There's an interesting article in today's Wired News on the differences between the two formats being developed that will allow us to record video and audio to DVD and play it back on a DVD player: ...
LAS VEGAS--The two groups striving to make their respective formats the standard for rewritable DVDs used this week's Consumer Electronics Show as an opportunity to demonstrate their progress. At ...
Microsoft has decided to support one of two competing formats for popular DVD recording technology, a decision that is intended to make the storage devices as easy to use as current CD burners and ...
The two groups striving to make their respective formats the standard for rewritable DVDs used this week's Consumer Electronics Show as an opportunity to demonstrate their progress. At separate, ...
One side of the ongoing recordable DVD format battle is expected to be first with products that nearly double the amount of data held on one disc. But that victory may not put an end to the feud. The ...
A decidedly more vociferous Ricoh took its DVD+RW road show here during Comdex/Fall, while Panasonic countered with a forceful demonstration of its DVD-RAM format. The three-way battle between ...
Tokyo – Panasonic put the world on notice here that it intends to make its DVD-RAM recording format ‘the de facto DVD recording standard.’ Company executives invited select members of the press from ...
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 (UPI) -- If holiday shoppers go looking for a rewritable version of Digital Versatile Disc technology, they're likely to end up facing a dilemma along the lines of the VHS versus ...
Software Architects, a supplier of disk drive utilities that use the Universal Disk Format (UDF), has released DVD-RAM TuneUp! 3.2 for the Mac. The new version — a combination of two products, DVD-RAM ...
HP says: HP to support DVD-RAM<BR><BR><I>HP and Panasonic are working together to make it easier for consumers to use DVD media between their digital consumer electronics and PCs by incorporating ...
I’m confused! I recently hired a video firm to cover an anniversary dinner party, with the video to be provided to me on a DVD. I naively didn’t even consider there might not be a “standard” DVD ...