Ian wrote:Not surprising. They gave the DVD+RW format their stamp of approval last year.
I hate to say it.. but the DVD-RW format will probably get squeezed out of the market.
I personally am not so sure... Many consumers have invested in DVD-R drives (A03, A04 and A05 based drives), so if nothing else, it would take quite a while.
You may well be right however Ian.
If DVD+RW does win, it will certainly not be because it is any better for the average consumer. DVD-R and DVD-RW satisfy most users' needs very well.
I almost bought into the DVD+RW hype myself a year ago when buying my first DVD burner.
Luckily for me, Philips made a huge mistake in their hardware design by not including DVD+R write support (the +R standard was actually developed/finalized AFTER the release of 1st gen +RW drives) on their first generation DVD+RW drive.
Their tech support wrongly told me (and others) via e-mail the DVDRW208 could burn DVD+R, but I was suspicious thanks to posts on the net about the possiblity it couldn't).
Luckily I also couldn't get the same confirmation over the phone.
While I was waiting for +R capable drives to come out, I saw a super hot deal (March 2002) on a Panasonic DVD-R/DVD-RAM drive (after $100 MIR it was HALF the price of my $499.99 Philips which I had returned once Philips couldn't guarantee that +R support was going to be included).
I was very happy with the lower media prices and the slightly better compatiblity (DVD-R plays on all my DVD capable players/devices).
I luckily sold my Panasonic for a great price just at the right time (one month before DRU-500A Dell hot deal occurred very unexpectedly).
I currently own a DRU-500A and an A05, and even though the Sony supports DVD+R/DVD+RW, I burn only DVD-R (bought a 5 pack of Philips DVD+R discs once).
Microsoft is a big player of course, but DVD-R/-RW, not DVD+R/+RW is currently the official DVD forum standard.