ZIP phenomenon? Here we have a company (Iomega) that wasn't any of the "usual suspects". They created a product that ended up as a huge success even though it was completely closed and proprietary.
Ultimately, Iomega failed because they coasted on their initial success far too long but even today you'll find ZIP drives as options on every desktop and most laptops from major hardware manufacturers. There were even some programs released with ZIP disks as a choice of installation media.
Cringley once wrote an article (I can't seem to find it at the moment) that talked about the 10x factor. If something is 10x better or 10x cheaper than existing alternatices, consumers will flock to it.
I think Cringley hit the nail right on the head. ZIP drives came out right at a time where computer manufacturers were waffling on the subject of increasing floppy capacity. CD recordables were too new and expensive and no one needed THAT much storage. 100MB was perfect and fairly resonable.
FMD easily exceeds the 10x factor. They will be the next Iomega if they can ever produce an actual product. It won't matter what the major players decide to do. People will all buy FDM drives and figure out a way to play video from that. Or they will make dual-use drives. Or people will have one FDM drive and one DVD drive just like most modern systems have one DVD drive and one CD-RW drive.
27GB is nice, but it's not 10x better or 10x cheaper than existing options. People will gradually adopt them but the market is still up for grabs to anyone who can make the 10x factor.
- JoeShmoe
.
Re:Sorry, disagree Re:FMD or Blu-ray first to mark (Score:2)
Zip drives have now lost to cd-r and cd-rw. Why? You can use them anywhere and they store enough. The 10 time factor is probably correct, but the simple fact that you can share a burned cd with all and a zip disk with some made cd-r the standard to win. You have to add the factor that you need somebody to share it with. If you have a standard that is 10 times better and supported by all, then you win. If you're just 10 times better but there is a competitor that comes close enough and is supported by all. You loose.
Re:FMD or Blu-ray first to market? (Score:2)
FMD is still total vapor. Those guys have been hyping that vapor for over two years now [byte.com], but they still have nothing two show or sell. I smell a rat. I think that they've hit some technical hurdles that will keep them from producing anything.
Curious by its absence (Score:3, Insightful)
What do you want to bet this time the "CSS" is designed so that it cannot be brute-forced, and that the manufacturer keys are better locked down?
Lastly, I see lots of discusson on the Matsushita site about digital video, but none about raw data storage - I hope they didn't make the same mistake the CD folks did and not consider data storage up front.
Digital Rights Management is present (Score:3, Informative)
"It is possible for the Blu-ray Disc to record digital high definition broadcasting while maintaining high quality and other data simultaneously with video data if they are received together. In addition, the adoption of a unique ID written on a Blu-ray Disc realizes high quality copyright protection functions."
Re:Digital Rights Management is present (Score:2)
That is the point I am making - they have a chance to slip in "fixes" to all the "shortcomings" of DVD, and they are not talking about that.
OSI Model, etc. (Score:2)
The new format, the Blu-ray Disc, will store more than 13 hours of film, compared with the current limit of 133 minutes, - It is expected to come into its own as more viewers become able to record TV shows on DVD machines.
I wonder if this is just for the media alone. Maybe the standard being agreed to is similar to layer 0 of the OSI model that you see in networking, the physical media.
Which would leave DRM to be decided later.
right now, I do not know who I would trust to manage my digital rights. [smile]
Backwards compatibility? (Score:2)
Yes, the existing base of DVDs isn't as big as, say the existing one of vinyl discs when CDs came out, but it does add several bases to it (CDs, and all the DVD formats (screw laserdiscs, though).
From a customer point of view, the ideal hardware will be one that can play ANY digital disc.
Re:Backwards compatibility? (Score:2)
The early CD-ROMs (at least many of them) used cartridges. The CD-ROM would fit in them. You could get empty cartridges to put normal CDs into. They were sort of pricy like $17 or so, but they were a low volume item. I expect a similar thing could be done here too.
Re:Backwards compatibility? (Score:2)
Not necessarily... I used to have a Panasonic laptop with an internal PD drive. (It was really cool -- on eject, the keyboard would lift up and the tray would come out)
This format was caddied (you couldn't easily remove the disc from the caddy), but the tray also took uncaddied CD-ROMs.
I'm all for caddies/cartridges. Much easier to handle, and keeps the disc clean and scratch-free. If done properly, they could make caddies that doubled as cases. You'd buy the caddy with a cardboard sleeve, rather than an Amaray case.
This is positive news ... (Score:5, Informative)
To the future: This new format is a next generation format. 27GB per layer is a very cool capacity. Combined with MPEG2 and AC3 whole seasons of 'startrek' may be on one disc. But on the other hand: have you looked at the sizes of DVDs lately: they are big like nearly 9GB. Viewed at 27GB from this side it's actually small. It's the bare minimum
The physical problems with DVDs are scratches. The more capacity there is on the disc the more problems you get.
What I like about this announcement is that all major players are on the list, this is positive: nobody will have choose the "better" format, this is also the negative thing
To those who need DVD-R right now, nothing has changed, buy a player, I've seen discs as cheap as $3
For those who want a DVD-video recorder: WAIT for this new format, this will really enhance the VCR experiance: direct access and capacity
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:2)
I always wondered why CDs/DVDs didn't come in a cartridge form. You slap the cartridge into the reader and the CD pops out (kind of like how VHS tapes/cartridges work). That way you never touch the disc and introduce scratches.
Of course if discs stayed in perfect condition, people wouldn't REBUY their old CDs and DVDs, which means the media companies lose money. They are better off giving you a fragile format.
Cartridges (Score:2)
Re:Cartridges (Score:2)
No, people objected to having to pay $5 - $12 for the CD caddies at the time.
I personally loved the cartridge, I just didn't like having to pay the high prices to encase every CD-ROM I bought.
Re:Cartridges (Score:2)
While this is true of the tapes, it is not true of the recorders. The slot on the front of a vcr has been carefully designed so that it easily will accept an unwanted peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
Thank goodness the vcrs are now super cheapo.
But, yes, I agree that the tapes are virtually indestructable. Our original Lion King tape has finally bit the dust. But it played for years, even with crayon markings, etc. on the cartridge. Now that LK is available on tape again, it is possible to re-buy it. Now the only question is, do I want to. It seems of less interest to a 9 yr. old. So the original tape served it's purpose and survived the period of early childhood years where it was of major interest.
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:2)
Once upon a time, caddies were required for CD-ROM drives. They were bulky peices of junk that didn't typically come with the CD itself.
The thing is... if you scratch your DVD, the average customer is just going to replace it and that's another sale for the movie/record companies.
Sure they are going to argue that the cost was too high, customers didn't like them, etc. In reality, the extra plastic required to make a simple cartriage would be less than the cost of making the DVD itself. A more complex cartriage like those seen on iomega disks would be more expensive however, but if all you want is to have your DVD not get scratched when you drop it, it's not exactly necessary. Dust will be a problem though.
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:2)
Re:scratches,MPEG2 vs MPEG4 (Score:2)
Re:scratches,MPEG2 vs MPEG4 (Score:4, Insightful)
MPEG-2 was developed for highest quality video. On the consumer end, DVDs use bitrates around 8-10Mbps and on the professional end MPEG-2 4:2:2 is something huge like 45Mbps. The compression makes it more managable but it's really just a cursory thing, throw away redundant frame area, etc.
Now on the other hand MPEG-4 was developed for highest possible compression. Your basic DivX file is around 1Mbps or so and looks pretty darn good. But the compression doesn't ramp up...I think it tops out at around 4Mbps. That's probably sufficient for most consumer applications but the professionals need more.
MPEG-4 will continue to be the format of choice for streaming video or other things where bandwidth cost and availablity is the main issue. But MPEG-2 will continue to be the choice in closed systems like cable networks, tv studios, digital theaters, etc.
- JoeShmoe
.
MPEG2 vs MPEG4 (Score:2, Interesting)
properties:
* Its still operates on fixed-size rectangular
block in a musguided attempt to ease the
hardware implementation (Not sure about the size
for MPEG, but JPEG's is 8x8. You've all seen 'pixellated' JPEGs that happen because of
this at high compression ratios)
* it is based on a conventional FFT
whereas MPEG4 was a 'container spec' with extensible codec, where the default codec
is already wavelet-based and does not require
fixed rectangular areas. If this is so, MPEG4
should be superior to MPEG2 in all instances.
Flawed point... (Score:5, Interesting)
Broadcast production have a different set of requirements, they'd rather compress it as little as at all possible (for editing, archival purposes), and they don't want to deal with multiple formats. They just want a line to go camera -> editing -> sender (oversimplified) without hassle or loss of quality. This goes for TV studios and also for digital theaters.
Contrary to your +5, Insigtful I think the cable companies would like to give you 100 channels instead of 25, or PPV, or broadband.
Kjella
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:3, Funny)
I think we can say with near certainty that you don't have kids.
Re:This is positive news ... (Score:2)
I don't see why it would have to. A cartridge could be the same size as current half-width CD cases, and even smaller because the hinge area wouldn't be needed. They could even replace the sliding metal cover with a molded-in slow window to make it even cheaper and more robust--although I don't know how close to the CD surface the lens has to be to focus properly.
Unique ID's.. oh JOY (Score:3, Insightful)
Otherwise I love the technology, I've been hearing about blue-laser technology and optical discs since I was a kid (I'm in my mid-20's now), it's good to see it finally coming of age.
Re:Unique ID's.. oh JOY (Score:2)
Let's see press 1 million copies of that same movie. Now we make a master and press the living crap out of that. this digital watermark id? a new master must be created for every pressing.
so we just made that $19.95 dvd cost $199.95. now noone will buy them and this watermarking fails a horrible miserable death.
they cannot do it, it's impossible to make each disc 100% unique when you are trying to make mass quantities unless you are willing to spend enormous amounts of money and make production take months instead of weeks.
Re:Unique ID's.. oh JOY (Score:2)
Re:Unique ID's.. oh JOY (Score:2)
Imagine how it could work, rather than stating it can't. You are probably right (probably) about not being feasable to make each set of content unique. (But don't assume.)
Assuming you are right, one way it could work is thus. The content is not watermarked, as recorded on the disk. The bits on each disk are identical. But the hardware that plays it will only extract, even at some low level, watermarked data. That is, as the data comes off the disk, the drive watermarks it, even before it ever leaves the drive mechanism and hits your ide cable.
It works kind of how CD Audio and CD Data are different. Data is recorded on the disk differently from "a movie". You must issue one command to the drive mechanism to read sectors of data. You issue different commands to the drive to start the streaming transfer of "a movie". The streaming movie comes out of the drive watermarked with the disk's unique id.
This is just one hypothetical scenerio. I'm sure clever slashdotters could imagine other horrors that these terrorists could embed into our drives.
He who controls the hardware, controls the universe! -- Maud Dibb (or something like that)
What has caused this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Normally when a company has large commercial sucess with a proprietary format, it simply "goes with it" and the competition be damned. Perhaps the sucess of each of these formats was far less than expected, forcing this collaboration.
Certainly it will mean cheaper media and drives for everyone, less consumer confusion and A Better Ride®.
Re:What has caused this? (Score:3, Insightful)
With a standard, there's more of a profit to be made as now consumers will be able to shop and compare features across a number of different makers, will not have to worry about which type of DVD disk to purchase, and will be insured that their recorded media will work on any other DVD recording hardware device regardless of maker. While this is all beneficial to the end user, this is also beneficial to the electronics makers since they will see more sales as a whole as a result of unification.
Re:What has caused this? (Score:2)
Why is GSM a standard all over the world? At a guess its probably more to do with strict Govt. regulation than any philanthropic urge by the telecoms companies.
Also, telecoms seems to be more engineer driven when it comes to implimenting standards in Europe, except in the case of A5 which is deliberately crippled. But thats another story.
Re:What has caused this? (Score:2)
Re:What has caused this? (Score:2)
Re:What has caused this? (Score:3, Interesting)
There were many LD buyers, and at the format's peak you could get nearly ANY movie on it, and CHEAPER than VHS, which was still primarily a rental format. Let's see... Die Hard on VHS for $100, or on LD for $50? Many LDs were down in the $30 range, when VHS tapes were always expensive because they were made to sell to video rental stores.
Laserdisc let me watch near DVD quality movies when I got my player back in '90. (!) My rich brat friend had been there years before, too.
I have since switched to DVD and never looked back, but LD was sweet "back in the day."
27GB on each side? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:27GB on each side? (Score:5, Funny)
They'd think you've got took much spare time.
How much confidence are they trying to create? (Score:2)
Nine electronics manufacturers have developed the discs, which they hope they will become the standard format, getting rid of the differences between those currently made by individual companies.
while, as the same time:
How strong of a new standard are they trying to create if they're already working on a sucessor?
It sounds like this new format will be of greater use to the emergine video hobbyist market (such as who the iMac w/DVD writer and video editing software is targetted at) as opposed to joe blockbuster. According to the press release, the video format is still MPEG2.
Of course, the DVD pirates out there are going to love this... 3-6 entire DVD's from the video store ripped and stored on a single disk.
--Cycon
Re:How much confidence are they trying to create? (Score:2)
Something like the Linux kernal development, is it not?
New Region Encoding Standards (Score:5, Funny)
The standard is a BAD idea (for consumers)... (Score:5, Interesting)
BUT, I suspect there is more to this 'standard'. I suspect that this is an attempt not only to standardize a format for burning DVD's but also to create a standard that makes playback impossible on normal DVD players, allowing publishers like Sony et all to "put the genie back in the bottle" (the genie being that DVD burners are now easily affordable, and soon the blank media will be very cheap as demand is rising).
I strongly suspect that the intention is that consumer DVD writers (in IBM Compatible PC's and Macintoshes) should be able to burn this standard and that should be it - and at 27 GB a side, they are very clearly not going to be playable on home DVD players.
This means we cannot record and save our own shows (at least no as easily as we currently can with VHS) and we won't be able to make our own DVD's and give them away (this being an attempt to stop piracy, though I'm sure the don't care much for our ability to publish our own DVD's legitimately).
This seems logical because:
1) This standard will ONLY work with the aid of companies like Sony, Panasonic, et al because THEY an other market leaders will need to impliment it in their hardware for it to be a success.
2) IF companies like Sony and Panasonic are involved (which they must be, see point 1) then they are going to do there damnest to design a system that prevents or hinders privacy of regualr DVD's.
As always a carrot and stick approach is required by them in order to get consumers to agree to purchasing and going with a new system when actually taking something away from them:
- The carrot is more storage (27 GB a side).
- The stick is that I'd be almost certain you won't be also able to uses these same burners to create DVD's that will play in standard set top DVD players.
This would in line with previous attepts and content control, such as the ATRAC 3 music format on Sony's Memory stick:
- The carrot is it's better quality and uses less space than MP3.
- The stick is that you can't copy them freely.
If that "stick" is enough to put you off moving from the MP3 format, then it should also be enough to make you wary about the proposed limitations 'standard' until the public get's it's hand on shipping unit's.
Re:The standard is a BAD idea (for consumers)... (Score:2)
Why bring up DVD-R,DVD+RW,DVD-RAM? (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyhow, bringing up DVD-R/+RW/RAM is a Red Herring.
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
In other news (Score:3, Insightful)
No changes that I see... (Score:2, Informative)
You'll also note that nowhere in the article does it mention DVD other than the general "12cm CD/DVD size disc". Do you know why? Because nothing can be called a DVD until the DVD Forum [dvdforum.com] says it's a DVD. That's why DVD-R/DVD-RW/DVD-RAM can be called DVDs and DVD+RW cannot.
Even if the DVD Forum were to accept the new Blu-ray disc, we'll most likely still have the same "problem" we have now (which really isn't a problem).
slow (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Large recording capacity up to 27GB:
and
2) High-speed data transfer rate 36Mbps:
Means 100 minutes to burn 27Gigs. That's a long time to sit around doing nothing.
Re:slow - not really, just needs interpreting (Score:3)
It may be 100 minutes to burn at 1x, but how many weeks do you expect to wait before the first 2x drive arrives? My DVD reader is ancient (in the first year of the format) but does 5x nontheless.
Re:slow - not really, just needs interpreting (Score:3, Informative)
Broadcast 1080i is encoded at only 19 Mbps, and it's visually stunning. So 36 Mbps would be overkill.
On the other hand, this opens up the possibility of 1080/24p DVDs, which are largely indistinguishable from film, at least for the average viewer. Once we start building monitors that can sync a 1080 frame at 96 Hz, we'll be in business.
See, if your monitor refreshes 24 times per second, or once for every frame, the flicker is pretty unacceptable. Movie theaters get around this by opening the shutter twice for every frame, for a refresh rate of 48 Hz and a frame rate of 24 Hz. Double that again and you're refreshing the screen four times for every frame (96 Hz) and you've got yourself a very pleasant viewing experience.
Re:slow - not really, just needs interpreting (Score:2)
Re:slow - not really, just needs interpreting (Score:2)
I work with high-def and film resolution media all day. Last year I watched the Super Bowl in broadcast high definition on a friend's 8' screen.
We were in his home, but we were using a quality projector and screen. I couldn't see a difference between that viewing and a reference screening room with stacked Barcos.
"Overkill" means spending money without getting results. Like de Mille said, spend every penny, but make sure it ends up on the screen. If you can't see a difference between 20 Mbps and 40 Mbps, you shouldn't spend the extra money for 40 Mbps.
Price vs Hard Drive? (Score:3, Interesting)
Combined with high speed links (including wireless), there will be no need to have a solution that you can store like current DVDs and CDs. The industry is just trying to hedge their digital rights management problem.
They are dead in the water.
Re:Price vs Hard Drive? (Score:2)
X-Ray Disk (Score:3, Funny)
Possible advantages are:
- Unbelievable data storage capacity (X-Rays wavelength is around 1/10000 of the one for blue light - this means 10000 times more data or 200TB per side).
- X-Ray Disk is a cooler sounding name.
- X-Ray Disk players would be almost impossible to steal (they would weight a ton, most of it being the lead anti-radiation protection)
Am I the only one not impressed? (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.sigmadesigns.com/products/em8470seri
http://investor.indigovision.com/indigovisio
http://www.lsilogic.com/products/c
Personally I think the only reason they're waiting for these DVDs is because they're afraid of mpeg4 players. But they're coming anyway, and I dare to say that a mpg4 normal DVD (9gb) is better than these mpg2 superDVDs (27gb). Of course the DVD industry is seeing what the CD industry already has. People will pay for a cd "full" of wav files but not one with 1/10th fileed with mp3s, nor 10x the price for 10 times the mp3s, so we need to fill the 27gb disk with something. If it was 270gb they'd fill it with uncompressed avi and say it's soooo much better.
Kjella
Re:Am I the only one not impressed? (Score:2, Funny)
That was a joke...
usurper_ii
www.vitaminb17.org
FMD: upto 200GB on dvd-like disc, so.. (Score:2, Informative)
The technology to make far larger storage on the same physical size disk exists for at least three years now, or longer, I can't remember.
The technology is called FMD, Fluorescent Multi-layer Disc.
One can guess at the reason this is not marketed yet, but I think a combination of big-industry interest in current disc technology and capital is the answer.
This tech is some years old now, probably a 12cm disc could hold 1 Terabyte or more with current state of the art tech, but I don't think you will see Sony, Philips and the others agreeing on a standard for that size, no, on a lowly 27 GB...
Serial Numbers (Score:3, Insightful)
At one of my forays to Fry's to purchase an X-box, they not only took my money, but also entered the serial number of the box into their system. Since this was paid for by a credit card, they have all the info necessary to track the item back to me.
Now I understand paying with cash can help solve the above problem, but if resellers are forced to track the serial numbers, they will -- no matter now many John Smith 123 Main St USA they have in their database.
Considering how things are going with IP and the draconian measures being taken, I would not doubt that blanks and drives, when they become available, must be sold as a traceable item.
If the whole thing is too onerous, simply making the players/recorders "call home" a'la TiVo would serve the same purpose.
The next step is to tie the consumer's identification in a traceable manner. The only way to do that is to tie the consumer to the serial numbers. That way they can know what we record, and possibly what we watch.
What codec will they use? (Score:2)
What about HDTV? (Score:2, Insightful)
But, will Hollywood let it? They don't want you to be able to buy a HD-DVD - play it back on you 50" plasma + home theater and never go to the movie house. They don't want you to take that same HD-DVD and make 50 copies for your friends. They don't want you to copy the DVD to your PC and share it with the world on the Internet. You can bet they won't let HD enter this media. And that's too bad because what else are you going to put on your Scream XI DVD?
True there is already D-VHS. But who wants to mess with the size of tapes with no random access! Besides, I've heard they movie studios are trying to kill D-VHS too.
-spitzcor
It will be DVD and DeCSS all over again! (Score:2, Insightful)
In plaintext for the paranoid http://www.matsushita.co.jp/corp/news/official.da
This is a Cartel of Nine companies, it may be "an open standard" but we will have to wait and see how free (as in freedom not cost) it is.
The Register is also carrying this story [theregister.co.uk]
Blu-Ray (Score:3, Funny)
/pun
Re:Just mpeg-2? (Score:2)
Re:Just mpeg-2? (Score:2)
Well, with 27GB, I don't see anyone needing MPEG-4, really... besides, it seems to me there are as many disparate ways to do MPEG-4 and cousins as there are ways to record a DVD-size disc.
Re:Just mpeg-2? (Score:3, Informative)
as my daddy use to say, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
Re:Just mpeg-2? (Score:2)
At any given bitrate, mpeg4 is better... (Score:2)
Kjella
Re:Compatibility (Score:2)
What gets me is that it seems we'll be needing a new round of DVD players just to play the damned things. Why no backwards compatibility? It seems to me nobody decided to create a "next-generation CD" that was completely unplayable on any current CD player.
Re:Compatibility (Score:2)
The reason they didn't even try to make them backwards compatable is that the technology is entirely dependent on using blue lasers for reading, something which current DVD's don't have. So they would have had to sacrifice most, if not all, of the increased density to make them readable in current DVD players. And if they did that, who would care? Sometimes backwards compatability has to be dropped if you want an increase in performance. Now, whether or not consumers will see "Blue-ray" as being good enough to justify dropping DVD's remains to be seen.
Re:Compatibility (Score:2)
Backwards compatibility would be the new drive being able to play old DVDs and CDs (probably with a cartrage you have to put the old disk in), not being able to play the new media in an old drive. Much like current DVD players are (mostly) backwards compatible with CDs and (sometimes) CD-R and CD-RW.
Re:Compatibility (Score:2)
Seriously though - I doubt that this will make a dent in the market now. People have spent a lot of money on their current DVD system, by the time that most people are ready to go back out and spend again 27GB will probably seem quite small. I can see this as a physical computer data storage format more than anything as DVD never quite took off in that arena.
Re:this is the end of piracy (Score:2)
BTW, has anybody been keeping up WRT to the artists suing the RIAA and individual labels over royalties from streaming media/mp3s. From what I read in the NYT (free registration req.), an artist/band will make $0.01 for every 4 songs of theirs that I download. The artists are saying that if they are not going to make any money off of their music being online, then they will just release it online for free to begin with.
Anyways, I was just checking with if anybody else read this. Can anybody help me with my Interest Rate Swaps homework. It's due later today and I'm stuck.
Re:Not enough... (Score:2)
Re:Not enough... (Score:2)
I tell people this and even the ones with digital-everything with HDTV setups look confused when I mention it.
It's a nasty little detail about DVDs that is never mentioned. That, and the fact that they will degrade over time. Looks like one complements the other?
Re:Flip side of coin (Score:2, Offtopic)
It's disconcerting, to say the least. And this is definately an all-new format, nothing in the press release or BBC article seem to indicate that the discs will work in existing DVD drives, so this is the studios/MPAA's "second chance" to get copy protection implemented correctly.. I'm sure after the DeCSS beating they got, they're definately looking at every possibility they have...
Re:Flip side of coin (Score:3, Insightful)
The unique IDs are still present, but are now meaningless unless they can be traced back through a single internet userid to an actual individual. Then they can be used as evidence when a search warrant is executed, and the equipment is matched to the compromised unique IDs.
Mixmaster remailers and mail to news gateways, or non-centralized P2P strongly encrypted data streams may be the order of the day for those wishing to share copies of movies. In the P2P model though, you _could_ end up sharing your movie with someone who works for the MPAA, and then an encrypted P2P path won't necessarily help you. The mixmaster path might still work.
All the industry needs to do is successfully track and prosecute a few individuals (who weren't careful enough) in the first year after releasing the new watermarked media and equipment, make sure the cases are publicized widely, and they'll have successfully generated the public feeling of caution and fear that will keep _most_ people honest. Then they only need to make sure one or two instances get prosecuted/publicized per year as a public "reminder" that it doesn't pay to screw with the MPAA.
Am I happy about this? No... It casts a chilling effect on people who really _do_ want to use stuff fairly within the concept of "fair use" such as making personal backups, or using pieces of media for educational purposes.
And frankly, if the industry can't make their content interesting enough that a majority of people want to rush right out and buy it, then they should just admit that their stuff is priced too high to spark interest, or that they need to pay more attention to the quality.
Of course, that's just my opinion, I don't expect them to listen to me at all.
Unique IDs are worthless IMO... (Score:2)
Kjella
Guns and DVDs (Score:5, Interesting)
Wonderful. So I suppose you'll be required to pay credit for the DVD, not cash, so you can be tracked later? Might as well force you to present valid picture ID to purchase the disc. And if you choose to sell the disc later, what happens if the purchaser decides to use it illegally? So will you have to register with the government as a DVD Distributor? After all, the anti-gun lobby in the USA tries to do the same things for transactions involving guns. So are DVDs as dangerous as firearms? It sure sounds like it.
This kind of Orwellian nonsense rarely happens, at least in the USA. Gun laws are one exception. I suspect it's simply because there's a line (public safety, or waste of tax dollars, etc.) that hasn't been crossed for most consumer purchases, even when they cost some corporation some money. The average American citizenry, taken as a whole, doesn't vote with their dollars and ballots for this kind of nonsense, even when corporations do, and in the end, it's the government, NOT the corporations, that do the arresting. Enough stories of this sort of nonsense get around, the government HAS to pull back, despite what some MPAA lawyers want.
It'll have next-gen CSS (Score:3, Informative)
In addition, the adoption of a unique ID written on a Blu-ray Disc realizes high quality copyright protection functions.
I assume this to mean that it'll employ the next generation of CSS encryption. For one thing, MPAA and friends have probably learned their lesson: don't roll your own stream cipher. For another, it's now legal to export products using 128-bit encryption from the United States; the regulations in effect when DVD CSS was standardized permitted only 40-bit.
Or is this just a try to make movies even LARGER so cable and DSL users can't share movies in high quality anymore?
At a point, the detail becomes so fine that the human eye can't distinguish it. XviD [xvid.org] (a fork of the last free DivX 4 release) attempts to find that point.
Unknown algorithm (Score:2)
Methinks we have here the candidate for the biggest distributing computing effort ever to be undertaken.
Brute-force encryption cracking using distributed computing methods relies on known plaintext (i.e. the message starts with "The secret message is:"), known ciphertext, and known algorithm. If the drive itself (as opposed to software) performs the decryption (to avoid the Xing leak that opened the DeCSS floodgates), it won't be easy to discover the encryption algorithm, as the CPS-2 Shock [retrogames.com] team found. Besides, d.net still hasn't broken 64-bit encryption, and at this rate, it'll take until the heat death of the universe to brute-force 128-bit.
Re:Blue?! There are no blue semiconductor lasers! (Score:2, Funny)
Why, that sounds like the very reasoning every geek will now have to have one, storing pr0n, not withstanding.
I just waiting for the first allusion to M$, distribute the BSOD via BR. Well, they changed the color didn't they? Well, no matter, the pirates will probably get the joke...
Re:Blue?! There are no blue semiconductor lasers! (Score:2, Informative)
sampling blue laser diodes?
Blue's Clues (Score:2)
[there will be a brief intermission while I fumble for links.]
....
One companies perspective [cermetinc.com] Thin, but hey. Updates from the summer and spring of 1999 and even a december 1998 press release.
Blue Chip. [sciam.com]Get it. Blue Laser, Blue Chip, good investment. Ha Ha. Clever journalists. At least Sciam isn't touting the revolution of clean free "zero point energy". Yet.
The Sciam page is practically littered with links. So I'll expect extra mod points for my diligent karma whoring.