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HD DVD

HD DVD (short for High Definition Digital Versatile Disc)[1] is an obsolete[2][3][4][5] high-density optical disc format for storing data and playback of high-definition video.[6] Supported principally by Toshiba, HD DVD was envisioned to be the successor to the standard DVD format.

HD DVD
Reverse side of an HD DVD
Media typeHigh-density optical disc
EncodingVC-1, H.264, and MPEG-2
Capacity15 GB (single layer)
30 GB (dual layer)
Read mechanism405 nm laser:
1× @ 36 Mbit/s & 2× @ 72 Mbit/s
Write mechanism405 nm laser:
1× @ 36 Mbit/s & 2× @ 72 Mbit/s
Developed byToshiba
DVD Forum
UsageData storage, 1080p high-definition video
Extended fromDVD-Video
Extended toBlu-ray Disc
ReleasedMarch 31, 2006; 17 years ago (2006-03-31)
DiscontinuedMarch 28, 2008; 15 years ago (2008-03-28)

HD DVD employed a blue laser with a shorter wavelength (with the exception of the 3× DVD and HD REC variants), and it stored about 3.2 times as much data per layer as its predecessor (maximum capacity: 15 GB per layer compared to 4.7 GB per layer on a DVD). The format was commercially released in 2006 and fought a protracted format war with rival Blu-ray. On February 19, 2008, Toshiba abandoned the format,[7] announcing it would no longer manufacture HD DVD players and drives.[6] The HD DVD Promotion Group was dissolved on March 28, 2008.[8]

The HD DVD physical disc specifications (but not the codecs) were used as the basis for the China Blue High-definition Disc (CBHD) formerly called CH-DVD.

History

In the late 1990s, commercial HDTV sets started to enter a larger market, but there was no inexpensive way to record or play back HD content. JVC's D-VHS and Sony's HDCAM formats could store that amount of data, but were neither popular nor well-known.[9] It was well known that using lasers with shorter wavelengths would yield optical storage with higher density. Shuji Nakamura invented practical blue laser diodes, but a lengthy patent lawsuit delayed commercial introduction.[10]

Origins and competition from Blu-ray Disc

Sony started two projects applying the new diodes: UDO (Ultra Density Optical) and DVR Blue together with Philips, a format of rewritable discs which would eventually become Blu-ray Disc (more specifically, BD-RE) and later on with Pioneer a format of read only discs (BD-ROM).[11] The two formats share several technologies (such as the AV codecs and the laser diode). In February 2002, the project was officially announced as Blu-ray Disc,[12] and the Blu-ray Disc Association was founded by the nine initial members.

The DVD Forum (chaired by Sony) was deeply split over whether to go with the more expensive blue lasers or not. Although today's Blu-ray Discs appear virtually identical to a standard DVD, when the Blu-ray Discs were initially developed they required a protective caddy to avoid mis-handling by the consumer (early CD-Rs also featured a protective caddy for the same purpose.) The Blu-ray Disc prototype's caddy was both expensive and physically different from DVD, posing several problems.[13] In March 2002, the forum voted to approve a proposal endorsed by Warner Bros. and other motion picture studios that involved compressing HD content onto dual-layer DVD-9 discs.[14][15] In spite of this decision, the DVD Forum's Steering Committee announced in April that it was pursuing its own blue-laser high-definition solution. In August, Toshiba and NEC announced their competing standard Advanced Optical Disc.[16] It was adopted by the DVD forum and renamed to HD DVD the next year.[17]

The HD DVD Promotion Group was a group of manufacturers and media studios formed to exchange thoughts and ideas to help promote the format worldwide.[18] Its members comprised Toshiba as the Chair Company and Secretary, Memory-Tech Corporation and NEC as Vice-Chair companies, and Sanyo Electric as Auditors; there were 61 general members and 72 associate members in total.[19] The HD DVD promotion group was officially dissolved on March 28, 2008, following Toshiba's announcement on February 19, 2008 that it would no longer develop or manufacture HD DVD players and drives.

Attempts to avoid a format war

Much like the videotape format war between VHS and Betamax, HD DVD was competing with a rival format, Blu-ray Disc.

In an attempt to avoid a costly format war, the Blu-ray Disc Association and DVD Forum attempted to negotiate a compromise in early 2005. One of the issues was that Blu-ray Disc companies wanted to use a Java-based platform for interactivity (BD-J based on Sun Microsystems' Java TV standards), while HD DVD companies wanted to use Microsoft's "iHD" (which became HDi).[20] Another problem was the physical formats of the discs themselves.[21] The negotiations proceeded slowly and ultimately stalled.[22]

On August 22, 2005, the Blu-ray Disc Association and DVD Forum announced that the negotiations to unify their standards had failed.[23] Rumors surfaced that talks had stalled; publicly, the same reasons of physical format incompatibility were cited.[21][24] By the end of September that year, Microsoft and Intel jointly announced their support for HD DVD.[25]

Hewlett-Packard (HP) attempted to broker a compromise between the Blu-ray Disc Association and Microsoft by demanding that Blu-ray Disc use Microsoft's HDi instead of BD-J and threatening to support HD DVD instead.[26] The Blu-ray Disc Association did not agree to HP's demands.[27]

Launch

 
In November 2006, Microsoft released an HD DVD player for their Xbox 360 game console for $199. It came packaged with King Kong and could only play movies.

On March 31, 2006, Toshiba released their first consumer-based HD DVD player in Japan at ¥110,000 (US$934).[28] HD DVD was released in the United States on April 18, 2006,[29] 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, and The Phantom of the Opera by Warner Home Video and Serenity by Universal Studios.[30] The first independent HD film released on HD DVD was One Six Right.[31][32]

Sales developments

 
Although HD DVD and Blu-ray used near-identical translucent keep cases for most pre-recorded releases, they were normally coloured red for the former and blue for the latter.

In December 2006 Toshiba reported that roughly 120,000 Toshiba branded HD DVD players had been sold in the United States, along with 150,000 HD DVD add-on units for the Xbox 360.[33]

On April 17, 2007, one year after the first HD DVD titles were released,[29] the HD DVD group reported that they had sold 100,000 dedicated HD DVD units in the United States.[34]

In the middle of 2007, the first HD DVD Recorders were released in Japan.[35]

In November 2007, the Toshiba HD-A2 was the first high definition player to be sold at a sale price of less than US$100; this was done through several major retailers to make room for the new HD-A3 models. These closeout sales lasted less than a day each due to both limited quantities and high demand at that price point. In the same month, the HD DVD promotion group announced that 750,000 HD DVD players had been sold, which included stand-alone players and the Xbox 360 add-on.[36]

In January 2008 Toshiba announced that close to one million dedicated HD DVD players had been sold.[37]

As of June 24, 2008, 475 HD DVD titles had been released in the US.[38] As of April 29, 2008, 236 HD DVD titles had been released in Japan.[39] Approximately 232 were released in the UK.[citation needed]

Decline

On January 4, 2008, citing consumer confusion and indifference as a reason for lackluster high-definition software sales, Warner Bros. publicly announced it would stop supporting HD DVD by June 2008, and the company would release HD titles only on Blu-ray Disc.[40] This was followed by news of Netflix phasing out support for the format, and Best Buy's decision to recommend Blu-ray Disc over HD DVD in its retail locations and to remove HD DVD players as part of its ongoing "HDTV advantage" promotion. Finally, retailer Wal-Mart announced that it would be supporting only Blu-ray Disc by June 2008.

On February 19, 2008, Toshiba announced plans to discontinue development, marketing and manufacturing of HD DVD players while still providing product support and after-sale service to consumers of the format (including firmware updates), effectively making the platform obsolete. The company cited "recent major changes in the market".[41][2][3][4][5] Shipments of HD DVD machines to retailers were reduced and eventually stopped by the end of March 2008.[42] Toshiba later revealed that they lost about $986 million on the format's failure.[43]

End of releases

The final HD DVD major-studio releases in the United States were Paramount's Into the Wild, Warner's P.S. I Love You and Twister, on May 27, 2008. In June, the final HD DVD, Freedom: 6, was released by Bandai Visual, which acknowledged the demise of HD DVD, but stated that it wanted to complete the release of the seven-part Freedom Project, of which six parts had been released.[44] The seventh part, due for August 2008, never saw a release. Disco Pigs was announced but postponed, with no new date announced for release.[45] Pan's Labyrinth is also notable as New Line Cinema's only film to be released on HD DVD, as the studio quickly shifted to Blu-ray.

Death Proof was released on HD DVD format as a special-release steelbook by Senator Films in Germany on December 15, 2008.[46]

On April 3, 2010, Engadget reported that Anthem Films would release the film Deadlands 2: Trapped on HD DVD in a limited run of 500 copies. This eventually happened in the form of HD DVD-Rs.[47] Deadlands: The Rising, announced on September 5, 2010, was released on HD DVD in limited numbers. As with the previously released Deadlands 2: Trapped, the film was pressed on HD DVD-R disc.[48]

Warner Blu-ray Disc replacements in the U.S.

In mid-2009, Warner offered to replace any HD DVD Warner home video release with a Blu-ray Disc equivalent for $4.95, plus $6.95 shipping to the contiguous United States or $8.95 to Alaska, Hawaii or Puerto Rico.[49] The deal required the HD DVD's original sleeve art to be returned to Warner as proof of purchase. The turnaround time for processing was approximately two weeks. Multi-disc sets were exchangeable at a discount, such as $14.95 for the five-disc Blade Runner release rather than $24.75. No exchanges were offered to customers outside the United States.

Technical specifications

The current specification books for HD DVD are listed at the DVD FLLC website.[50]

Disc structure

HD DVD-ROM, HD DVD-R and HD DVD-RW have a single-layer capacity of 15 GB, and a dual-layer capacity of 30 GB. HD DVD-RAM has a single-layer capacity of 20 GB.[51] Like the original DVD format, the data layer of an HD DVD is 0.6 mm below the surface to physically protect 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.[52]

Physical size Single layer capacity Dual layer capacity
12 cm (4.7 in), single sided 15 GB 30 GB
12 cm (4.7 in), double sided 30 GB 60 GB
8 cm (3.1 in), single sided 4.7 GB 8.5 GB
8 cm (3.1 in), double sided 9.4 GB 18.8 GB

Recording speed

Drive speed Data rate Write time for HD DVD (minutes)
Mbit/s MB/s Single Layer Dual Layer
36 4.5 56 110
72 9 28 55

File systems

As with previous optical disc formats, HD DVD supports several file systems, such as ISO 9660 and Universal Disk Format (UDF). All HD DVD titles use UDF version 2.5 as the file system. In this file system, multiplexed audio and video streams are stored in EVO container format.[53]

Audio

The HD DVD format supports encoding in up to 24-bit/192 kHz for two channels, or up to eight channels of up to 24-bit/96 kHz encoding.[54]

All HD DVD players are required to decode uncompressed linear PCM, Dolby Digital AC-3, Dolby Digital EX, DTS, Dolby Digital Plus E-AC-3 and Dolby TrueHD.[55] A secondary soundtrack, if present, can be stored in any of the aforementioned formats, or in one of the HD DVD optional codecs: DTS-HD High Resolution Audio and DTS-HD Master Audio. For the highest-fidelity audio experience, HD DVD offers content-producers the choice of LPCM, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

Video

HD DVD video can be encoded using VC-1, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC, or H.262/MPEG-2 Part 2.[citation needed] A wide variety of resolutions are supported, from low-resolution CIF, all SDTV resolutions supported by DVD-Video, and HDTV formats: 720p, 1080i, and 1080p.[54] All studio-released movie titles have featured video in a 1080-line format, with companion supplements in 480i or 480p. The vast majority of releases were encoded with VC-1, and most of the remaining titles encoded with H.264/MPEG-4 AVC.

Digital rights management

If a publisher wishes to restrict use of its HD DVD content, it may use the Advanced Access Content System (AACS) although this is not required for normal disc playback. AACS is a standard for content distribution and digital rights management. It is developed by AACS Licensing Administrator, LLC (AACS LA), a consortium that includes Disney, Intel, Microsoft, Panasonic, Warner Bros., IBM, Toshiba and Sony. One of the advantages over CSS, the content restriction system for DVDs, is that AACS allows content providers to revoke an individual player device model 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.

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.[56] The processing key was widely published on the Internet after it was found and the AACS LA sent multiple DMCA takedown notices with the aim of censoring it.[57] 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.[58][59]

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.[60] Other AACS circumvention programs have become available, like DVDFab HD Decrypter.[61]

Interactive content

HD DVDs use Advanced Content to allow interactive content to be authored for discs. Microsoft's implementation of Advanced Content is the HDi Interactive Format, and "HDi" is frequently used to refer to the Advanced Content system. Advanced Content is based on web technologies such as HTML, XML, CSS, SMIL, and ECMAScript (JavaScript), so authoring in Advanced Content should be a fairly easy transition for web developers. No existing DVD authoring experience is required. In comparison, Blu-ray Disc content is authored using either a scripting environment (BDMV) or a Java-based platform (BD-J). DVD video discs use pre-rendered MPEG segments, selectable subtitle pictures, and simple programmatic navigation which is considerably more limited.

Hardware

Compatibility

Backward compatibility is available with all HD DVD players, allowing users to have a single player to play all types of HD DVD, DVD and CD. 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 a smooth transition for the studios in terms of publishing movies, and allowing consumers with only DVD players to still use the discs. DVD 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. However, HD DVD discs can't be played on standard DVD players.

General purpose computers

HD DVD drives can also be used with a desktop/laptop personal computer (PC) running Windows XP, Windows Vista, Mac OS X v10.5 "Leopard", and many varieties of Linux. Third-party player software for Windows and Linux have successfully played HD DVD titles using the add-on drive.[62]

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 includes a USB 2.0 cable for connection to the console. The first drives also included Peter Jackson's King Kong or Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins on HD DVD. The final "regular" for the drive was US$129.99 as of February 25, 2008. On February 23, 2008 Microsoft discontinued the Xbox 360 HD DVD player. On February 26, 2008, Microsoft "officially" announced that the Xbox 360 HD DVD add on drive would reflect a heavily discounted price down to $49.99.[63]

Dual-compatibility drives

 
Internal optical disc drive from LG playing both, HD DVD and Blu-ray disks

In 2007, LG and Samsung released standalone consumer players that could read both HD DVD and Blu-ray Discs.[a] The machines were sold at premium prices, but failed to sell in large quantities. In May 2008, both companies announced they would stop manufacturing dual-compatibility drives.[64]

A few computer manufacturers (such as HP and Acer) sold computers with combination HD DVD/Blu-ray Disc drives. LG marketed a Blu-ray writer that also read HD DVD discs (but could not write to them).[65][66]

HD DVD / Blu-ray Disc comparison

 
Comparison of various optical storage media. Parameters: track pitch (p), pit width (w) and minimum length (l), and laser spot size (⌀) and wavelength (λ).

HD DVD competed primarily with Blu-ray Disc. Both formats were designed as successors to DVD, capable of higher quality video and audio playback, and of greater capacity when used to store video, audio, and computer data. Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD share most of the same methods of encoding media onto discs with each other, resulting in equivalent levels of audio and visual quality, but differ in other aspects such as interactive capabilities, internet integration, usage control and enforcement, and in which features were mandatory for players. The storage size also varies: A dual-layer HD DVD holds a maximum of 30 GB of data, while a dual-layer Blu-ray Disc carries 50 GB.

Development

Even after finalizing the HD DVD standard, engineers continued developing the technology. A 51 GB triple-layer spec was approved at the DVD Forums 40th Steering Committee Meeting (held on November 15, 2007).[67] No movies had been scheduled for this disc type, and Toshiba had declined to say whether the 51 GB disc was compatible with existing drives and players. Specification 2.0 Part 1 (Physical Specification) for triple layer HD DVD had been approved in November 2007.[68]

At the CES 2007, Ritek revealed their high definition optical disc process that extended both competing high definition formats to ten layers, increasing capacity to 150 GB for HD DVD and 250 GB for Blu-ray Disc. A major obstacle to implementing this technology in either format (150 GB HD DVD will not be developed due to HD DVD's discontinuation) is that reader-writer technology available may not be able to support the additional data layers.[69]

NEC,[70] Broadcom,[71] Horizon Semiconductors, and STMicroelectronics[71] 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 OEM willing to develop a product based on the chip.

Variants and media

HD DVD-R / -RW / -RAM

HD DVD-R is the writable disc variant of HD DVD, available with a single-layer capacity of 15 GB or a dual-layer capacity of 30 GB.[72] Write speeds depend on drive speed, with a data rate of 36.55 Mbit/s (4.36 MB/s) and a recording time of 56 minutes for 1× media, and 73 Mbit/s (8.71 MB/s) and a recording time of 28 minutes for 2×.

The Toshiba SD-L902A for notebooks was one of the first available HD DVD writers, although it was not meant for retail.[73][74] Burning HD DVD (including Dual Layer) with a 1× write speed, it could also burn DVDs and CDs. In a test of the SD-L902A by C't computer magazine with Verbatim discs, the written HD DVD-Rs suffered from high noise levels,[75] as a result, the written discs could not be recognized by the external HD DVD drive of the Xbox 360, though they could be read back by the SD-L902A.[76]

HD DVD-RW is the rewritable disc variant of HD DVD with equal storage capacity to an HD DVD-R. The primary advantage of HD DVD-RW over HD DVD-R is the ability to erase and rewrite to an HD DVD-RW disc, up to about 1,000 times before needing replacement, making them comparable with the CD-RW and DVD-RW standards. This is also of benefit if there are writing errors when recording data, as the disc is not ruined and can still store data by erasing the faulty data. The dual-layer variant was never released and the single-layer variant was, but it is among the rarest of optical media.

HD DVD-RAM was the proposed successor to DVD-RAM for random access on optical media using phase-change principals. It would hold 20 gigabytes per layer instead of 15 gigabytes for HD DVD-R, due to differences in recording methods used, yielding a higher density disc. This variant of HD DVD was never released.

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.[77] These hybrid discs make retail marketing and shelf space management easier. Another advantage is hardware cross-compatibility. The average consumer does not have to worry about whether or not they can play a hybrid DVD: any standard home DVD player can access the DVD-encoded content and any HD DVD player can access both the DVD- and HD DVD-encoded content.

HD DVD / Blu-ray Disc hybrid discs

Warner Bros. officially announced Total Hi Def (THD or Total HD) at CES 2007. THD hybrid discs were to support both HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc, with HD DVD on one side (up to two layers) and Blu-ray Disc on the other side (up to two layers). In November 2007, Warner Bros. cancelled THD's development.[78]

3× DVD

The HD DVD format also applies to current red laser DVDs; this type of disc is called "3× DVD", as it is capable of three times the bandwidth of regular DVD-Video.

3× DVDs are physically identical to normal DVDs. Although 3× DVDs provide the same high definition content, their playback time is less. For example, an 8.5 GB DVD DL can hold about 90 minutes of 1080p video encoded with VC-1 or AVC at an average bitrate of 12 Mbit/s, which corresponds with the average length of Hollywood feature-films. If quality is compromised slightly, and good compression techniques are used, most feature films could be encoded with 3× DVD. Due to its much greater resolution, HD-Video also has significantly more redundant information than DVD which newer compression standards can encode more efficiently.

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.[79] The 3× DVD is comparable to Blu-ray Disc BD5 and BD9 formats.

HD REC

HD Rec is an extension of the HD DVD format for recording HD content on regular red laser DVD-Rs/DVD-RWs using H.264/MPEG-4 AVC compression.[80] It was approved by the DVD Forum on September 12, 2007[81] It is comparable to Blu-ray Disc's AVCREC.

CBHD

The China Blue High-definition Disc (CBHD), a high-definition optical disc format, was based upon the HD DVD format. Like the HD DVD, CBHD discs have a capacity of 15 GB single-layer and 30 GB dual-layer and can use existing DVD production lines.

See also

Alternative disc technologies

Notes

  1. ^ In players and drives capable of reading both HD DVD and Blu-ray, the same blue violet laser is used for both formats.

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short, high, definition, digital, versatile, disc, obsolete, high, density, optical, disc, format, storing, data, playback, high, definition, video, supported, principally, toshiba, envisioned, successor, standard, format, reverse, side, media, typehigh, densi. HD DVD short for High Definition Digital Versatile Disc 1 is an obsolete 2 3 4 5 high density optical disc format for storing data and playback of high definition video 6 Supported principally by Toshiba HD DVD was envisioned to be the successor to the standard DVD format HD DVDReverse side of an HD DVDMedia typeHigh density optical discEncodingVC 1 H 264 and MPEG 2Capacity15 GB single layer 30 GB dual layer Read mechanism405 nm laser 1 36 Mbit s amp 2 72 Mbit sWrite mechanism405 nm laser 1 36 Mbit s amp 2 72 Mbit sDeveloped byToshiba DVD ForumUsageData storage 1080p high definition videoExtended fromDVD VideoExtended toBlu ray DiscReleasedMarch 31 2006 17 years ago 2006 03 31 DiscontinuedMarch 28 2008 15 years ago 2008 03 28 HD DVD employed a blue laser with a shorter wavelength with the exception of the 3 DVD and HD REC variants and it stored about 3 2 times as much data per layer as its predecessor maximum capacity 15 GB per layer compared to 4 7 GB per layer on a DVD The format was commercially released in 2006 and fought a protracted format war with rival Blu ray On February 19 2008 Toshiba abandoned the format 7 announcing it would no longer manufacture HD DVD players and drives 6 The HD DVD Promotion Group was dissolved on March 28 2008 8 The HD DVD physical disc specifications but not the codecs were used as the basis for the China Blue High definition Disc CBHD formerly called CH DVD Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and competition from Blu ray Disc 1 2 Attempts to avoid a format war 1 3 Launch 1 4 Sales developments 1 5 Decline 1 6 End of releases 1 7 Warner Blu ray Disc replacements in the U S 2 Technical specifications 2 1 Disc structure 2 2 Recording speed 2 3 File systems 2 4 Audio 2 5 Video 3 Digital rights management 4 Interactive content 5 Hardware 5 1 Compatibility 5 1 1 General purpose computers 5 2 Dual compatibility drives 6 HD DVD Blu ray Disc comparison 7 Development 8 Variants and media 8 1 HD DVD R RW RAM 8 2 DVD HD DVD hybrid discs 8 3 HD DVD Blu ray Disc hybrid discs 8 4 3 DVD 8 5 HD REC 8 6 CBHD 9 See also 9 1 Alternative disc technologies 10 Notes 11 ReferencesHistory EditIn the late 1990s commercial HDTV sets started to enter a larger market but there was no inexpensive way to record or play back HD content JVC s D VHS and Sony s HDCAM formats could store that amount of data but were neither popular nor well known 9 It was well known that using lasers with shorter wavelengths would yield optical storage with higher density Shuji Nakamura invented practical blue laser diodes but a lengthy patent lawsuit delayed commercial introduction 10 Origins and competition from Blu ray Disc Edit Sony started two projects applying the new diodes UDO Ultra Density Optical and DVR Blue together with Philips a format of rewritable discs which would eventually become Blu ray Disc more specifically BD RE and later on with Pioneer a format of read only discs BD ROM 11 The two formats share several technologies such as the AV codecs and the laser diode In February 2002 the project was officially announced as Blu ray Disc 12 and the Blu ray Disc Association was founded by the nine initial members The DVD Forum chaired by Sony was deeply split over whether to go with the more expensive blue lasers or not Although today s Blu ray Discs appear virtually identical to a standard DVD when the Blu ray Discs were initially developed they required a protective caddy to avoid mis handling by the consumer early CD Rs also featured a protective caddy for the same purpose The Blu ray Disc prototype s caddy was both expensive and physically different from DVD posing several problems 13 In March 2002 the forum voted to approve a proposal endorsed by Warner Bros and other motion picture studios that involved compressing HD content onto dual layer DVD 9 discs 14 15 In spite of this decision the DVD Forum s Steering Committee announced in April that it was pursuing its own blue laser high definition solution In August Toshiba and NEC announced their competing standard Advanced Optical Disc 16 It was adopted by the DVD forum and renamed to HD DVD the next year 17 The HD DVD Promotion Group was a group of manufacturers and media studios formed to exchange thoughts and ideas to help promote the format worldwide 18 Its members comprised Toshiba as the Chair Company and Secretary Memory Tech Corporation and NEC as Vice Chair companies and Sanyo Electric as Auditors there were 61 general members and 72 associate members in total 19 The HD DVD promotion group was officially dissolved on March 28 2008 following Toshiba s announcement on February 19 2008 that it would no longer develop or manufacture HD DVD players and drives Attempts to avoid a format war Edit Main article High definition optical disc format war Much like the videotape format war between VHS and Betamax HD DVD was competing with a rival format Blu ray Disc In an attempt to avoid a costly format war the Blu ray Disc Association and DVD Forum attempted to negotiate a compromise in early 2005 One of the issues was that Blu ray Disc companies wanted to use a Java based platform for interactivity BD J based on Sun Microsystems Java TV standards while HD DVD companies wanted to use Microsoft s iHD which became HDi 20 Another problem was the physical formats of the discs themselves 21 The negotiations proceeded slowly and ultimately stalled 22 On August 22 2005 the Blu ray Disc Association and DVD Forum announced that the negotiations to unify their standards had failed 23 Rumors surfaced that talks had stalled publicly the same reasons of physical format incompatibility were cited 21 24 By the end of September that year Microsoft and Intel jointly announced their support for HD DVD 25 Hewlett Packard HP attempted to broker a compromise between the Blu ray Disc Association and Microsoft by demanding that Blu ray Disc use Microsoft s HDi instead of BD J and threatening to support HD DVD instead 26 The Blu ray Disc Association did not agree to HP s demands 27 Launch Edit In November 2006 Microsoft released an HD DVD player for their Xbox 360 game console for 199 It came packaged with King Kong and could only play movies On March 31 2006 Toshiba released their first consumer based HD DVD player in Japan at 110 000 US 934 28 HD DVD was released in the United States on April 18 2006 29 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 and The Phantom of the Opera by Warner Home Video and Serenity by Universal Studios 30 The first independent HD film released on HD DVD was One Six Right 31 32 Sales developments Edit Although HD DVD and Blu ray used near identical translucent keep cases for most pre recorded releases they were normally coloured red for the former and blue for the latter In December 2006 Toshiba reported that roughly 120 000 Toshiba branded HD DVD players had been sold in the United States along with 150 000 HD DVD add on units for the Xbox 360 33 On April 17 2007 one year after the first HD DVD titles were released 29 the HD DVD group reported that they had sold 100 000 dedicated HD DVD units in the United States 34 In the middle of 2007 the first HD DVD Recorders were released in Japan 35 In November 2007 the Toshiba HD A2 was the first high definition player to be sold at a sale price of less than US 100 this was done through several major retailers to make room for the new HD A3 models These closeout sales lasted less than a day each due to both limited quantities and high demand at that price point In the same month the HD DVD promotion group announced that 750 000 HD DVD players had been sold which included stand alone players and the Xbox 360 add on 36 In January 2008 Toshiba announced that close to one million dedicated HD DVD players had been sold 37 As of June 24 2008 475 HD DVD titles had been released in the US 38 As of April 29 2008 236 HD DVD titles had been released in Japan 39 Approximately 232 were released in the UK citation needed Decline Edit On January 4 2008 citing consumer confusion and indifference as a reason for lackluster high definition software sales Warner Bros publicly announced it would stop supporting HD DVD by June 2008 and the company would release HD titles only on Blu ray Disc 40 This was followed by news of Netflix phasing out support for the format and Best Buy s decision to recommend Blu ray Disc over HD DVD in its retail locations and to remove HD DVD players as part of its ongoing HDTV advantage promotion Finally retailer Wal Mart announced that it would be supporting only Blu ray Disc by June 2008 On February 19 2008 Toshiba announced plans to discontinue development marketing and manufacturing of HD DVD players while still providing product support and after sale service to consumers of the format including firmware updates effectively making the platform obsolete The company cited recent major changes in the market 41 2 3 4 5 Shipments of HD DVD machines to retailers were reduced and eventually stopped by the end of March 2008 42 Toshiba later revealed that they lost about 986 million on the format s failure 43 End of releases Edit The final HD DVD major studio releases in the United States were Paramount s Into the Wild Warner s P S I Love You and Twister on May 27 2008 In June the final HD DVD Freedom 6 was released by Bandai Visual which acknowledged the demise of HD DVD but stated that it wanted to complete the release of the seven part Freedom Project of which six parts had been released 44 The seventh part due for August 2008 never saw a release Disco Pigs was announced but postponed with no new date announced for release 45 Pan s Labyrinth is also notable as New Line Cinema s only film to be released on HD DVD as the studio quickly shifted to Blu ray Death Proof was released on HD DVD format as a special release steelbook by Senator Films in Germany on December 15 2008 46 On April 3 2010 Engadget reported that Anthem Films would release the film Deadlands 2 Trapped on HD DVD in a limited run of 500 copies This eventually happened in the form of HD DVD Rs 47 Deadlands The Rising announced on September 5 2010 was released on HD DVD in limited numbers As with the previously released Deadlands 2 Trapped the film was pressed on HD DVD R disc 48 Warner Blu ray Disc replacements in the U S Edit In mid 2009 Warner offered to replace any HD DVD Warner home video release with a Blu ray Disc equivalent for 4 95 plus 6 95 shipping to the contiguous United States or 8 95 to Alaska Hawaii or Puerto Rico 49 The deal required the HD DVD s original sleeve art to be returned to Warner as proof of purchase The turnaround time for processing was approximately two weeks Multi disc sets were exchangeable at a discount such as 14 95 for the five disc Blade Runner release rather than 24 75 No exchanges were offered to customers outside the United States Technical specifications EditThe current specification books for HD DVD are listed at the DVD FLLC website 50 Disc structure Edit HD DVD ROM HD DVD R and HD DVD RW have a single layer capacity of 15 GB and a dual layer capacity of 30 GB HD DVD RAM has a single layer capacity of 20 GB 51 Like the original DVD format the data layer of an HD DVD is 0 6 mm below the surface to physically protect 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 52 Physical size Single layer capacity Dual layer capacity12 cm 4 7 in single sided 15 GB 30 GB12 cm 4 7 in double sided 30 GB 60 GB8 cm 3 1 in single sided 4 7 GB 8 5 GB8 cm 3 1 in double sided 9 4 GB 18 8 GBRecording speed Edit Drive speed Data rate Write time for HD DVD minutes Mbit s MB s Single Layer Dual Layer1 36 4 5 56 1102 72 9 28 55File systems Edit As with previous optical disc formats HD DVD supports several file systems such as ISO 9660 and Universal Disk Format UDF All HD DVD titles use UDF version 2 5 as the file system In this file system multiplexed audio and video streams are stored in EVO container format 53 Audio Edit The HD DVD format supports encoding in up to 24 bit 192 kHz for two channels or up to eight channels of up to 24 bit 96 kHz encoding 54 All HD DVD players are required to decode uncompressed linear PCM Dolby Digital AC 3 Dolby Digital EX DTS Dolby Digital Plus E AC 3 and Dolby TrueHD 55 A secondary soundtrack if present can be stored in any of the aforementioned formats or in one of the HD DVD optional codecs DTS HD High Resolution Audio and DTS HD Master Audio For the highest fidelity audio experience HD DVD offers content producers the choice of LPCM Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD Master Audio Video Edit HD DVD video can be encoded using VC 1 H 264 MPEG 4 AVC or H 262 MPEG 2 Part 2 citation needed A wide variety of resolutions are supported from low resolution CIF all SDTV resolutions supported by DVD Video and HDTV formats 720p 1080i and 1080p 54 All studio released movie titles have featured video in a 1080 line format with companion supplements in 480i or 480p The vast majority of releases were encoded with VC 1 and most of the remaining titles encoded with H 264 MPEG 4 AVC Digital rights management EditMain article Advanced Access Content System If a publisher wishes to restrict use of its HD DVD content it may use the Advanced Access Content System AACS although this is not required for normal disc playback AACS is a standard for content distribution and digital rights management It is developed by AACS Licensing Administrator LLC AACS LA a consortium that includes Disney Intel Microsoft Panasonic Warner Bros IBM Toshiba and Sony One of the advantages over CSS the content restriction system for DVDs is that AACS allows content providers to revoke an individual player device model 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 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 56 The processing key was widely published on the Internet after it was found and the AACS LA sent multiple DMCA takedown notices with the aim of censoring it 57 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 58 59 Further information AACS encryption key controversy 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 60 Other AACS circumvention programs have become available like DVDFab HD Decrypter 61 Interactive content EditHD DVDs use Advanced Content to allow interactive content to be authored for discs Microsoft s implementation of Advanced Content is the HDi Interactive Format and HDi is frequently used to refer to the Advanced Content system Advanced Content is based on web technologies such as HTML XML CSS SMIL and ECMAScript JavaScript so authoring in Advanced Content should be a fairly easy transition for web developers No existing DVD authoring experience is required In comparison Blu ray Disc content is authored using either a scripting environment BDMV or a Java based platform BD J DVD video discs use pre rendered MPEG segments selectable subtitle pictures and simple programmatic navigation which is considerably more limited Hardware EditCompatibility Edit Backward compatibility is available with all HD DVD players allowing users to have a single player to play all types of HD DVD DVD and CD 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 a smooth transition for the studios in terms of publishing movies and allowing consumers with only DVD players to still use the discs DVD 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 However HD DVD discs can t be played on standard DVD players General purpose computers Edit HD DVD drives can also be used with a desktop laptop personal computer PC running Windows XP Windows Vista Mac OS X v10 5 Leopard and many varieties of Linux Third party player software for Windows and Linux have successfully played HD DVD titles using the add on drive 62 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 includes a USB 2 0 cable for connection to the console The first drives also included Peter Jackson s King Kong or Christopher Nolan s Batman Begins on HD DVD The final regular for the drive was US 129 99 as of February 25 2008 On February 23 2008 Microsoft discontinued the Xbox 360 HD DVD player On February 26 2008 Microsoft officially announced that the Xbox 360 HD DVD add on drive would reflect a heavily discounted price down to 49 99 63 Dual compatibility drives Edit Internal optical disc drive from LG playing both HD DVD and Blu ray disks In 2007 LG and Samsung released standalone consumer players that could read both HD DVD and Blu ray Discs a The machines were sold at premium prices but failed to sell in large quantities In May 2008 both companies announced they would stop manufacturing dual compatibility drives 64 A few computer manufacturers such as HP and Acer sold computers with combination HD DVD Blu ray Disc drives LG marketed a Blu ray writer that also read HD DVD discs but could not write to them 65 66 HD DVD Blu ray Disc comparison Edit Comparison of various optical storage media Parameters track pitch p pit width w and minimum length l and laser spot size and wavelength l Main article Comparison of high definition optical disc formats HD DVD competed primarily with Blu ray Disc Both formats were designed as successors to DVD capable of higher quality video and audio playback and of greater capacity when used to store video audio and computer data Blu ray Disc and HD DVD share most of the same methods of encoding media onto discs with each other resulting in equivalent levels of audio and visual quality but differ in other aspects such as interactive capabilities internet integration usage control and enforcement and in which features were mandatory for players The storage size also varies A dual layer HD DVD holds a maximum of 30 GB of data while a dual layer Blu ray Disc carries 50 GB Development EditEven after finalizing the HD DVD standard engineers continued developing the technology A 51 GB triple layer spec was approved at the DVD Forums 40th Steering Committee Meeting held on November 15 2007 67 No movies had been scheduled for this disc type and Toshiba had declined to say whether the 51 GB disc was compatible with existing drives and players Specification 2 0 Part 1 Physical Specification for triple layer HD DVD had been approved in November 2007 68 At the CES 2007 Ritek revealed their high definition optical disc process that extended both competing high definition formats to ten layers increasing capacity to 150 GB for HD DVD and 250 GB for Blu ray Disc A major obstacle to implementing this technology in either format 150 GB HD DVD will not be developed due to HD DVD s discontinuation is that reader writer technology available may not be able to support the additional data layers 69 NEC 70 Broadcom 71 Horizon Semiconductors and STMicroelectronics 71 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 OEM willing to develop a product based on the chip Variants and media EditHD DVD R RW RAM Edit HD DVD R is the writable disc variant of HD DVD available with a single layer capacity of 15 GB or a dual layer capacity of 30 GB 72 Write speeds depend on drive speed with a data rate of 36 55 Mbit s 4 36 MB s and a recording time of 56 minutes for 1 media and 73 Mbit s 8 71 MB s and a recording time of 28 minutes for 2 The Toshiba SD L902A for notebooks was one of the first available HD DVD writers although it was not meant for retail 73 74 Burning HD DVD including Dual Layer with a 1 write speed it could also burn DVDs and CDs In a test of the SD L902A by C t computer magazine with Verbatim discs the written HD DVD Rs suffered from high noise levels 75 as a result the written discs could not be recognized by the external HD DVD drive of the Xbox 360 though they could be read back by the SD L902A 76 HD DVD RW is the rewritable disc variant of HD DVD with equal storage capacity to an HD DVD R The primary advantage of HD DVD RW over HD DVD R is the ability to erase and rewrite to an HD DVD RW disc up to about 1 000 times before needing replacement making them comparable with the CD RW and DVD RW standards This is also of benefit if there are writing errors when recording data as the disc is not ruined and can still store data by erasing the faulty data The dual layer variant was never released and the single layer variant was but it is among the rarest of optical media HD DVD RAM was the proposed successor to DVD RAM for random access on optical media using phase change principals It would hold 20 gigabytes per layer instead of 15 gigabytes for HD DVD R due to differences in recording methods used yielding a higher density disc This variant of HD DVD was never released DVD HD DVD hybrid discs Edit 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 77 These hybrid discs make retail marketing and shelf space management easier Another advantage is hardware cross compatibility The average consumer does not have to worry about whether or not they can play a hybrid DVD any standard home DVD player can access the DVD encoded content and any HD DVD player can access both the DVD and HD DVD encoded content HD DVD Blu ray Disc hybrid discs Edit Warner Bros officially announced Total Hi Def THD or Total HD at CES 2007 THD hybrid discs were to support both HD DVD and Blu ray Disc with HD DVD on one side up to two layers and Blu ray Disc on the other side up to two layers In November 2007 Warner Bros cancelled THD s development 78 3 DVD Edit The HD DVD format also applies to current red laser DVDs this type of disc is called 3 DVD as it is capable of three times the bandwidth of regular DVD Video 3 DVDs are physically identical to normal DVDs Although 3 DVDs provide the same high definition content their playback time is less For example an 8 5 GB DVD DL can hold about 90 minutes of 1080p video encoded with VC 1 or AVC at an average bitrate of 12 Mbit s which corresponds with the average length of Hollywood feature films If quality is compromised slightly and good compression techniques are used most feature films could be encoded with 3 DVD Due to its much greater resolution HD Video also has significantly more redundant information than DVD which newer compression standards can encode more efficiently 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 79 The 3 DVD is comparable to Blu ray Disc BD5 and BD9 formats HD REC Edit HD Rec is an extension of the HD DVD format for recording HD content on regular red laser DVD Rs DVD RWs using H 264 MPEG 4 AVC compression 80 It was approved by the DVD Forum on September 12 2007 81 It is comparable to Blu ray Disc s AVCREC CBHD Edit The China Blue High definition Disc CBHD a high definition optical disc format was based upon the HD DVD format Like the HD DVD CBHD discs have a capacity of 15 GB single layer and 30 GB dual layer and can use existing DVD production lines See also Edit1080p high definition resolution supported by HD DVD and Blu ray Disc 82 Advanced Interactivity Consortium Comparison of popular optical data storage systems Dolby Digital Plus one of the mandatory audio codecs for HD DVD hardware HD NVD High definition optical disc format war MUSE LD an earlier optical disc which contained analog HDTV signals List of optical disc manufacturersAlternative disc technologies Edit 3D optical data storage another next generation technology AVCHD Blu ray Disc Digital Multilayer Disk Enhanced Versatile Disc EVD Fluorescent Multilayer Disc Forward Versatile Disc FVD LS R a layer selection technology designed to allow large numbers of data layers in one disc Professional Disc for DATA PDD or ProDATA Ultra Density Optical Versatile Multilayer DiscNotes Edit In players and drives capable of reading both HD DVD and Blu ray the same blue violet laser is used for both formats References Edit HD DVD High Definition Digital Versatile Disk blue laser optical disk Retrieved April 16 2015 a b Alternative Uses for your soon to be obsolete HD DVD 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2007 Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved March 23 2007 Gieselmann Hartmut Op een laag pitje in C t magazine December 2007 Dutch version page 74 Het is niet eens de bedoeling dat de HD DVD brander SD L902A apart verkocht gaat worden Het beperkte aantal dat Toshiba ervan produceert in in eerste instantie bedoeld voor de notebookserie Qosmio Gieselmann Hartmut Op een laag pitje in C t magazine December 2007 Dutch version page 74 Gieselmann Hartmut Op een laag pitje in C t magazine December 2007 Dutch version pages 74 76 Gieselmann Hartmut Op een laag pitje in C t magazine December 2007 Dutch version page 75 De foutwaarde PI Sum 4 had op dat moment al de grenswaarde van 1000 overschreden vier keer zo hoog als toegestaan Bij de single layer HD DVD R kwam deze met 559 fouten op het dubbele van de toegestane grenswaarde Daarmee pakken de eerste brandresultaten van de HD DVD een stuk slechter uit dan van de eerste dvd of Blu ray branders We konden de discs in de SD L902A weliswaar lezen maar de externe HD DVD drives van de Xbox 360 herkende ze niet New disc supports high capacities of both standard DVD and HD DVD on a single disc Toshiba Retrieved April 1 2007 hd articles on Engadget Engadget Clark Joseph July 30 2006 The Official AVS Guide to HD DVD Authoring AV Science Forum Retrieved April 9 2007 Martyn Williams October 5 2007 New Chips Enable High Def Recording on DVDs pcworld com Retrieved October 18 2007 DVD Forum Approves Recording of HD DVD Content on Red laser Recordable Discs cdrinfo com September 13 2007 Retrieved October 18 2007 Perton Marc April 13 2006 Early HD DVD flicks to be 1080p Engadget Retrieved April 9 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HD DVD amp oldid 1148219493, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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