Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: Permission denied in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/a4/a4aea0512703b0e8091b2801587a9ccbaa2d25d7.tc2cache) [
function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
130
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
131
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
132
{{Infobox media]| encoding =
VC-1, H.264, and MPEG-2 (single layer)30 GB (dual layer)| read = 1x@36 [Megabit per second & 2x@72 Mbit/s| write =| standard =| owner =
DVD Forum| extended from =| extended to =-->HD DVD or High-Definition DVD is a high-density [optical media optical disc format designed for the storage of data and
high-definition video.
Overview
The HD (High-Definition) DVD standard is designed to be the successor to the standard
DVD format, and is derived from the same underlying technologies. It can store about 3 1/2 times as much data as its predecessor (Maximum capacity: 30 GB instead of 8.5 GB). A 51 GB triple-layer preliminary spec has been approved. However, no movies are currently scheduled for this disc type.
HD DVD is currently in a "
format war" with rival format
Blu-ray Disc, to determine which of the two formats will become the leading carrier for high-definition content to consumers.
As of
October 16 2007, 311 HD DVD titles have been released in the USA. As of
15 September 2007, 133 HD DVD titles has been released in Japan, while 21 titles pending to be released.
History
The HD DVD standard was jointly developed by
Toshiba and NEC. On
19 November 2003, the DVD Forum voted to support HD DVD as the
High-definition video successor of the standard DVD. At this meeting, they also renamed it HD DVD. The format had previously been called the "Advanced Optical Disc" (AOD).
On 31 March
2006, Toshiba released their first HD DVD player in Japan at ¥110,000 (
United States dollar934).. That was the first HD player available to consumers, beating Blu-Ray to the market.{{cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,189960,00.html|title= Toshiba Starts Selling HD DVD Players in Japan|accessdate=2007-10-17|author=|date= 2006-03-31|work= foxnews.com--> HD DVD was released in United States on
18 April 2006, with players priced at $499 and $799.
The first HD DVD titles were released on April 18
2006. They were
The Last Samurai,
Million Dollar Baby,
The Phantom of the Opera (2004 film) by Warner Home Video and
Serenity (film) by
Universal Studios. The first independent HD film released on HD DVD was
One Six Right. October 4, 2006 Page 34, Jan/Feb 2007
In December 2006, Toshiba reported that roughly 120,000 Toshiba branded HD DVD players have been sold in the
U.S. along with 150,000 units coming in the form of HD DVD upgrade kits for the Xbox 360.
As of
18 April 2007, (on the first “birthday” of HD DVD), the HD DVD camp reported that they had sold 100,000 dedicated HD DVD units in the U.S. alone, (that is standalone players only, it does not include any computers with HD DVD drives or Xbox 360 add-ons drives—the latter was reported to have sold 92,000 units during the Christmas holiday season alone).
On January 29
2007, Microsoft released
Windows Vista which supports the HD DVD format, including DRM requirements for playing back commercial content.
The first HD DVD Recorders were released mid 2007 in Japan.
Technical specifications
The current specification version for HD DVD-ROM and HD DVD-Rewritable is version 1.0. The specification for HD DVD-R is currently at 0.9; the
HD DVD-RAM specification is not yet finalized.
Disc structure
HD DVD-ROM has a single-layer capacity of 15 Gigabyte, a dual-layer capacity of 30 GB, and a 51 GB single-sided triple-layer disc (which uses slightly bigger 17 GB layers), approved in September 2007 by the
DVD Forum. Toshiba has claimed that all existing and future players should be compatible with the triple layer. Toshiba confirms 51GB disc works with players
HD DVD-R and
HD DVD-RW has a single-layer capacity of 15 GB, a dual-layer capacity of 30 GB. The HD DVD-RAM has a single-layer capacity of 20 GB. Disk lineup HD DVD Promotion Group Like the original DVD format, the data layer of an HD DVD disc is 0.6 mm below the surface physically protecting the data layer from damage. The numerical aperture of the optical pick-up head is 0.65, compared with 0.6 for DVD. All HD DVD players are backward compatible with DVD and CD.
{| class="wikitable"! Physical size! Single layer capacity! Dual layer capacity! Triple layer capacity
|-| 12 cm, single sided || 15 GB || 30 GB || 51 GB|-| 12 cm, double sided || 30 GB || 60 GB || unknown|-| 8 cm, single sided || 4.7 GB || 9.4 GB || unknown|-| 8 cm, double sided || 9.4 GB || 18.8 GB || unknown|}
File systems
Like previous optical disc formats, HD DVD supports several file systems, like
ISO 9660 and
Universal Disk Format (UDF). Currently, all HD DVD titles use UDF version 2.5 as the file system.
Audio
HD DVD discs support encoding in up to 24-bit/192 kHz for two channels, or up to eight channels of up to 24-bit/96 kHz encoding. For reference, even new big-budget Hollywood films are mastered in only 24-bit/48 kHz, with 16-bit/48 kHz being common for ordinary films.
All HD DVD players are required to decode
PCM,
Dolby Digital AC-3,
Dolby Digital EX,
Digital Theater System, Dolby Digital Plus and
Dolby TrueHD. A secondary soundtrack, if present, can be stored in any of the aforementioned formats, or in one of the HD DVD optional codecs:
Digital Theater System and DTS-HD Master Audio.
For the highest-fidelity audio experience, HD DVD offers content-producers the choice of linear PCM, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio. Due to the high-bandwidth requirements of linear-PCM, lossless audio on HD DVD movies has thus far been delivered in the Lossless data compression format Dolby True-HD.
Video
The HD DVD format supports a wide variety of resolutions, from low-resolution
Common Intermediate Format and SDTV, all video resolutions supported by the DVD-Video standard, and up to
HDTV formats such as
720p, 1080i and
1080p. HD DVD supports video encoded in MPEG2 which is what is used in DVDs as well as the new formats VC-1 and H.264/MPEG-4 AVC which are more efficient. All movie titles released so far have had the feature encoded in 1080p, with most supplements in
480i or 480p. Almost all titles are encoded with VC-1, and most of the remaining titles encoded with
MPEG-4 AVC.
Digital rights management
HD DVD content is protected by the
Advanced Access Content System (
AACS) a standard for content distribution and
digital rights management. It is developed by
AACS Licensing Administrator, LLC (
AACS LA), a
consortium that includes The Walt Disney Company, Intel,
Microsoft,
Matsushita (Panasonic),
Warner Brothers,
IBM,
Toshiba and
Sony. One of the advantages over Content Scramble System, the content restriction system for DVDs, is that AACS allows content providers to revoke an individual player device if its cryptographic keys have been compromised (meaning that it will not be able to decrypt subsequently released content).There is no
Region Coding in the existing HD DVD specification, which means that titles from any country can be played in players in any other country. This is likely to give the format some advantage in Europe and other places where consumers are now used to using multi-region players to play DVDs purchased in the US or through the extensive grey market.
Since appearing in devices in 2006, several successful attacks have been made on the format. The first known attack relied on the
trusted client problem. In addition, decryption keys have been extracted from a weakly protected player (WinDVD). Notably, a
Processing Key was found that could be used to decrypt all HD content that had been released at the time. The processing key was widely published on the Internet after it was found and the AACS LA sent multiple Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act notices in the aim of censoring it. This caused trouble on some sites that rely on user-submitted content, like
Digg and
Wikipedia, when administrators tried to remove any mentions of the key.
AACS has also been circumvented by
SlySoft with their program AnyDVD HD, which allows users to watch HD DVD movies on non-HDCP-compliant PC hardware. Slysoft has stated that AnyDVD HD uses several different mechanisms to disable the encryption, and is not dependent on the use of a single compromised encryption key.
Interactive content
HD DVDs use the HDi Interactive Format to allow interactive content to be authored for discs. HDi is based on web technologies such as HTML, XML,
Cascading Style Sheets,
SMIL, and
ECMAScript (JavaScript), so authoring in HDi should be a fairly easy transition for web developers. No existing DVD authoring experience is required. In contrast, Blu-ray Disc content is authored using either a scripting environment for basic content, or a Java-based platform (BD-J) for advanced content. DVD video discs utilize pre-rendered MPEG segments, selectable subtitle pictures, and simple programmatic navigation which is considerably more primitive.
Hardware
Compatibility
Backward compatibility will be available with all HD DVD players, allowing users to have a single player in their homes to play all types of HD DVD, DVD and CD discs. There is also a hybrid HD DVD format which contains both DVD and HD DVD versions of the same movie on a single disc, providing smoother transition for the studios in terms of publishing movies, and letting consumers with only DVD drives still use the discs. DVD disc replication companies can continue using their current production equipment with only minor alterations when changing over to the format of HD DVD replication. Due to the structure of the single-lens optical head, both red and blue laser diodes can be used in smaller, more compact HD DVD players.
List of HD DVD devices
{| class="wikitable sortable"|-! Device name! Manufacturer! Type of device! Release date! Approximate price|-| Toshiba HD-A1| standalone player| [April 18 2006 (also known as HDV5000)| [Toshiba [2006| standalone player| 2006 Q4| US$299.99|-| Toshiba HD-XA2| [Toshiba| standalone player| [January 7 [2007| standalone player| October 2007| US$299.99http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/news/2007/08/toshiba_to_debu.php|-| Toshiba HD-A30| [Toshiba| standalone player| October 2007| US$499.99|-| DV-HD805| [Onkyo| standalone player| fall 2007| US$899|-| SHD7000| Venturer Electronics| standalone player| end of 2007| US$199|-| VidaBox MAX and VidaBox LUX| [VidaBox (supports both Blu-ray and HD DVD){{cite web| url = http://www.vidabox.com/news.htm#061018
| title = VidaBox Introduces World’s First Dual HD DVD & Blu-Ray Player / Media Center
| accessdate = 2006-10-18
| year = 2006
-->|||-| BH-100 [LG Electronics| standalone player (supports both Blu-ray and HD DVD)|
January 7 2007| US$1,199{{cite web| url = http://www.lge.com/about/press_release/detail/PRO%7CNEWS%5EPRE%7CMENU%5ERND%7CMENU_20318_PRE%7CMENU.jhtml
| title = LG BH100 Combo Drive
| accessdate = 2007-04-15
| year = 2007
-->|-| BH-200|
LG Group LG Electronics| standalone player (supports both Blu-ray and HD DVD)| scheduled for October 2007| US$999{{cite web| url = http://www.reuters.com/article/technology-media-telco-SP/idUSN0443957620070905?pageNumber=1
| title = LG BH200 Combo Drive
| accessdate = 2007-09-05
| year = 2007
-->|-|
Samsung BD-UP5000{{cite web| url = http://www.samsung.com/PressCenter/PressRelease/PressRelease.asp?seq=20070413_0000338109
| title = Samsung BD-UP5000 Combo Drive
| accessdate = 2007-04-15
| year = 2007
-->|
Samsung Group 35| Toshiba| [Laptop| May 16 2006| PC drive ([Original equipment manufacturer usage only)|||-| HDV-ROM2.4FB| Buffalo Technology [2006| PC drive (supports both Blu-ray and HD DVD)|| US$1200|-| Xbox 360 add-on external HD DVD drive| [Microsoft accessory (can be connected to PCs as well)|| US$179|-| [Qosmio G45]| Laptop with DVD-R drive|||-| Toshiba Satellite X200|
Toshiba with DVD-R drive|||-| [HP Pavilion (computer) dv9500/9600t series|
Hewlett-Packard| Laptop (optional HD DVD-R drive)|||-|
HP Pavilion (computer) HDX series| Hewlett-Packard|
Laptop (optional HD DVD-ROM drive)| 26 July 2007| ranging from $2,999|-| HP Pavilion (computer) PC series| Hewlett-Packard|
Desktop Computer (can be customised to include combo HD DVD-ROM/BD-RE)]| Asus|||-| [Acer| [Laptop|||-|
Rock UK| [Laptop (standard HD DVD-ROM drive for all DirectX 10 compatible)|||-|}
Toshiba is expected to reveal the first portable HD DVD player at the 2008 CES show.
Xbox 360
Released at the end of November 2006, the
Microsoft HD DVD drive for the Xbox 360 game-console gives the Xbox 360 the ability to play HD DVD movies. The drive was announced with an MSRP of US$199, and included Peter Jackson's King Kong on HD DVD along with a USB for connection to the console. Many view the HD DVD add-on drive for the Xbox 360 as Microsoft's response to Sony's PlayStation 3 game-console, which plays competing
Blu-ray Disc movies out of the box.The original
Xbox 360#Xbox 360 Core and Xbox 360#Xbox 360 Premium bundles did not offer
HDMI/DVI-D outputs. In April 2007, Microsoft introduced the
Xbox 360 Elite, which includes an
HDMI 1.2 output port (and larger hard-drive). HD DVD Video output at the highest supported resolution (1080p) requires a display with HDMI or VGA input. For audio output, the Xbox 360 is limited compared to standalone players—the analog stereo-audio jack outputs a Pro-logic compatible downmixing of the movie's audiotrack. The TOSLINK (
S/PDIF) jack offers more choice: 2-channel LPCM stereo (Pro-logic compatible), Dolby Digital (AC-3) @ 640 kbit/s, Digital Theater System @ 1500 kbit/s, or WMA Pro @ 1500 kbit/s. The console handles transcoding, if necessary, so a movie soundtrack of any type (Dolby
Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Dolby Digital Plus/AC-3, DTS, LPCM) will be output in the selected format. The HDMI-output on Xbox 360 Elite does not support multichannel LPCM—the Elite is limited to the same output choices as the non-HDMI 360 models.
The Xbox 360's add-on HD DVD drive can also be used with a desktop/laptop PC running Windows XP or Windows Vista. Although PC use is not officially supported, third-party player software can successfully play HD DVD movies using the add-on drive. A number of users buy the HD DVD add-on drive to use exclusively with their PCs because of the cheap price when compared to HD DVD drives made for PCs. For best experience, HD DVD player software requires a modern PC, with a DirectX 9 graphics adapter and dual-core or fast CPU. If the video is output to a DVI/HDMI port, then both the display and graphics processing unit must be HDCP-compliant.
The Xbox 360's add-on HD DVD is recognized on
Macintosh computers running
Mac OS 10.4, but support for UDF 2.5 does not exist for the platform. Standard DVDs and CDs can be read with the drive, but not HD DVDs. The
beta version of
Mac OS 10.5 "Leopard" includes Apple's UDF 2.5 driver.
The Xbox 360 HD DVD add-on drive is sold at retailers in the white color of the Xbox 360 Core/Premium. No announcements have been made by Microsoft to release this product in other colors to the general public.
Corporate and industry support
HD DVD Promotion Group Member List contains the main promoters of HD DVD, namely Toshiba,
Nippon Electric Corporation, Sanyo,
Microsoft,
RCA, Kenwood Electronics,
Intel, Venturer Electronics and
Memory-Tech Corporation. The HD DVD format is also non-exclusively supported by
Acer,
Hewlett-Packard,
Hitachi Maxell,
LG Electronics, Lite On,
Onkyo, Meridian Audio, Ltd., Samsung Group, and
Alpine.
In terms of major studios in North America, HD DVD is currently exclusively backed by
Universal Studios (including subsidiaries Focus Features and Rogue Pictures),
Paramount Pictures (including Paramount Vantage, Nickelodeon Movies,
MTV Films, DreamWorks Pictures and DreamWorks Animation), The Weinstein Company (including Dimension Films), and
First Look Studios.
The format is non-exclusively backed by Warner Bros. Pictures (it should be noted that a number of Warner's titles—Batman Begins,
Constantine (film), Troy (film) (excluding Troy: Director's Cut), V for Vendetta (film),
The Perfect Storm (film),
Poseidon (film),
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines,
The Matrix Trilogy—are HD DVD exclusive at the present),
New Line Cinema (it should be noted that some of New Line Cinema titles, the first being
Hairspray (2007 film), are announced as Blu-ray exclusive for limited time due to lack of region coding in HD DVD. All catalog titles will be released simultaneously in both formats), HBO, and
Image Entertainment (including the Discovery Channel),
Magnolia Pictures, Brentwood Home Video,
Ryko, Koch/
Goldhil Entertainment.
In Europe HD DVD is currently supported either exclusively or non-exclusively by Medusa Home Entertainment, Studio Canal, Universum Films, Kinowelt Home Entertainment, DVD International, Opus Arte, MK2, Momentum Pictures, Twister Home Video, and many others http://avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=915978&page=3. Many titles that are Blu-ray exclusive in the United States are released on HD DVD in Europe, and can be played on any US player due to the absence of region coding on HD DVD. Likewise, movies that are HD DVD exclusive in the United States are released in either exclusive to a format or released to both formats in other region, to be made easier because some of region-coded discs are actually region-freehttp://bluray.liesinc.net/ Region Coded/Region Free compatibility list. For example, Universal's Bruce Almighty, a European exclusive to Blu-ray, is compatible to region A player.
In the Music Industry, HD DVD is currently exclusively supported by EMI and non exclusively supported by
Warner Music Grouphttp://avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=915978&page=3 and
Universal Music Grouphttp://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=908169
In the
porn, HD DVD is currently exclusively backed by
Wicked Pictures,
Pink Visual,
Bang Bros, Digital Playground and
ClubJenna (which on 22 June 2006 was acquired by Playboy Enterprises). Contrary to many internet blogs, it has been reported by ABC News that the porn industry will not be a factor in the current format war.. The main reason is that many pornographic websites have movie downloads as an option, thus making the disc format less important.
Beginning July 2007, Blockbuster Video Blockbuster to Expand Blu-Ray to 1,700 Stores,Blockbuster Inc. Press Releases 2007-06-18. will be carrying Blu-ray Disc in 1,450 stores, in addition to the original 250 that carried both HD DVD and Blu-ray. Online they will still be offering both formats.{{cite web| url = http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/s_513097.html
| title = Blockbuster to favor Blu-ray high-definition discs over rival HD DVD format
| accessdate = 2007-06-17
| year = 2007
--> Blockbuster will continue to offer both formats at its initial 250 stores thatcurrently carry both high-definition formats.{{cite web| url = http://www.b2i.us/profiles/investor/ResLibraryView.asp?BzID=553&ResLibraryID=20345&Category=1027
| title = Blockbuster to Expand Blu-Ray to 1,700 Stores
| accessdate = 2007-06-17
| year = 2007
-->
On August 20, 2007,
Paramount Pictures,
DreamWorks Pictures, and DreamWorks Animation announced their exclusive support for the HD DVD format citing its cost benefits and superior features. However, in contrast to this the New York Times reported, citing two Viacom executives that a payoff had occurred for a sum of $150 million for a period of 18 months exclusivity. Paramount has neither denied or confirmed this, however Paramount's CTO Alan Bell said it was an indefinite commitment. Both Microsoft and Toshiba have denied that such a payoff occurred. Films directed by Steven Spielberg are excluded from this announcement as he controls the rights to his own works.{{cite web| url = http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/technology/21disney.html?ei=5088&en=d4e1f285e2f41437&ex=1345348800&adxnnl=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&adxnnlx=1187698143-B5wO3L/F+4r1NyAsum87vQ
| title = Two Studios to Support HD DVD Over Rival
| publisher = New York Times
| accessdate = 2007-08-21
| date =
August 21 [
-->
HD DVD / Blu-ray disc comparison
The primary rival to HD DVD is
Blu-ray Disc. Currently, Blu-ray has the advantage in maximum disc capacity, but in
September 2007 the DVD Forum approved the triple layer 51GB HD DVD-ROM disc.
As of 2007, the 51 GB HD DVD disc has only a preliminary specification, and no titles have been released. The first 50 GB dual-layer Blu-ray Disc release was movie
Click (film), on October 10
2006, several months after the Blu-ray Disc format was released. As of
September 2007 40% of Blu-ray titles use the 50 GB disc and 60% use the 25 GB disc Blu-ray stats while almost all HD DVD movies are in the 30 GB dual layer format.
Frequently updated list of historical release dates and disc capacities, HD DVD NEWS, High-Def Digest,
15 April 2007In terms of audio/video compression, HD DVD and Blu-ray are similar on the surface: both support MPEG-2, VC-1, and H.264 for video compression. Virtually every HD DVD released uses an advanced codec (VC-1 or H.264) for video compression, reducing the required space for equivalent quality video. The first generation of Blu-ray Disc movies however used the older and less efficient video codec
MPEG-2, and many new titles still do. In terms of audio, there are many differences. With HD DVD support for the new Dolby Digital Plus audio codec is mandatory at 3.0 Mbit/s, but for Blu-ray players it is optional at 1.7 Mbit/s. Furthermore HD DVD players must be able to decode the new
lossless audio codec Dolby True HD, but this is optional for Blu-ray players.
Both HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc support the 24p (traditional movie) frame rate, but technical implementations of this mode are different among the two formats. Blu-ray Disc supports 24p with its native timing, while HD DVD uses 60i timing for 24p (encoded progressively, replacing missing fields with "repeat field flags"). Decoders can ignore the “flags” to output 24p. There is no impact on picture resolution or storage space as a result of this, as the HD DVD format uses the exact same video information—it simply adds notational overhead.
Continuing development
Although the HD DVD standard is final, engineers continue developing the technology. At the Consumer Electronics Show 2007,
Ritek revealed their high definition optical disc process extended both competing high definition formats to ten layers, increasing capacity to 150 GB for HD DVD, however, the major obstacle is that current reader-writer technology may not support the additional data layers. {{cite web], Broadcom, Horizon Semiconductors, and STMicroelectronics have separately developed a single chip/laser that can read both the HD DVD and the Blu-ray disc standard. Broadcom and STMicroelectronics will be selling their dual-format single chip/laser solution to any Original equipment manufacturer willing to develop a product based on the chip.
Variants
DVD / HD DVD hybrid discs
There are two types of hybrid formats which contain standard DVD-Video format video for playback in regular DVD players, and HD DVD video for playback in high definition on HD DVD players. The Combo disc is a dual sided disc with one side DVD and the other HD DVD, each of which can have up to two layers. The Twin disc is a single sided disc that can have up to three layers, with up to two layers dedicated to either DVD or HD DVD. These hybrid discs make retail marketing and shelf space management easier. Another advantage is hardware cross-compatibility. The average consumer doesn't have to worry about whether or not they can play a hybrid DVD disc: any standard home DVD player can access the DVD encoded content and any HD DVD player can access both the DVD and the HD DVD encoded content.
HD DVD / Blu-Ray hybrid discs
Warner Bros. officially announced
Total Hi Def at
Consumer Electronics Show. Total Hi Def (Total HD) hybrid discs supports both HD DVD and Blu-ray, HD DVD on one side (up to two layers) and Blu-ray on the other side (up to two layers). Despite initially announcing that Total HD would be ready by the second half of 2007, on
June 27 2007, Warner Bros. issued a press release stating that they would be delaying the launch of Total HD discs until early 2008. As of September 2007, no specific titles have yet been announced.
3x DVD
The HD DVD format also applies to current red laser DVDs, which offers a low-cost option for distributors; this type of disc is called "3x DVD", as it is capable of three times the bandwidth of regular DVD-Video.
3x DVDs are physically identical to normal DVDs, thus why the cost is lower for the physical medium. Although 3x DVDs provide the same high definition content, their playback time is less. For instance, on an 8.5 GB DVD you could fit about 85 minutes of
1080p video encoded with VC-1 or
MPEG-4 AVC at an average bitrate of 13 Mbit/s, suitable for short subjects (training films, home movies), but unsuitable for feature film-length content.
It is technically possible for consumers to create HD DVD compatible discs using low cost DVD-R or DVD+R media. At least one such guide exists. {{cite web| url = http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?t=705146| title = The Official AVS Guide to HD DVD Authoring.| accessdate = 2007-04-09| date = 2006-07-30| last = Clark| first = Joseph| work = AV Science Forum| language = English-->
HD REC
HD Rec is an extension of the HD DVD format for storing HD content on regular red laser DVDs using
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC compression. It was approved by the DVD Forum on
September 12 2007
See also
Alternative disc technologies
References
External links
- HD DVD Promotion Group – International site
- The Look and Sound of Perfect - Promotional
- The Authoritative HD DVD FAQ by Hugh Bennett
af:HD-DVD
ar:HD DVDbs:HD DVD
ca:HD-DVDcs:HD-DVD
de:HD DVDes:HD-DVDeu:HD-DVDfr:Disque numérique polyvalent de haute densité
gl:HD DVDko:HD-DVDid:HD DVDit:HD DVD
he:HD-DVDhu:HD DVDms:HD DVD
nl:HD DVDja:HD DVDno:HD DVD
pl:HD DVDpt:HD DVDro:HD DVD
ru:HD DVDsq:HD DVD
simple:HD DVDsk:HD DVDsl:HD DVD
sr:ХД ДВДfi:HD DVDsv:HD DVDth:HD DVDtr:HD DVDuk:HD DVD
zh:HD DVD
Toshiba HD DVD . European Support
BBC NEWS | Business | Toshiba climbs on 'HD DVD exit'
Toshiba shares gain more than 5% on speculation the firm is about to shelve its high definition DVD format.
BBC NEWS | Business | Toshiba drops out of HD DVD war
Toshiba will stop making its HD DVDs, ending a battle with rival format Blu-ray over which would be the standard.
Amazon.co.uk: Transformers [HD DVD] [2007]: Michael Bay: DVD
Amazon.co.uk: Transformers [HD DVD] [2007]: Michael Bay: DVD ... Availability: In stock. Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk. Gift-wrap available.
The Look and Sound of Perfect - HD DVD
Visit the HD DVD official site for information on the total HD DVD high definition experience, including movies, players, and tech specs. ... HD DVD - The Look and Sound of Perfect
Blu-ray and HD DVD: The facts, Insider Secrets at CNET.co.uk
Come to CNET.co.uk for product reviews and ratings, technology news, gadget blogs, technology videos, help and how-to and prices for UK consumer tech products
HD DVD Promotion Site
Play.com (UK) - Free Delivery - HD DVD
Play.com - Buy DVDs, CDs, MP3s, Video Games, Electronics, Books and Ringtones with free delivery to UK and Europe. Play.com is the top site for dvds, cds and games in the UK.
DVD player or PVR Reviews and User Reviews of DVD and PVR at CNET.co ...
Come to CNET.co.uk to find DVD and PVR. DVD player or PVR reviews, news, product ratings, help, how-to and prices
HD DVD - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
HD DVD or High-Definition Digital Versatile Disc is an obsolete high-density optical disc format for storing data and high-definition video. [1] HD DVD was designed principally by ...