Kennyshin wrote:boblx2 wrote:There was something about not getting royalies from most of the cheaper media suppliers. But I guess they must be mending their ways. Well we can hope anyway.......
Those most of the cheaper media suppliers supply most (90%) of the media produced in the world. The media royalties alone mean more than 10 billion USD for the few companies for the next few years. Where did you learn it?
well, it seems like "Ian@LynxDV" at this posting (
http://forum.firmware-flash.com/viewtop ... c&start=50 ) says:
"The Royality cost for DVD-R is 20p per disc, this goes to the DVD-Forum, on x2 speed DVD-R there's another Royality of 20p, this goes to Pioneer, total royalities for a x2 speed disc is therefore 40p.
Simple common sense tells you that a disc claimed as x2 speed that is sold for 55p, hasn't had the Royalities paid on it, and therefore shouldn't be expected to work properly, i.e. no royalities = no dye calibration in drive firmware.
Pioneer have put a stop to the fake x2 speed discs so it's likely they will not be sold for much longer, don't be angry at Pioneer, it's not them that are lying about the origins and speed rating of the disc, it's the people who are putting their brand name on it you should be blaming. "
this guy's supposed to be a seller in the UK, and his statement sounds reasonable.
DA
A-Bit IT7-Max; P4 1.8GHz (o/c'ed to 2.4 GHz); HSF Alpha PAL8942; 512MB DDR-2100; 431W PSU (EnerMax EG465P-VE); ATI AIW Radeon 8500DV; HDD: 30 GB (IBM), 80GB (Maxtor), 40GB (WD); 120GB (WD); Lite-On LTR-40125S & 48125W; Pioneer DVD-117 & DVR-105