eBusiness Help
Reach Millions of Job Seekers
Post a job now and save $50.
500 FREE web conferencing minutes in January.
Get A FULL RANGE of Advanced Features to Enhance Your Meetings.

WebProWorld Dev Forum

Add-on or Tool for Orderly Scripts
I need a tool or a Dreamweaver add-on which puts the scripts in order: eliminates whitespaces, etc...

Netscape vs. IE
Does anyone know why with IE both of my tables below display fine, but with Netscape only Table 1 displays OK?



Recent Articles

Hitachi's Five Hundred Gigs
Hitachi plans to pitch its Deskstar 7K500 hard drive to digital video recorder makers who crave larger amounts of video storage.

01.07.05


Blu-Ray Versus HD-DVD - Beta/VHS Revisited?

By Chris Richardson

This year's Consumer Electronics Show has been filled with a number of highlights. However, the battle for High Definition DVD recording may just be taking center-stage.s

The gist of the spirited disparity has to do with deciding upon and endorsing a particular type of DVD storage that will increase disk capacity exponentially, a necessary amount if consumers want High Definition-quality recordings. The formats fighting to become the industry standard are Blu-Ray and HD-DVD recording.

In what is shaping up to be another VHS versus Beta type of battle, many electronic conglomerates are taking opposing sides, ensuring the subject will be highly competitive and perhaps heated; effectively becoming what the BBCNews calls ‘A Format War'.

The science behind these writing technologies resides in the color of the laser being used to burn information to DVD discs. By using a blue-colored laser, discs can hold up 10 times the amount of data, as opposed to the red lasers, which is what the current format employs. The two formats in question are Blu-Ray, capable of storing up to 50 gigabytes, and HD-DVD, which has a capacity of 30 gigs.

Reach Millions of Job Seekers
Post a job now and save $50.

What makes this "battle" so competitive is the respective backers of each format. The Blu-Ray side is championed by Sony and includes such notables like Hewlett-Packard and Panasonic. Supporting the HD-DVD format are Toshiba, Sanyo, and NEC. Adding spice to the fight is the entertainment industry, which has decided to choose sides as well.

On the Blu-Ray side, studios like Disney, MGM, and Buena Vista have voiced their support. While some of the HD-DVD supporters are Paramount, Warner Brothers, and Universal.

However, the Blu-Ray group may have pulled off a minor coup, long before either technology will be a standard home fixture. Two major players in the video game industry, EA Games and Vivendi Universal, have announced support for the Blu-Ray format, giving the particular style of burning data a leg up in the fight for being the standard. Sony also announced the next generation of their Playstation gaming consoles will support Blu-Ray technology.

Since the gaming industry is so financially lucrative, this only helps solidify Blu-Ray's quest to become the high capacity storage standard.

Backers of each technology each have recorders coming out at the end of the year. Toshiba will release a HD-DVD recorder, costing around $1000, while Panasonic will be introducing a Blu-Ray recorder with an estimated price tag of $2700.

The question is, unlike its Betamax predecessor, will the Sony-backed format survive the fight this time?


About the Author:
Chris Richardson is a search engine writer for WebProNews. Visit WebProNews for the latest search news.

About StorageInsider
Enterprise storage strategies, news and reviews for IT professionals.

StorageInsider is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
ActivePro.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SoHoDay.com CRMNewz.com


-- StorageInsider is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 880 Corporate Drive, Lexington, KY 40503
2005 iEntry, Inc.  All Rights Reserved  Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article
Storage News and Reviews Storage Insider News Archives About Us Feedback StorageInsider Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact