Friday, June 25th 2010

Blu-ray Disc Association Approves Final BDXL Format Specifications

The Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) today announced the finalization and release of the specifications for BDXL, the new multi-layer recordable Blu-ray Disc format with up to 128GB of capacity. With the completion and approval of the specification, manufacturers can now obtain licensing information and license applications needed to begin production of the high capacity write-once and rewritable discs and hardware.

Targeted primarily at commercial segments such as broadcasting, medical and document imaging enterprises with significant archiving needs, BDXL provides customers with triple layer 100GB RE (rewritable) and R (write-once) discs and quadruple layer 128GB R discs. Possible consumer applications include capture and playback of HD broadcast and satellite programming in markets where set-top recorders are prevalent.

"The BDA worked diligently to create an extension of the Blu-ray Disc format that leverages the physical structure of the design of the disc to create even more storage capacity," said Victor Matsuda, Blu-ray Disc Association Global Promotions Committee chair. "By using the existing Blu-ray technologies, we have created a long-term and stable solution for archiving large amounts of sensitive data, video and graphic images. We expect further growth of the Blu-ray Disc market as the introduction of 100GB/128GB discs will expand the application of Blu-ray Disc technologies."

The BDXL specification was developed with specific market segments in mind, and newly-designed hardware addressing such markets will play back or record BDXL media. However, because the new media specifications are extensions of current Blu-ray Disc technologies, future BDXL capable recorders can easily be designed to play back existing 25GB and 50GB Blu-ray Disc formats.
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28 Comments on Blu-ray Disc Association Approves Final BDXL Format Specifications

#26
Sasqui
DepthI bought a Blu-Ray drive for my computer along with some movies. I couldn't watch anything because my display was not HDCP-capable. Going into the Nvidia control panel, I read "Your system is HDCP capable", next to a big green check sign... :banghead:

Using the drive with DVD worked well and fine for about two months until it started making the computer hang while making strange noises. Threw the (now) worthless thing out and put in my old trusted DVD+RW drive :toast:
A real-world story about the pitfalls of BD vs DVD.

I still have an HD-DVD set top player, use it all the time (for upscaling DVD's, lol).
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#27
DaedalusHelios
Phxprovostand the price is?
Expect around $40 a disk at the cheapest. Failed burn? Too bad. :laugh:
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#28
SUPERREDDEVIL
Discs are more and more bigger everyday.. i can´t imagine what kind of disc are used for this:

Quad HD

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QFHD

this evolution of technology scares me really really bad...
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