Interesting article on Blu-ray replication
#26
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Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
I'm not sure what the article is supposed to demonstrate.
So the Microsoft comments from 9/28/05 are still valid: outside of a lab context, the 50GB disc is missing in action.
Realistically, it doesn't matter why there are no 50GB BR discs, only that they aren't ready to sell. I guess MS correctly assumed that several months later, BR still wouldn't have 50GB discs ready.
Now, HD-DVD is first to market with an initial disc capacity greater than the BR discs will have (30GB vs. 25GB). No matter how you cut it, it is a very bad thing for BR to tout the higher capacity as reason to abandon HD-DVD, yet, ironically, release their first titles on a smaller disc.
Or am I way off here? Are the first BR titles getting dual layer 50 GB discs? If so, I apologize, I missed the memo.
#27
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Originally Posted by awmurray
Or am I way off here? Are the first BR titles getting dual layer 50 GB discs? If so, I apologize, I missed the memo.
However, I am totally aware of all of Blu-rays launch issues with discs and hardware and will avoid the entire format until 2007. For all of HD DVDs faults it is much closer to being ready for the marketplace than Blu-ray which looks extremely rushed to market.
They don't have the replication issues worked out, the encoding software ready and their first gen hardware is not very future proof for a $1000 product.
#28
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From: NYC
Originally Posted by darkside
Well, I guess the Blu-ray defense to that is the 50GB discs will be out in a few months and the players will be able to handle them. For HD DVD players 30GB is the limit.
Wouldn't BR be the equivalent of a man who hates kids and relationships buying a 4 bedroom house? Costs more and there's a lot of space that he could use but probably won't.
#29
Originally Posted by digitalfreaknyc
I guess I just don't get this. You don't need more than 30GB for the movies though.
Wouldn't BR be the equivalent of a man who hates kids and relationships buying a 4 bedroom house? Costs more and there's a lot of space that he could use but probably won't.
Wouldn't BR be the equivalent of a man who hates kids and relationships buying a 4 bedroom house? Costs more and there's a lot of space that he could use but probably won't.
Putting an LPCM track on each disc is going to require the video to be heavily compressed on a single-layer BD-ROM. They better hope they get the bugs out of DL production. Otherwise, some discs might be so heavily compressed, DVD releases look as good.
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From: England
Isn't LPCM lossless? Surely it's better to have that rather than DD+ etc where you'll probably end up having to rebuy a disc in a similar way to people now going out to buy DTS versions of DVDs they already have?
I can't comment on the space issue since I don't know how much space is needed for a regular film with HD video and audio (although I did read somewhere that you can fit HD video on a standard dual layer DVD which would leave a fair amount of space for audio on a standard 25GB BD disc).
I can't comment on the space issue since I don't know how much space is needed for a regular film with HD video and audio (although I did read somewhere that you can fit HD video on a standard dual layer DVD which would leave a fair amount of space for audio on a standard 25GB BD disc).
#31
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Originally Posted by Deus
Isn't LPCM lossless? Surely it's better to have that rather than DD+ etc where you'll probably end up having to rebuy a disc in a similar way to people now going out to buy DTS versions of DVDs they already have?
I'm personally still not 100% sure that 5.1 LPCM will really be that much better than 7.1 DD+ anyway. On paper it seems it would, but I want to hear both encoded on the same disc to decide.
As far as the HD lossless formats, the big push with those seems to be greatly increasing the number of channels and I just don't know how practical and useful that will be for the average consumer.
#32
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Originally Posted by awmurray
Well, on paper BR has 50GB capacity, while in the real world, it will have 25GB. If the 50GB are ready to go, why release titles on 25GB?
#33
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From: NYC
Originally Posted by Grubert
Read the article again. It says very clearly dual-layer discs will be ready in October.
And Sony very clearly has stuck to all of their dates and promises thus far.
#34
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Neither format properly supports next gen audio with the first gen players, so I'm not sure why that's an issue, or even relevant to this particular thread.
It seems likely that BD ROM 50 will not be available for at least a few months after launch, though BD R/RW 50 looks to already be on sale in Japan (and, no, I'm not just talking about those 2 year old caddy jobs but rather the new stuff). It's probably true that for a little while HD DVD will enjoy a slight capacity advantage, though it's also probably true that for nearly the next decade the format will be way behind the eight ball on this aspect of comparison - 30Gb vs 50Gb.
While 30Gb might be enough for most movies with very limited extras that's not likely to be the way things work out in reality. Studios are including ever more extras in an effort to capture additional sales, so it's pointless arguing that you personally only want the movie with top notch AV. These formats aren't being made for one person they're being made for the average consumer, and that demographic seems to want extras, and lots of them. Disney have already signalled their intent in this regard, and Warners are not far behind - I believe they've promised that all their new HD DVD releases will have at least the same extras as the equivalent DVD versions, with some HD only options thrown in for good measure. Them's the real beans.
It seems likely that BD ROM 50 will not be available for at least a few months after launch, though BD R/RW 50 looks to already be on sale in Japan (and, no, I'm not just talking about those 2 year old caddy jobs but rather the new stuff). It's probably true that for a little while HD DVD will enjoy a slight capacity advantage, though it's also probably true that for nearly the next decade the format will be way behind the eight ball on this aspect of comparison - 30Gb vs 50Gb.
While 30Gb might be enough for most movies with very limited extras that's not likely to be the way things work out in reality. Studios are including ever more extras in an effort to capture additional sales, so it's pointless arguing that you personally only want the movie with top notch AV. These formats aren't being made for one person they're being made for the average consumer, and that demographic seems to want extras, and lots of them. Disney have already signalled their intent in this regard, and Warners are not far behind - I believe they've promised that all their new HD DVD releases will have at least the same extras as the equivalent DVD versions, with some HD only options thrown in for good measure. Them's the real beans.
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From: A far green country
Originally Posted by Grubert
Read the article again. It says very clearly dual-layer discs will be ready in October.
#37
Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
Neither format properly supports next gen audio with the first gen players, so I'm not sure why that's an issue, or even relevant to this particular thread.
It it relevant to this article/thread because including an LPCM track is going basically require DL releases. With 25GB discs, the video is going to need to be very heavily compressed to fit.
MPEG-2 video encoding and LPCM on a single-layer disc is going to be trouble.
#38
Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
While 30Gb might be enough for most movies with very limited extras that's not likely to be the way things work out in reality.
And besides, consumers equate more discs with more value for their $. Sony would be stupid to eliminate double-disc releases, even if they can fit them all on one disc.
#39
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30GB is more than enough space for a HD movie with SD extras.
If they want the extras in HD, then there'll be a 2nd disc.
We'll be seeing 2-disc releases for BR as well, regardless if the movie is on a 25GB or 50GB disc.
The space issue is really a non-issue.
If they want the extras in HD, then there'll be a 2nd disc.
We'll be seeing 2-disc releases for BR as well, regardless if the movie is on a 25GB or 50GB disc.
The space issue is really a non-issue.
#40
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From: A far green country
Originally Posted by Deus
Isn't LPCM lossless? Surely it's better to have that rather than DD+ etc where you'll probably end up having to rebuy a disc in a similar way to people now going out to buy DTS versions of DVDs they already have?
I can't comment on the space issue since I don't know how much space is needed for a regular film with HD video and audio (although I did read somewhere that you can fit HD video on a standard dual layer DVD which would leave a fair amount of space for audio on a standard 25GB BD disc).
I can't comment on the space issue since I don't know how much space is needed for a regular film with HD video and audio (although I did read somewhere that you can fit HD video on a standard dual layer DVD which would leave a fair amount of space for audio on a standard 25GB BD disc).
As far as "fitting" HD video on a standard DVD, of course it is possible. It's all just data. The question is how much HD video could one fit on a standard DVD? And the answer, with any kind of reasonable image quality, is "not much."
#41
Originally Posted by RoboDad
As far as "fitting" HD video on a standard DVD, of course it is possible. It's all just data. The question is how much HD video could one fit on a standard DVD? And the answer, with any kind of reasonable image quality, is "not much."
I have a few and they certainly prove your "answer" to be quite incorrect.
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From: A far green country
Originally Posted by mbs
When you can fit a whole movie of HD (encoded with VC-1 with no compression artifacts) on a SD DVD (DVD-9), I don't see where 25 GB would be limited at all.
Originally Posted by mbs
And besides, consumers equate more discs with more value for their $. Sony would be stupid to eliminate double-disc releases, even if they can fit them all on one disc.
#43
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From: A far green country
Originally Posted by mbs
I take it you have not seen any of the WMV-HD movies (such as T2 and a number of IMAX titles)?
I have a few and they certainly prove your "answer" to be quite incorrect.
I have a few and they certainly prove your "answer" to be quite incorrect.
. You're right. I haven't seen any of the WMV-HD titles. Are they encoded at 1080p?
#44
Originally Posted by RoboDad
We seem to be typing over each other
. You're right. I haven't seen any of the WMV-HD titles. Are they encoded at 1080p?
. You're right. I haven't seen any of the WMV-HD titles. Are they encoded at 1080p?A list of the few titles can be found here: MS link. They are quite impressive, I've noticed no compression issues and they look as good (or better) than OTA HD at 720p (my TV's native resolution is 720p).
Here is a mini-FAQ by Chris Lanier: mini-FAQ
I was always hoping for more titles, but that never happened (mainly IMAX movies, and T2 and Step Into liquid -- though there is some pr0n on WMV-HD).
#45
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From: A far green country
Thanks for those links! Looking over the showcase, It seems that they average around 50 MB per minute of video. Using that as a rough barometer, a 2 hour movie could fit into as little as 6-7 GB. Very impressive.
#46
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Originally Posted by mbs
The Toshiba has on-board decoders (which can be accessed using the 5.1 outs). The 1st generation Blu-Ray players are missing this important (IMO) feature.
It it relevant to this article/thread because including an LPCM track is going basically require DL releases. With 25GB discs, the video is going to need to be very heavily compressed to fit.
MPEG-2 video encoding and LPCM on a single-layer disc is going to be trouble.
MPEG-2 video encoding and LPCM on a single-layer disc is going to be trouble.
#47
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Originally Posted by mbs
When you can fit a whole movie of HD (encoded with VC-1 with no compression artifacts) on a SD DVD (DVD-9), I don't see where 25 GB would be limited at all.
And besides, consumers equate more discs with more value for their $. Sony would be stupid to eliminate double-disc releases, even if they can fit them all on one disc.
#48
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Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
Though it is only capable of outputing Stereo (2 Channel) Tru HD. It also appears to re-encode DD+ to a form of DTS which is somewhat strange. Frankly I'm not sure this is much of a better solution than the clearly audio impared proposed BD players.
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From: A far green country
Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
It's certainly true there's a "more discs = more value" perception. Though that's for DVD. I'm not sure the BDA really want to market their product as just an extention of the existing technology. I expect the interactive nature of this new format to be pushed very hard in marketing, to try and clearly differentiate it from the old DVDs.
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Originally Posted by Burnt Thru
Ignoring the pointless stuff and getting back to the discussion again: does anyone actually believe the BD ROM production won't get ironed out quick time? All of the major CE manufacaturers minus Toshiba are backing this horse, and Matsushita were the key players behind the improvements in DVD production. Seems pretty much a dead cert to me.
Of course, I think it will be quite a while before any title is hard to find on either format.



