Third Generation DVD+RW specification
Ricoh MP5140+SA (Serial ATA)
4x DVD+R write
4x DVD+RW write
16MB buffer memory
Serial ATA interface
Estimated price: 200 (?) - 240 Euro
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Results 1 to 29 of 29
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Originally Posted by Kusanagi
Was there any Sanyo 4x or Pioneer 4x DVD-RW drive product page or something like that? Or, is there any Prescott product page? I apparently said it's "rumor" at the title itself. So, if you don't care about rumors, why did you bother to read this thread at all?
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Originally Posted by Kennyshin
Originally Posted by Kennyshin
Originally Posted by Kennyshin
Read your own topic title again. It reads - "Third Generation DVD+RW - 4x DVD+RW, Serial ATA, 240 Euro." No mention of the word "rumor". Or do you like luring people into your thread traps with your seemingly convincing and legit titles, only to have all your posted information based on "rumors"?
Originally Posted by Kennyshin
We all just want the facts around here. "Rumors" or hype via links back to DVDplusRW.org forum threads do not constitute the facts.
Kusanagi
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Originally Posted by ChRaN
In some situations, the difference in buffer memory (8MB vs. 2MB., for example) means twice the total recording time. Like 5 min. vs. 10 min.
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More reports from Impress AV Watch on The Third DVD+RW Asia-Pacific Seminar
Sony displayed Optical Pickup and Spindle Motor components for notebook and desktop DVDplus-minusR/RW drives.
More pictures
Related Story - DVD+RW Drive Market Forecast
Related Story - Yamaha 2.4/2.4/16/24/10/40 DVD+R Drive
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Comparison.
Pioneer 104 2x DVD-RW vs. Kennyshin's HP 200i 2.4x DVD+RW
2 x DVD-R writing vs. No DVD+R writing without firmware upgrade
1 x DVD-RW writing vs. 2.4x DVD+RW writing.. but discs won't play in nearly anything
Buffer memory.... being a completely useless stat above 2MB or so
ATAPI or UW/SCSI vs. ATAPI
-R Standard, plays in 90% of players vs. +R Non-standard, no guarantees
Available for $254 from esbuy.com vs. $499 from Best Buy or Amazon
And here's another comparison:
Normal movie buff with a life vs. Kennyshin.
Bought a DVD-RW because it was the best vs. DVD+RW came with his PC
Will migrate to any recorder that becomes the standard, regardless of cost, because it will be the best recording, archiving and presentation method, vs. Relentlessly defending DVD+RW in the stark fear that his nice shiney new drive will go the way of Betamax and OS/2 Warp.
Look, just wake the hell up and get real, Kennyshin. Right now, DVD+RW is a joke. If that changes, there will be a mass migration toward it... otherwise, Pioneer and Apple will continue to addict an entire mass market to the wonders of DVD recording.... their way.
In the meanwhile, the DVD Multi may well expand to include the + drives, since it's just a software enhancement to existing multi, so in players manufactured 2002 or later... it may not matter much.-MPB/AZ
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Originally Posted by mpb
It's you who needs to wake up. Look at the following data hard.
DVD200i cannot write to DVD+R without firmware what?! Get educated first, like what the most notorious DVD-RW promotor, westblock used to say.
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Originally Posted by digv
Iwill P4G has onboard Serial ATA but it has only two Serial ATA connectors. I'm not sure whether I'll have to wait for 12-port or even 16-port S-ATA cards.
Anyway, some of the first 4x and 6x DVD+R/+RW/+MRW drives will be actually cheaper than 2.4x DVD+RW drives of eight months ago.
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Originally Posted by Kennyshin
Iwill P4G has onboard Serial ATA but it has only two Serial ATA connectors. I'm not sure whether I'll have to wait for 12-port or even 16-port S-ATA cards.
Anyway, some of the first 4x and 6x DVD+R/+RW/+MRW drives will be actually cheaper than 2.4x DVD+RW drives of eight months ago.
Kenny, get a life and a DVD-R/-RW (or a current DVD+R/+RW) burner and enjoy what all of us have been enjoying for some time now - instead of spreading all these rumors on future technologies that DON'T EVEN EXIST in the prosumer/consumer market and stop dodging the questions.
If you still want to make your false predictions, DO IT IN THE OT FORUM!
Kusanagi
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I own a DVD+R/+RW. It makes little difference what format that you choose. As soon as you buy either burner, you will find out that most of your frustrations will be with the software when capturing, encoding, authoring or burning DVDs (which you would get in either formats).
I am not sure why this forum is so pro -R. It can get annoying at times. +R discs play in almost all DVD players (if burned properly). Most people agree that +RW is superior to -RW. There is little to debate about. Yet you guys find ways to debate this over and over. This is getting old.
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Originally Posted by Kusanagi
Kusanagi[/quote]
I don't respond directly to Kennyshin anymore, since he's clearly a troll. I didn't realize it initially because it was careful, methodical trolling, but time and evidence tipped the scales.
- or +, really, anyone who has been through this before knows what will happen. HST was faster initially, and then was discarded. OS/2 was better than Windows 3.1, but look what prevailed. the bottom line is that the standard that works best in more situations and behaves properly with more equipment is the one that earns ubiquity, and thus becomes the new default tool. DVD-R/RW is already doing this.
You know, it's possible that +RW drives are outselling -RW as add-on drives right now for the PC. I see the evidence of this... Best Buy, CC, etc all sell lots of +RW, but only a few places sell the Pioneer A04 (and friends). So the existing installed base of computer users is going to see +RW drives on the rack and will assume it's the correct thing... until they do some research, and then realize what happened.
But even with this, people underestimate the number of -RW drives that are actually reaching homes. The Apple iMacs and Powermacs with the 103/4 -RW drives built in are popular beyond reason right now. My roommate does purchasing for a PC wholesaler that sells both, and they have a constant backorder queue for them. Also, Sony VAIO is a consistently-selling brand of PCs, and that also includes the 104.
Despite what the Dell Dude would like to have us think, those two brands are immensely popular right now, as the general public buys computers that bridge the gap between data and home theater. By the end of Xmas 2002, the DVD+RW alliance is going to look up and notice that their market share is a fraction of what their standalone drive sales figures suggested.
In the end, dual-standard drives will surely fill the shelves... but for now, there is only one safe play, and it doesn't contain a plus symbol.-MPB/AZ
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Nobody will win the format war since both formats are compatible with DVD-Video players. If you own a +R burner, you will not decide to buy a new -R burner just because some other guy predicts it as the winner (It seems that Kenny is not the only one with a crystal ball...). As long as you are able to burn DVD-Video discs, you are happy with either of the formats.
The main difference between the formats is the advantage of +RW over -RW. The +R disc are at least as compatible as the -R disc. The +RW advantage (over -RW) is an important one which cannot so easily be dismissed. Anyways, the DVD authoring etc software has to improve before either formats becomes main stream.
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Originally Posted by Kusanagi
As for waiting, it's actually about ten weeks only, not years, which I can cover with all the hard drives I've (still) got.
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Originally Posted by mpb
How do you know "dual-standard" drives will "surely" fill the shelves "in the end"? Do you seriously believe drives that support DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD-RAM, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD+MRW, CD-R, CD-RW, CD-MRW, CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, and every other CD/DVD-related format standard will replace everything else? Even DVD Multi drives with quite slow speeds cost about US$100 more than DVD-R drives and about US$200 more than 1x DVD-RAM drives.
For people who have already bought DVD+R/+RW drives, what do they need more if their DVD-Video players and DVD-ROM drives have no serious problem in reading DVD+R and/or DVD+RW media and media prices are going to drop even more? For DVD-R/-RW users, well, not the same.
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Originally Posted by mpbOriginally Posted by mpb
Guess your roommate needs to call the guy in that story who has all those apples sitting around collecting dust.
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Originally Posted by KennyShin
. Or you could feed those extra parts to my SuperMicro P4DCE+ (Dual Prestonia 2.2GHz Xeon, btw) workstation here - yum yum
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Originally Posted by john1290
http://www.dv-info.net/cgi-bin/ib/ikonboard.cgi?s=3d234dd52d7dffff;act=ST;f=5;t=16
http://www.nikkeibp.asiabiztech.com/wcs/leaf?CID=onair/asabt/moren/193516
Chalk up another (two) for DVD-R/-RW. :P
Also, I'm done feeding you trolls. You want to discuss this more in detail, PM me.
Kusanagi
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Originally Posted by Kusanagi
Originally Posted by Kusanagi
Originally Posted by Kusanagi
Somebody put it very nicely........all of this arguing is crap. Everyone needs to stop lying and exaggerating the facts. +R is AS COMPATIBLE as -r and so long as it works for you......stfu and go in piece. It all comes down to your source video and how you encode and author it that is a MAJOR factor for compatibility. Can we at least all agree on that?
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