Originally posted by Mr-Movies:
This is great news and my guess would be that they are affordable by next X-Mas, hopefully.
- This is just an interesting theoretical possibility from the lab.
The article the states that
they are at least 2 - 4 years away from commercial production cos it looks like they're going to try and combine the lastest innovations
(which would make a lot of sense if the higher power spec shortened the laser life-span as would otherwise be logical).
I'd also be inclined to hold off the excitement.
I'd just wait on seeing this reach market and whether it delivers all it promises, it wouldn't be the first piece of BD-connected prototype equipment to make big claims that it either failed to deliver out in 'real life' or suffered very long delays.
2 - 4 years could very easily become 5 - never.
Quote:
While the new high speed lasers will eventually improve the usability of blue laser storage, making applications such as archival storage on the devices more feasible, DenBaars described the innovation as more “evolutionary” than revolutionary. DenBaars was part of the team of UCSB researchers that recently announced another breakthrough in blue laser technology that could increase power even further.
The UCSB team, led by blue laser inventor and former Nichia Corp. researcher Shuji Nakamura, recently demonstrated the world's first nonpolar blue-violet laser diodes. According to DenBaars, the technology could eventually produce blue laser diodes that operate in the range of 500 mW. However, commercial availability of the nonpolar blue lasers is still two to four years away, he said.
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=6202
Quote:
Definitely the higher power laser diodes will not last as long, what there MTBF is one would have to look up the part number to find the MFG's specs on it though.
- As we can see from the article here (
http://www.afterdawn.com/news/archive/8543.cfm ) blue lasers currently have a limited lifespan (currently said to be 3 years) but that was assessed as a movie player not a combo movie and game player.
Interesting how no-one even mentions anything about the expected life-span for, er, shall we say 'certain pieces of BD kit', hmmmm?
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Why buy this superior product when you can get a 3X or VMD... Tooo funny
- Er, you can't actually 'buy this product'.
No-one actually knows if or when it will - ever - come to market, it's an interesting lab story right now, nothing more.
......and how hilarious is it that
Blu-ray has it's own version of 3X (BD9)?
Which if your blinkers could only allow you to see has fantastic potential for the HTPC.
3X offers 30mbit/sec & 9.4gb on an ordinary
DVD9.....and you can only make a cheap passing dig about it?!
Quote:
GO BD!
- No thanks.
You can keep your over-priced,
DRM crammed, clunky bulk data storage media and I'll stick with
HD-DVD, the format specifically designed for video.
Of course some folks might just take this as very good reason to hold off buying any
Blu-ray products.
They haven't even finalised the BD specs yet and now it looks like the hardware is very much open to revision.
Too funny indeed. :P