KennyShin posted LiteOn's intended '04 roadmap. 16x SATA dual layer dual fomat....very nice.
blakerwry said:Do set-top players read dual layer? For somereason I was thinking that it was part of the original DVD spec, but may have not been implemented in DVD movies... and thus probably not supported in set tops.
Many movies are dual-layer. Set-top boxes have no problem with them. I can't say, of course, how the STB will respond to a dual-layer R/RW disc, though.blakerwry said:hmm.. after looking at that I just might get a DVD burner now... my gf wants one... I assume to burn movies and possibly make backups.
Do set-top players read dual layer? For somereason I was thinking that it was part of the original DVD spec, but may have not been implemented in DVD movies... and thus probably not supported in set tops.
Sure. Even my player has a slight pause .. maybe 1/2 to 3/4 of a second. But it's not a problem. And it certainly beats the 7 seconds or so it takes to change sides on a laserdisc.CityK said:Well, while most STB's have no problem (i.e. the transition is seamless), there are (as Steve alluded) many that have a slight pause, and on older machines, the pause can be quite pronounced.
Lower-end units typically didn't offer a side-change feature. Mid- and hi-end did. Do, actually, since at least Pioneer still sells 1 DVD/LD combi player.CityK said:Yep. Didn't the older LD's players require that you manually flip the disc too?
Not quite. DVD-9 has a capacity of 8.54GB (7.95 Gibibytes). First layer holds 4.7GB (~4.3Gibibytes) and the second 3.8GB (~3.6 Gibibytes).You can fit over 9GB (four hours or so) on a single side.
http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html#3.3.1Mercutio said:The DVD standard also supports a ~18GB dual-layer, dual side format. *I've* never seen one but it's in the spec.