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LOL! Yeah, I know, Ian. I'm bracing myself! Thanks for the link. I was just curious (for the sake of wondering, and too much time on my hands) whether if a DVD-R/W (A05) could be "firmwared" in the future for multiformat (like the 500A).Ian wrote:I'm sure someone will give you links to about 5 million other posts. In the mean time, read here:
http://www.dvdplusrw.org/faq/faq_general.html
jase wrote:Yeah, but some of the information on that site is blatently one-sided, and often their claims about how terrible DVD-R is are outdated or just plain false. -R compatible with 65% of players vs 85% for DVD+R indeed.....
The DVD-RAM and DVD-R/-RW supporters have announced numurous (sic) compatibility programs for their DVD players (such as "DVD-Multi" and "VR support")
DVD-R and DVD-RW were initially not designed to be used as a DVD-compatible recording solution.
DVD+RW backers claimed in 1997 that the format would be used only for computer data, not home video, but this was apparently a smokescreen intended to placate the DVD Forum and competitors. The original 1.0 format, which held 3 billion bytes (2.8 gigabytes) per side and was not compatible with any existing players and drives, was abandoned in late 1999.
by then most companies had decided not to support these new DVD Forum formats but instead opt for a better solution
The DVD Forum is not a standards-setting body, but instead just a trade-organization promoting some standards.
Ironically, the DVD+R/+RW format is more faitfull (sic) to the official DVD Forum-developped (sic) DVD-Video specification than the DVD-R/-RW/-RAM formats developed by the Forum itself!
however, only DVD+R/+RW is designed from the start to be compatible with existing DVD-ROM drives and DVD-Video players
Furthermore, DVD-R/-RW is less suitable for data applications as well due to a number of technical limitations (such as the inability of random access writing)
DVD-RAM/-R/-RW lies the burden of compatibility on the player, while DVD+R/+RW lies the burden of compatibility on the recorder itself.
For technical comparison between DVD-R(W) and DVD+R(W), just what is a better source for the average readers? Since it is a site dedicated to DVD+RW, it is quite easy to guess it is biased towards DVD+RW as an AMDxxx.com is biased towards AMD and rather against Intel.
jase wrote:For technical comparison between DVD-R(W) and DVD+R(W), just what is a better source for the average readers? Since it is a site dedicated to DVD+RW, it is quite easy to guess it is biased towards DVD+RW as an AMDxxx.com is biased towards AMD and rather against Intel.
Quite right. But if someone asked for a comparison between Pepsi and Coca-Cola, would you send them to www.pepsifanboys.com?
It's you who is acting one.
Jim Taylor's DVD FAQ is hardly a dedicated DVD recordable site. It is updated usually once in a month. The information's too incomplete and outdated. If you think DVD FAQ's more correct than DVDPlusRW.org, I can't agree
I don't think he spends more time on this than me at all.
I apologize in advance for this question, since I'm sure it's been asked many times before. What IS the big difference between DVD+R/W and DVD-R/W? Is it structurally/architecturally different as far as internals go (laser)?
jase wrote:I apologize in advance for this question, since I'm sure it's been asked many times before. What IS the big difference between DVD+R/W and DVD-R/W? Is it structurally/architecturally different as far as internals go (laser)?
To get back to the point, you will generally find little difference between the two. The writers are very similar internally, as are the media.
The writers will generally be cheaper for +R, but the media is slightly cheaper in the main for -R.
Compatibility is generally on a par. You MAY find a few older players which pre-date DVD+R have problems with the + format but which may work with -R, until firmware is updated if available.
As for who will win, who can tell. It'll probably come down to market forces in the end. There isn't really (despite what those on BOTH sides will tell you) that much in terms of useful features to separate the two. +R can be more elegant in its approach but -R has become a defacto standard.
My suggestion would be to either buy the cheapest unit you can find and replace it once it's clear which standard will "win" (or if you are going to be burning a large number of write-once discs consider the price of the media you'll be using and do the same). Or buy a dual-format writer, use probably -R discs for now (for costs reasons again) and then swap and change between the two as the media prices fluctuate.
Thanks for the feedback! I'm not shopping around for a burner, I have an A05 right now. Just for curiousitys sake, I was wondering if hacked firmware(s) could come to the point of flashing an A05 for +R/RW.
jase wrote:It's you who is acting one.
And why bring yourself into the conversation? No-one has questioned your expertise, have they? Why so defensive?
As for who will win, who can tell. It'll probably come down to market forces in the end. There isn't really (despite what those on BOTH sides will tell you) that much in terms of useful features to separate the two. +R can be more elegant in its approach but -R has become a defacto standard.
Since you are accusing the site to be a fanboy something, you are also accusing those who have helped it to have the current contents of being such. I am one of the most prolific posters there. Basically, what you said just seem to accuse everyone related there of some marketing tool for HP and Philips. That's why I said you are acting one.
DVD-R doing what perfectly well?
If DVD+RW companies offer better prices for more features
I can just laugh at anyone who says DVD-R is a standard while DVD+R is not.
So someone who questions the motives of a site which universally praises one format over another, always pointing out the positives of one vs the negatives of another, and steadfastly refusing to acknowledge that its preferred format also has its weaknesses, is automatically a fanboy? I'm sorry, but if you genuinely believe that, you have a very strange view of the world!!!
Providing a format which allows end-users to record data onto discs that are compatible with the vast majority of DVD playback units? Is that not the basic point of any DVD recording format? What, fundamentally (not in terms of fancy toys but real, substantial differences) separates DVD-R from DVD+R? DVD+R was introduced for purely financial reasons, in the same way that there was no real, fundamental advantage of JVC's VHS or Sony's Beta over Philips's early formats.
this has been dealt with thousands of times on many related forums.
nothing in your posts is something that has not been mentioned at least dozens of times [...] bashing on a site that is dedicated to DVD+RW
it's you who twist the facts to suit your own feelings [...] mind [your] own business
You seriously believe you don't sound like a marketing someone from Pioneer itself?
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