The High Definition DVD FAQ
Author: Xiao Fang
Version: 0.8.0
Creation Date: 14th September 2005
Last Updated: 8th November 2007
Text Version:
http://www.digital-digest.com/highdefdvd/faq.txt
Official Websites:
http://www.digital-digest.com/highdefdvd/
http://old.bitburners.com/
Contact Details:
http://www.digital-digest.com/highdefdvd/faq_contact.php
Copyright Notice
This FAQ is presented as is. This FAQ can only be distributed without any
monetary cost involved, and by specific permission from the author.
Please also see the "Distributing this FAQ" section (section A.1).
No parts of this FAQ can be reproduced without the permission of the
author.
Mirrors
Below is a list of official mirrors for this FAQ. Please contact me if you wish to mirror and/or translate this FAQ.
The list below is in alphabetical order:
Translations:
For the most up to date list of mirrors, please refer to this forum post.
* Indicates outdated version
Table of Contents
1. About this FAQ
1.1 Who am I?
1.2 Which format do you support?
1.3 Why make a FAQ?
1.4 Providing Feedback
2. General Topics
2.1 What is high definition DVD?
2.2 Why should I want high definition DVD?
2.3 What will happen to my existing DVDs?
2.4 Can my computer play back high definition DVDs?
2.4.1 PowerDVD Ultra
2.5 What are the different formats for high definition DVD?
2.6 Why do we need different formats?
3. Blu-ray
3.1 What is Blu-ray?
3.2 What is Blu-ray's official launch date?
3.3 Who is behind Blu-ray?
3.4 Are there different readable/writable formats like with
DVD/DVD-R/W?
3.5 What will be the capacities of these types of discs?
3.6 What resolution will the video on a movie BD be?
3.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
3.8 What about the audio?
3.9 What can you tell me about the recordable BD formats?
3.10 What kind of equipment will I need to play back BD
movies?
3.10.1 Blu-ray Hardware Profiles
3.11 What about my existing DVD collection? Out the trash
like my old VHS collection?
3.12 Will BD/HD DVD players be able to play back the other
high definition DVD formats?
3.13 What about copy protection? Will it be as weak as
DVD's CSS?
3.14 So why have AACS if it might not work?
3.15 What about region coding?
3.16 PlayStation 3
3.16.1 Why is the PS3 being mentioned in this FAQ?
Did you copy and paste the wrong section into
the wrong FAQ?
3.16.2 Will the PS3 be able to play back BD movies?
3.16.3 Why is PS3's support for BD significant enough
to warrant an entire chapter in this FAQ?
3.16.4 What about the Xbox 360?
3.16.5 PS3 Blu-ray Playback Details
3.17 Technical details overview
3.18 Hardware availability
3.19 Software (Movies) availability
4. HD DVD
4.1 What is HD DVD?
4.1.1 What is AOD?
4.2 What is HD DVD's official launch date?
4.3 Who is behind HD DVD?
4.4 Are there different readable/writable formats like
with DVD/DVD-R/W?
4.5 What will be the capacities of these types of discs?
4.6 What resolution will the video on a movie HD DVD be?
4.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
4.8 What about the audio?
4.9 What can you tell me about the recordable HD DVD
formats?
4.10 What kind of equipment will I need to play back
HD DVD movies?
4.10.1 HD DVD Performance Levels
4.10.2 CH DVD
4.11 What about my existing DVD collection? Out the trash
like my old VHS collection?
4.12 Will BD/HD DVD players be able to play back the other
high definition DVD formats?
4.13 What about copy protection? Will it be as weak as
DVD's CSS?
4.14 So why have AACS if it might not work?
4.15 What about region coding?
4.16 Xbox 360
4.16.1 Since the Sony PS3 will support BDs, will the
Xbox 360 support HD DVD?
4.16.2 Xbox 360 HD DVD Playback Details
4.16.3 Using the Xbox 360's HD DVD add-on drive on your PC
4.17 Technical details
4.18 Hardware availability
4.19 Software (Movies) availability
5. EVD
5.1 What is EVD?
5.2 When was EVD officially launched?
5.3 Who is behind EVD?
5.4 What about EVD recordable formats?
5.5 Why develop EVD?
5.6 What resolution will the video on an EVD be?
5.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
5.8 What about the audio?
5.9 What kind of equipment will I need to play back
EVD movies?
5.10 What about my existing DVD collection?
5.11 Will EVD players be able to play back the other
high definition DVD formats?
5.12 What about copy protection?
5.13 Technical details
6. FVD
6.1 What is FVD?
6.2 When was FVD officially launched?
6.3 Who is behind FVD?
6.4 What about FVD recordable formats?
6.5 Why develop FVD?
6.6 What will be the capacities of these types of discs?
6.7 What resolution will the video on a FVD be?
6.8 What kind of video compression will be used?
6.9 What about the audio?
6.10 What kind of equipment will I need to play back
FVD movies?
6.11 What about my existing DVD collection?
6.12 Will FVD players be able to play back the other
high definition DVD formats?
6.13 What about copy protection?
6.14 Technical details
7. Format Comparisons
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Blu-ray vs HD DVD
7.2.1 The Author's Opinion
7.2.2 Opinion from www.dvdrs.net
7.2.3 Opinion from DVDHelp.us
7.3 EVD vs FVD
8. The Future
8.1 Which format will win the day?
8.2 Which format should I go for now (or soon)?
8.3 How can I ensure there is only one format?
A. Appendix
A.1 Distributing this FAQ
A.2 Terms and Concepts
A.3 Acknowledgements
A.4 ChangeLog
1. About this FAQ
1.1 Who am I?
My name is Xiao Fang and I'm the webmaster of Digital Digest and
dvdloc8.com. But more
important than that, I'm a big DVD fan, and naturally, I'm very
interested in the next generation high definition DVD formats. My real
concerns is that with all the confusion over the different high
definition formats, people will give up on all of the formats due to
frustration.
1.2 Which format do you support?
Like most of you, I don't think I have enough information
just yet to make any sort of informed decision. One of the main problems
right now is that a lot of the literature out there is to promote
one format or another, usually biased and sometimes blatant advertising.
Hopefully, this FAQ will shed light on most of the issues in a non-
-partisan/biased manner, so you can make this decision yourself.
1.3 Why make a FAQ?
Apart from the reasons listed above, I thought it would be nice to have
a single document where all the most common questions can be answered,
before the official launch dates of the various high definition formats.
These questions are questions that I have been seeking
answers for, and questions that I've been asked by others (and
unfortunately, I have not always been able to find or provide the
answers to these questions).
1.4 Providing Feedback
If you have any questions, suggestions and corrections for this FAQ,
you can post them in the official forum for this FAQ:
http://forum.digital-digest.com/forumdisplay.php?f=104
When posting, please add at the start of the subject "HDDVD FAQ:", so I
will know that the post is in regards to the FAQ.
2. General Topics
2.1 What is high definition DVD?
High definition DVD will be more like an evolution of the DVD format,
than an outright revolution. In terms of video and audio quality, high
definition DVD will be what DVD was to VHS videotapes. Many
television sets today are capable of displaying high definition
pictures, and the move to a high definition home video format is the
logical step in the evolution of home video.
To be more precise, high definition DVD will aim to offer 1080 lines of
video resolution video (more on these technical details later), compared
to the 576/480 lines offered by DVDs today.
2.2 Why should I want high definition DVD?
For the same reasons why you would want DVDs over video tapes. Apart
from the high resolution video and audio, the increased capacity of high
definition discs will hopefully mean an end to single movie multi-disc
sets, and allow for more extra features to fit onto one disc. It may,
for example, be possible to fit an entire season of a television show
onto one disc.
2.3 What will happen to my existing DVDs?
Regardless of which high definition format you choose, they will most likely be
compatible with existing DVDs meaning your DVD collection (mine is
listed here) does
not have to be replaced. Many DVD players today can upscale (increase
the video resolution through digital manipulation) existing DVD movies
to high definition, and I expect this feature will be present sooner or
later on all the high definition DVD players once they are released.
While upscaling won't offer the same kind of experience as "real" high
definition movies, it will allow your DVDs to be show in the best
possible manner without resolution loss being an issue.
More information on compatibility later in the FAQ for each specific
format.
2.4 Can my computer play back high definition DVDs?
June 2007 Update: If you want to find out more about whether your system
meets the requirements for Blu-ray or HD DVD playback on your Windows
PC, you can read my new (added June 2007) guide which goes into detail
about both hardware and software requirements -
Is your PC High Definition DVD Ready?
At this moment, there are no commercially available computer systems
available to play some of the sample high definition disc available.
Once the hardware and software arrives, most 2.8 GHz or higher rated
computers should be able to play back high definition content smoothly,
although the highest video/audio resolution movies (e.g. 1080p with high
definition multi-channel audio) may require a faster computer
and/or dedicated audio decoding hardware. As a test, you can try and
playback some trailers marked (HD) on
this page
or some WMV-HD clips
here.
I have also written a new guide that will show you how to test your
system for high definition DVD playback:
Is your computer fast enough for high definition DVD playback?.
Cyberlink, makers of the PowerDVD software, has already demonstrated
playback of a HD DVD using PowerDVD and an Intel Pentium D processor at
the Digital Hollywood conference in September 2005. More information
about this demonstration can be found in Cyberlink's
press release.
Cyberlink has also announced that they will demonstrate Blu-ray disc
playback at CEATEC (Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies) in
Japan in early October 2005. The demonstration will be supported by
Panasonic and the BDA (Blu-ray Disc Association). More information about
this demonstration in this
press release.
In August 2006, Cyberlink released a tool called "CyberLink BD / HD
Advisor". This free tool allows you to test your computer and see if you
have the required hardware and software (Windows, PowerDVD versions) to
playback Blu-ray or HD DVD movies. You can download this tool
here.

Cyberlink has also listed the system requirements for BD/HD DVD playback
on their website.
One interesting note is the requirement for HDCP compliant monitor and
graphics card if you use DVI/HDMI to connect your monitor to your
computer. Many monitors are HDCP certified, but there are surprisingly
few video cards that have HDCP support. NVIDIA/ATI both provided HDCP
support in their GPUs starting several years ago, but it left the
decision to actually implement HDCP support up to manufacturers. Suffice
to say, only the most recent cards that specifically state HDCP support
actually has HDCP support, and most cards manufactured prior to July
2006 will not support HDCP. It also seems that version 7.3 of PowerDVD
Ultra specifically prevents older ATI cards from working - only those
listed as officially supported will work, even though most older cards
are capable of doing so (if you have a fast CPU). For more information
on the full hardware and software requirements for PowerDVD Ultra,
please have a look at my Is Your PC High Definition DVD Ready? guide.
So what will happen when HDCP support is not present or if your monitor
only has D-Sub/VGA input?
With D-Sub/VGA/Analog or HDCP-less digital output, the output will be
limited to 960x540 (a quarter of the full 1920x1080 resolution) at best.
Studios have the option to prevent playback (black screen) at all, or to
present a distorted picture/warning text. The black screen/distorted
output option may be more common with DVI/HDMI outputs without HDCP, as
the data from digital outputs are easier to copy. With PowerDVD Ultra,
the restrictions are a bit different - if you are using a non-HDCP
compliant DVI connection, playback will simply not happen! Only when you
unplug is and use VGA, will you get (resolution limited) playback.
2.4.1 PowerDVD Ultra
PowerDVD Ultra was released in late December 2006. It marks the
first commercially available software based high definition DVD
player on the market (previous versions of WinDVD and PowerDVD with
high definition support were bundled with hardware only, and not
available to individual purchase). PowerDVD Ultra supports both
Blu-ray and HD DVD playback, including support for almost all the
advanced features that both formats offer (like interactive content
using BD-J or iHD).
Dolby Digital Plus, TrueHD, DTS-HD are all supported, as well as
DTS-ES Discrete and Matrix. DTS NEO:6 is also supported.
Hardware acceleration is supported for Intel, ATI and NVIDIA graphic
sub-systems.
In addition to these features, all the other features found in the
deluxe version of PowerDVD is also present.
If you want to find out more about whether your system meets the
requirements for Blu-ray or HD DVD playback on your Windows PC, you
can read my new (added June 2007) guide which goes into detail
about both hardware and software requirements - Is your PC High Definition DVD Ready?.
For more information on PowerDVD Ultra, please refer to Digital
Digest's software information page for PowerDVD Ultra
or the official website.
2.5 What are the different formats for high definition DVD?
The two main competing formats are HD DVD (not to be confused with the
more general term of High Definition DVD, which refers to any and all high
definition DVD formats) and Blu-ray disc (or BD).
There are also formats mainly based in Asia, called EVD and FVD, and
this FAQ covers them as well.
2.6 Why do we need different formats?
Well, the short answer is we don't. In an ideal world, there would only
be one single format, a format all the electronics firms and movie
studios would support. In fact, this "ideal world" existed during the
creation of the DVD format, and is perhaps one of the main reasons why
DVD became the record breaking success that it was.
With multiple formats, this means that movie studios will have to choose
a side when it comes to releasing movies in high definition format. What
this means for consumers is that unless your high definition DVD player
supports all the high definition formats, you will either be limited in
the movies you can buy or you might need to purchase more than one
player.
While "we" don't need multiple formats, the people behind the various
formats do because there is a huge amount of money involved in licensing
fees (more on that later).
3. Blu-ray

3.1 What is Blu-ray?
Blu-ray is one of the two major formats competing for the emerging high
definition DVD market. The name "Blu-ray" comes from the use of a
blue-violet laser to read and write data. The term Blu-ray discs is
shortened to BD for simplicity.
3.2 What is Blu-ray's official launch date?
The official date has been set to Spring 2006, announced in December
2005. HD DVD's release date was earlier pushed back to early 2006 as
well. The difference between HD DVD and Blu-ray's launch dates is
probably not a major issue, because even DVDs, the most successful
format ever, took a year to become a "must-have" item after its official
launch date, so the difference of a few months between the official
launch dates is probably insignificant.
A launch date of May 23, 2006 was first set in February of the same
year, but has recently been delayed until June 25th.
As for media, the 2006 CES allowed several companies to make
announcements in regards to media availability:
- Fujifilm: Blu-ray and HD DVD media available in mid 2006
- Verbatim: Single layer BD-R and HD DVD-R media available early 2006,
dual layer HD DVD-R by the end of 2006
More dates will be posted when more announcements are made.
3.3 Who is behind Blu-ray?
Blu-ray is backed by the following list of companies:
- Apple Computer, Inc.
- Dell Inc.
- Hewlett Packard Company
- Hitachi, Ltd.
- LG Electronics Inc.
- Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.
- Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
- Pioneer Corporation
- Royal Philips Electronics
- Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
- Sharp Corporation
- Sony Corporation
- TDK Corporation
- Thomson Multimedia
- Twentieth Century Fox
- Walt Disney Pictures
The main backers are Sony, Matsushita (Panasonics) and Philips, with
Sharp also playing an important role. Sony (formerly Columbia/Tri-Star,
and also the new owner of MGM), Fox and Disney are the main studio backers.
Warner is now the only major studio to back both formats after
Paramount/Dreamwork's decision in August 2007 to stop releasing movies
for Blu-ray and to produce HD DVD releases only. Rumours suggest that
this deal will only last 18 months, although official statements
indicate it is indefinite. For an updated list of studio and industry
support, please refer to this DigiWiki entry.
In November 2005, HP has stated that it might shift its support to HD
DVD if "managed copy" (see section 3.13) and "iHD" (see section 7.2) are
not supported by Blu-ray. Subsequently, mandatory managed copy will now
be part of Blu-ray specifications, but the decision to include iHD is
being considered. More information
here.
If you want to find out "which camp" you are in based on your currently
DVD collection, feel free to head on to dvdloc8.com, create a collection
list and view the collection's statistics to find out (the same thing
can be done with your wish list as well).
3.4 Are there different readable/writable formats like with DVD/DVD-R/W?
Blu-ray will come in three different formats, BD-ROM for read-only discs
(similar to DVD-ROM), BD-R for write-once discs (similar to DVD-R) and
BD-RE for rewritable discs (similar to DVD-RW). Why BD-RE instead of
BD-RW is anyone's guess though.
At the 2006 International CES, Panasonic made several announcements in
regards to pricing of BD-R/BD-RE media. A single layer BD-R will have
the retail price of $17.99 (USD). A dual layer BD-R will have the retail
price of $42.99. A single layer BD-RE will have the retail price of
$24.99, while the dual layer variety will retail for $59.99.
3.5 What will be the capacities of these types of discs?
Like DVDs, BDs will come in single layer and dual-layer versions, and
eventually, multi-layer (3 or more layer) discs will be supported.
A single layer BD will store around 25GB,
which is more than 5 times the capacity of a
single layer DVD. For each additional layer, an additional 25GB of
storage will be available. The reason for the dramatic capacity increase
over DVD is obvious when you consider that a HD transmission will take
up a lot more room than a typical DVD stream, although with 25GB
and 50GB capacities, and better compression algorithms, capacity
shouldn't be an issue (so no "flippers", or double sided disc). These
two types of discs are often referred to as BD25 and BD50.
However, in an interview
with a Microsoft representative, it was suggested that BD's 50GB discs may not
be ready yet for mass production. In December, the Blu-ray group has
official stated that dual layer discs will not be available at the
official launch of the format, in Spring 2006. Buena Vista has expressed
concern at the delay of dual layered BDs.
This could also lead to potential problems with early movie releases, as
Sony has indicated that MPEG-2 compression is their preferred video
compression format. A typical HD quality MPEG-2 compressed video would
require more space than what a single layer 25 GB BD can offer. The good
news is that Panasonic has started testing a production line for
producing dual layer BDs, although most expect full production of dual
layer BDs to be available in the second half of 2006. In comparison, HD
DVD movies showcased at CES 2006 did not use MPEG-2 compression.
Most Blu-ray movies have moved on to using H.264 of VC-1, and with BD50
production now available, capacity is no longer an issue.
3.6 What resolution will the video on a movie BD be?
BD resolution will follow the standard HD resolution standards currently
used for HDTV transmissions. This means, at least for the present, the
maximum resolution will be 1080i/p, or 1920x1080 in either interlaced or
progressive format (more information about the difference between
interlaced/progressive video in section A.2). There is also 720p
resolution (1280x720, progressive), which is the current native
resolution of many home theatre displays, and also SD resolution
support, similar to today's DVDs.
The first Blu-ray player from Samsung actually uses the same chip as the
early HD DVD player (Broadcom), which only supports 1080i. The 1080p
output from this player is achieved by Samsung adding another chip to
convert the 1080i signal to 1080p.
The actual quality difference between 1080i and 1080p is actually an
active debate, since it has to take into account various factors such as
the source material, the native resolution of the display, and even the
de-interlacer. For more information, please refer to section A.2.
3.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
BD will support MPEG-2 compression as found in DVDs, MPEG-4 AVC and also
Microsoft's VC-1, the exact same set as HD DVD's support (gee, I wonder
why we need two different formats then). Microsoft's VC-1 is based on
their WMV-9 standard.
Out of the supported compression formats, MPEG-2 is the oldest and least
efficient (larger file size/bitrate in order to achieve the same quality
as MPEG-4 AVC or VC-1). But due to licensing issues, Sony has indicated
that, at least at release, BD may use MPEG-2 compression instead. Using
MPEG-2 compression for HD content could lead to disc capacity problems
(see section 3.5). But since the early releases, most titles are now
using the more efficient H.264 or VC-1 codecs, which Warner mostly
using the same VC-1 transfer for both their Blu-ray and HD DVD releases.
MPEG-4 AVC is also known as H.264 or MPEG-4 Part 10. H.264 High Profile
will be used for the encoding. More information on MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 and
specifications for the various profiles can be found
here.
3.8 What about the audio?
The supported mandatory formats will be the existing DVD audio formats
of Dolby Digital AC3 and DTS. Linear PCM audio will be supported up to
7.1 channels. Dolby Digital Plus (DD+), Dolby TrueHD, DTS-HD and DTS-HD
Master Audio (lossless - see section A.2) are all part of the optional
specifications.
3.9 What can you tell me about the recordable BD formats?
The BD specification calls for the recordable function to be available
in most hardware. The initial recording speed will only be 1x (for the BD
1.0 specification), at 36 Mbps, which is actually equal to about 30x
in CD transfer terms (or 3.4x in DVD transfer terms). BD movies by their
nature may require more than the 36 Mbps offered by 1x drives, so 2x or
higher speed drives should be available by the time of launch.
3.10 What kind of equipment will I need to play back BD movies?
The first thing you will need is a BD capable player. No existing DVD
player will be able to read a BD, and there is no software or hardware
upgrade that can be performed to enable BD playback. Buying a new player
is, therefore, the only choice if you want BD playback.
To get the best out of BD and HD in general, you will need a TV that is
not only "HD Ready" (accepts HD inputs, but may not display HD
in full resolution), but a TV that can fully resolve and display 1080
lines of resolution, preferably in progressive fashion. Your HD display
should also have HDMI (see section A.2) or DVI input that supports HDCP
(High Definition Copy Protection - see section A.2), as otherwise you
may be limited to standard definition (SD) pictures only.
The reason for this is a form of copy protection called ICT (Image
Constraint Token). ICT is optional for Blu-ray movies (all movies with
ICT activated must display a logo to warn consumers), which limits
analog output (for example, through component output) to a maximum
resolution of 960x540. Most movie studios have expressed that they will
not use ICT in the near future (for fear of a public backlash, since
many people have high quality analog only equipment).
The bias towards HDMI only HD output is a bit of a debating point
amongst people that have been following the development of high
definition DVD formats. A lot of people do have HD equipment that only
have component/analog inputs, and even today, most of the cheaper displays
do not have HDMI or DVI inputs. By the end of this year though, it is
expected that most equipment will have HDMI/DVI inputs, and so this will
become less of an issue to people over time. There are also (some quite
valid) points being made about HDMI/DVI being inferior in quality to
analog inputs (mainly in the area of colour reproduction).
For those that don't yet have HD displays, BD movies will still work on
your existing television set, but only at SD definition. This isn't too
bad, as the having a HD source to down-convert to SD will mean you will get
the best possible looking SD picture there is.
3.10.1 Blu-ray Hardware Profiles
There are three Blu-ray playback profiles. Blu-ray playback hardware
must comply with one of these profiles. October 31st 2007 say the
Blu-ray Profile 1.1 become mandatory, meaning all players released
after this date must comply with Profile 1.1 specifications.
Profile 1.0 is used by the first generation of Blu-ray players, but
notably lacks a secondary video processor (needed for
Picture-in-Picture content) and only requires 64 KB of Persistent
Storage. Internet connectivity is also not required.
Profile 1.1 adds the requirement for a secondary video and audio
processors, requires 256 MB of persistent storage. All players
manufactured after October 31 2007 must comply with this profile.
Profile 2.0 adds network connectivity to the list of requirements,
and persistent storage requirement is increased to 1 GB.
A table of the various profile differences can be found here.
3.11 What about my existing DVD collection? Out the trash like my old VHS collection?
There is no official standard that says DVDs will have to be supported
by BD devices, but the general consensus is that all BD devices will
supports DVDs, without requiring any major modifications on the
manufacturer's part. It will be stupid for manufacturers not to put
support for such a popular and established format into their BD players.
3.12 Will BD/HD DVD players be able to play back the other high definition DVD formats?
Yes and no. No in that the official specifications obviously won't
mention rival formats, unless it's to slag them off, but as with support
for DVDs, it would be stupid for many manufacturers (especially those
that haven't strongly backed any single format) to not support all the
major formats, just like how DVD recordable multi-drives (DVD+ and DVD-
support in one drive) is the de-facto standard at the moment.
3.13 What about copy protection? Will it be as weak as DVD's CSS?
One major lesson that the movie studios have learnt with DVD is that
copy protection is something they should take much more seriously, and
they have done just that with the next generation formats, although some
would argue that there are still inherent weaknesses in the copy
protection scheme chosen.
BD and HD DVD will both use AACS (Advanced Access Content System)
to protect its digital data. It is very similar
to the flawed CSS, but the "key" difference is in how
the various decryption keys are distributed. AES encryption is to be
used.
There is actually a lot of computer science behind this, including
binary trees, public/private keys and what have you, so I won't bore
you with it. Basically, a key is like the normal use of the word:
a device used to unlock something. All BD/HD DVD players will have sets
of keys that can unlock the data on BDs/HD DVDs. Studios have the power
to revoke keys, or prevent certain keys from being used to unlock the
data (e.g. keys that have been posted publicly after being hacked). So
far so good (or bad), as this is how CSS functions as well, although
it's much harder for CSS to revoke keys because the keys are not
structured properly like with AACS. Once a key is revoked, future discs
will not carry this key, and players using this key will can no longer
play back these new discs. The real intention here is not to disable
players, but rather, stop ripping software that uses a set of "leaked"
or "hacked" keys to rip disc. There might be a situation where a
particular hardware player's keys have all been leaked, and it will no
longer be able to play back new discs.
Now, there have been a lot of discussion about AACS requiring an
Internet connection to update keys and so forth, as well as checking for
content authorisation (pay per play, etc...), but this is not really
true of standalone hardware players, at least not right now (although by
launch time, this may change, but it's hard to imagine Internet
connections being required by default, as this would wipe out a huge
segment of the consumer base). Only software based players will
require this key update, as it isn't really practical to implement an
"Internet connection" requirement for hardware. An Internet connection
might be useful if say a hardware player's keys have all been leaked and
revoked, so a new set can be issued to the player through an Internet
update. Although allowing updates through the Internet opens up a whole
other set of issues, like security. Besides, this kind of copy
protection can be implemented without an Internet connection, as in the
case of SPDC (see below).
And as long as hackers don't post keys publicly, or produce tools which
randomly generates working keys, this scheme won't even work to provide
any protection. Even if there was a large scale leak, say if all the keys
of a certain hardware manufacturer are leaked, a mass revocation may
not work either because this would cause big problems for existing
players of said manufacturer (assuming it is an "established" name), and
a lot of headaches to a lot of normal consumers (but we'll probably have
to get used to this sooner or later). If a "minor" manufacturer has its
keys revoked (e.g. a small manufacturer that did not pay licensing
fees), then people who have purchased this player might be in a bit of
bother, but this is probably one of the intended effects of this new
copy protection scheme.
Worst yet, work on AACS has been delayed meaning that a delay on the
launch dates of both Blu-ray and HD DVD hardware is a strong
possibility.
AACS will also feature analogue copy protection (Macrovision), a way to
force lower resolution video on analogue outputs, audio watermarks to
prevent non watermarked audio from being played back, and the
possibility of forcing digital output only (digital output is easier to
"protect" than analogue output).
Unfortunately, the Blu-Ray Disc Association has deemed AACS
insufficient, and has also added support for Self-Protecting Digital
Content (SPDC), or what it calls BD+, and "ROM Mark". Starting with ROM
Mark, it is a unique and undetectable identifier produced in the
manufacturing phase that prevents mass piracy. Fair enough. BD+ or SPDC,
on the other hand, has come under some criticism. BD+ allows discs to
carry title specific security logic, basically means that each disc can
contain code that can be run on a BD player to allow or disallow
playback (although the player's behaviour is not modified, and will
return to normal once the disc is ejected). Whether this code can be
used maliciously by hackers (e.g. a pirated disc distributed on the
Internet, which can shut down a player, forcing the user to reboot
and quickly eject the malicious disc before the code is run again), we
can only wait to find out.
More information on SPDC can be found here:
http://www.cryptography.com/technology/spdc/
As expected, the various AACS versions that have been present on discs
since release have all been cracked, sometimes before the discs
themselves were available for general sale. BD+ implementations have
been rumoured to be hacked too with the first commercial cracking
solution to be available before the end of 2007.
In November 2005, HP has requested "Managed Copy" to be added to the
Blu-ray specifications as a mandatory features. That request was
subsequently approved, so now both Blu-ray and HD DVD will have
mandatory managed copy support. Managed copy refers to
the part of the copy protection system that allows backups to be made,
as well as the content to be played back remotely (eg. over a home
network). Microsoft has recently cited this to be one of the main
reasons for its shift of support towards HD DVD, before Blu-ray made it
mandatory as well.
3.14 So why have AACS if it might not work?
The very same reasons why the (non-working) CSS and (non-working) region
protection schemes are still in place today.
Licensing is the cash cow of the 21st century. By only providing working
keys to manufacturers that pay you licensing fees (at your own
schedule/price), every time a device capable of playing BD/HD DVD is
produced, a licensing fee is paid to the founders of the formats. This
is also why there are two major and two minor high definition DVD
formats, as opposed to just the one (see section 2.6).
So in actual fact, AACS is more of a licensing protection scheme, than a
copy protection scheme, and any inconvenience consumers have to suffer
as a result is much less important, in the eye of the format founders,
than the billions in income that licensing will generate in the lifetime
of these high definition formats.
3.15 What about region coding?
By all accounts, region coding for DVDs should be considered a failure,
with region-free hacked firmware available for DVD-ROM drives, and
remote control hacks for standalones (not to mention the great number of
players manufactured to be region-free). However, this is not stopping
region coding to be included in Blu-ray, even if the boundaries of the
regions are different to that for DVDs.
An announcement in December 2005 specified the regions for Blu-ray
discs:
- Region 1: North America, South America, East Asia except for China
- Region 2: Europe and Africa
- Region 3: China, Russia and other countries
3.16 PlayStation 3

3.16.1 Why is the PS3 being mentioned in this FAQ? Did you copy and paste the wrong section into the wrong FAQ?
The Sony PS3 is indeed important to the success or failure of the BD
format. As mentioned above, Sony is one of the major backers of the BD
format, and so it is no surprise that the next generation game
console, the PS3, will use BD as its primary format. As for November
2007, the PS3 represents the best Blu-ray player available on the
market due to its versatile and powerful hardware, which allows it
to be eventually upgraded to conform with the most advanced Blu-ray
playback profile (see section 3.10.1).
But thanks for assuming that it was a mistake on my part.
3.16.2 Will the PS3 be able to play back BD movies?
Yes.
The PS3 is capable of 1080p output, so full resolution BD playback
is supported.
Because the PS3 has an Ethernet port, large quantities of storage
and a powerful processor, firmware updates will eventually be able
to bring the PS3 up to the most advanced Blu-ray playback profile
(see section 3.10.1).
3.16.3 Why is PS3's support for BD significant enough to warrant an entire chapter in this FAQ?
Because people like playing games, and the PS3 will most likely be
the most popular game console once it is released, and if not, it
will still be in the top 3. If anything, this could tip the format
race in favour of BD over HD DVD, and certainly doesn't hurt Sony,
which had the choice of having a proprietary format for its game
console, or something just as good.
As of November 2007, the PS3 is the most popular Blu-ray player on
the market and it has helped Blu-ray to have a lead in terms of
movie sales in the US.
3.16.4 What about the Xbox 360?
See section 4.16
3.16.5 PS3 Blu-ray Playback Details
This section briefly goes over the details of PS3's Blu-ray playback
capabilities. For a more detailed report and comparison with Xbox
360's HD DVD playback capabilities, please refer to this article.
For the time being, navigation of Blu-ray titles is done through the
PS3's controller. A remote control add-on will be available in time
though.
Disc loading and menu access is quite quick, and comparable if not
better than the Samsung BD-P1000 standalone player. The operation is
also near silent, unlike the noise from the Xbox 360's internal
cooling fan.
HDMI 1.3 output is included in both version of the console, making
it the first Blu-ray player to feature HDMI 1.3. 1080p output is
supported, as is internal decoding of audio up to 7.1 channels.
Dolby Digital, DTS, SACD and Dolby TrueHD can all be decoded by the
PS3. Pass-through of these formats is also supported through HDMI or
through Sony's optical "MultiOut" audio output system. HDMI cable
and Sony's proprietary PS3 to component cables are sold separately.
Playback quality appears to favour the PS3 over the Samsung BD-P1000,
especially in the area of detail. Video output is at 1080p/60, with
no support for 1080p/24 as of yet. The latest PS3 1.80 firmware adds
1080p upscaling for both games and movies (including DVD movies)!
3.17 Technical details overview
| Laser Type: | Blue-violet laser |
| Laser Wavelength: | 405nm |
| Track Pitch: | 0.32µm |
| Read Power: | 0.35mW |
| Disc size: | 120mm |
| Capacity: |
| Single Layer: | 25GB |
| Dual Layer: | 50GB |
| Transfer Rate: | 1x => 36 Mbps |
| Video Resolution: | 1080i (1920x1080 HD, 50i, 60i) |
| 1080p (1920x1080 HD, 24p) |
| 720p (1280x720, 50p, 60p, 24p) |
| SD (720x576/480, 50i, 60i) |
| Video Compression: | MPEG-2 |
| MPEG-4 AVC |
| Microsoft VC-1 |
| Audio Resolution/Compression: | Dolby Digital AC3 |
| DTS |
| Linear PCM |
| Optional: Dolby Digital Plus (DD+) |
| Optional: Dolby TrueHD |
| Optional: DTS-HD High Resolution Audio |
| Optional: DTS-HD Master Audio (lossless) |
| Copy Protection | AACS |
| ROM Mark |
| BD+ |
| File System: | DF 2.6 |
3.18 Hardware availability
This section will provide some details of early Blu-ray hardware (for
computers or standalone devices) that will be available around launch.
This section is not meant to be an all inclusive list of all available
hardware, but rather, a list that is designed to give you a
general idea of the specifications (and if available, costs) of the
early generation hardware.
Pioneer BDR-101A

Type: Computer Drive (ATAPI interface)
Supported Read Media
- Single Layer BD-R (2x)
- Single Layer BD-RE (without cartridge, 2x)
- Single and Double Layer BD-ROM (without cartridge, 2x)
- DVD-ROM
- DVD-R/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-R(DL)/DVD+R(DL)
- No CD support (will be available in upcoming BDR-102A)
Supported Write Media:
- Single Layer BD-R at 2x speed
- Single Layer BD-RE at 2x speed
- DVD-R/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-R(DL)/DVD+R(DL)
- No CD support (will be available in upcoming BDR-102A)
Shipping Date: End of January 2006
Estimate RRP: $USD 995
More information: http://www.pioneer.co.jp/press/release159.html
Samsung BD-1000

Type: Standalone Player
Supported Read Media:
- BD-ROM/BD-R/BD-RE
- DVD
- DVD-R/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-RAM
Supported Write Media:
Interface: HDMI
DVD Playback: Yes
Shipping Date: Spring 2006
Estimate RRP: $USD 1000
Pioneer BDP-HD1

Type: Standalone Player
Supported Read Media:
- BD-ROM/BD-R/BD-RE
- DVD
- DVD-R/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-RAM
Supported Write Media:
Interface: HDMI
Video Support:
- 720p or 1080i or 1080p
- JPEG, WMV Playback
Audio Support:
DVD Playback: Yes, with up-conversion to 720p/1080i/1080p through HDMI
Shipping Date: June 2006
Estimate RRP: $USD 1800
3.19 Software (Movies) availability
This section list some software (currently only movies) that have been
scheduled for release. This is not a complete list of
all available BD movies - for a list of BD movies, please refer to dvdloc8.com's Blu-ray movie list.
List of initial releases for 2006:
- Aeon Flux (2005)
- Armageddon
- Batman Begins
- Behind Enemy Lines
- Bram Stoker's Dracula
- Brothers Grimm, The
- Charlie & The Chocolate Factory
- Constantine
- Dark Water
- Desperado
- Devil's Rejects, The
- Dinosaur
- Dukes of Hazzard, The
- Dune
- Everest
- Fantastic Four
- Fifth Element, The
- For a Few Dollars More
- Four Brothers
- Great Raid, The
- Guns of Navarone, The
- Hero
- Hitch
- House of Flying Daggers
- Ice Age
- Italian Job, The (2003)
- Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
- Kill Bill: Vol. 1
- Kiss of the Dragon
- Knight's Tale, A
- Kung Fu Hustle
- Ladder 49
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider
- Last Samurai, The
- Last Waltz, The
- League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The
- Legends of the Fall
- Lethal Weapon
- Lord of War
- Manchurian Candidate, The (2004)
- Matrix, The
- Million Dollar Baby
- Oceans 12
- Punisher, The
- Rambo: First Blood
- Reservoir Dogs
- Resident Evil Apocalypse
- Robocop
- Saw
- Sahara
- Sense and Sensibility
- Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
- Sleepy Hollows
- Stealth
- Species
- SWAT
- Swordfish
- Terminator 2: Judgement Day
- Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines
- Total Recall
- Training Day
- Troy
- Twister
- U2 - Rattle & Hum
- Unforgiven
- We Were Soldiers
- xXx
4. HD DVD

4.1 What is HD DVD?
HD DVD (not to be confused with the general concept of high definition DVD
formats, although the confusion is probably intentional) is one of the
two major formats competing for the emerging high definition DVD market.
The name "HD DVD" is obviously an extension of the existing DVD naming
scheme, and while it's the usual marketing ploy, it does make a little
sense in that HD DVD is a lot closer to the current DVD format than
Blu-ray discs (BD).
4.1.1 What is AOD?
AOD is Advanced Optical Disc, another name for HD-DVD.
4.2 What is HD DVD's official launch date?
An announcement in late September 2005 from Toshiba has indicated that
the U.S launch will be delayed until February or March 2006. And in
December 2005, Blu-ray's launch date has been set for Spring 2006.
The actual official launch in the U.S came on the 17th of April, 2006.
As for media, the 2006 CES allowed several companies to make
announcements in regards to media availability:
- Fujifilm: Blu-ray and HD DVD media available in mid 2006
- Verbatim: Single layer BD-R and HD DVD-R media available early 2006,
dual layer HD DVD-R by the end of 2006
More dates will be posted when more announcements are made.
4.3 Who is behind HD DVD?
The major companies backing HD DVD are:
- Canon Inc.
- Digital Theater Systems
- Hitachi Maxell, Ltd.
- Kenwood Corporation
- Mitsubishi Kagaku Media Co., Ltd.
- NEC Corporation
- Onkyo Corporation
- Paramount Home Entertainment
- Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.
- Teac Corporation
- Toshiba Corporation
- Universal Pictures
- Warner Home Video Inc.
There are also some minor "Associate Members", the full list can be
found here
The major backers are Toshiba and NEC. The main studio backers are
Universal and Paramount.
Warner is now the only major studio to back both formats after
Paramount/Dreamwork's decision in August 2007 to stop releasing movies
for Blu-ray and to produce HD DVD releases only. Rumours suggest that
this deal will only last 18 months, although official statements
indicate it is indefinite. For an updated list of studio and industry
support, please refer to this DigiWiki entry.
Sony (the major backer of Blu-ray) announced in late November that it
will merge its optical disc-drive unit with that of NEC's, with
operations under the leadership of Sony. This has led to speculation
that NEC may pull out of HD DVD production, but the most likely outcome
could be that the merged unit will produce both Blu-ray and HD DVD
drives, as a Sony spokesman has said that "It is conceivable that there
could be a variety of disk-drive requests produced ... perhaps even that
other format" (the "other format" being HD DVD, one presumes). More
information about the merger can be found
here.
An announcement in late September 2005 from Microsoft and Intel has
stated that they would now officially support HD DVD. The reasons for
this support, taken from an interview
with a Microsoft representative by
Tom's Hardware Guide , seems to be
that it would be easier to make authorised copies of legally obtained
discs with HD DVD (Managed Copy), which is important in the context of home media
streaming.
If you want to find out "which camp" you are in based on your currently
DVD collection, feel free to head on to dvdloc8.com, create a collection
list and view the collection's statistics to find out (the same thing
can be done with your wish list as well).
4.4 Are there different readable/writable formats like with DVD/DVD-R/W?
HD DVD will come in three different formats, HD DVD-ROM for read-only
(similar to DVD-ROM), HD DVD-R for write-once discs (similar to DVD-R)
and HD DVD-Rewritable for rewritable discs (similar to DVD-RW).
4.5 What will be the capacities of these types of discs?
Like DVDs, HD DVDs will come in single layer and dual-layer versions, and
new is a triple-layer version just recently announced (BD may support
multi-layer discs, but nothing has yet been announced).
A single layer HD DVD will store around 15GB, which is more than 3 times
the capacity of a single layer DVD. For each additional layer, an
additional 15GB of storage will be available. The reason for the
dramatic capacity increase over DVD is obvious when you consider that a
HD transmission will take up a lot more room than a typical DVD stream,
although with 15/30 capacities, and better compression algorithms,
capacity shouldn't be an issue (so no "flippers", or double sided disc).
HD15 and HD30 are often used to describe these two capacity versions.
HD DVDs are also available as "combos", which are double sided discs
where one side is a single or dual layer HD DVD, and the other is a
standard DVD that can be read by any DVD player.
As announced in September 2007, triple layer HD DVD will bring the total
capacity to 51 GB, just above Blu-ray's dual layer capacity. Each layer
in this triple layer format will be increased to 17 GB as a result.
Rumours suggests that a further version of the triple layer HD DVD will
be available where the first two layers offer 30 GB of HD DVD storage,
and the third layer will be a standard DVD layer that can be read by any
DVD player.
4.6 What resolution will the video on a movie HD DVD be?
HD DVD resolution will follow the standard HD resolution standards currently
used for HDTV transmissions. This means, at least for the present, the
maximum output resolution will be 1080i (see below for updated information on
this issue), or 1920x1080 in interlaced format only
(not many displays can support 1080p,
and even less can resolve or display the full 1080 lines - more
information in section A.2). There is also 720p resolution (1280x720,
progressive), which is the current native resolution of many home
theatre displays, and also SD resolution support, similar to today's
DVDs.
The lack of 1080p support was something that even supporters of HD DVD
were complaining about. At the time movies were to be stored in 1080i
format, even if 1080p output in players were planned to be supported in
the future - requiring a bit of de-interlacing to produce a progressive
picture, as opposed to BD's progressive source.
But the situation either changed or was initially mis-represented. In an
interview with Microsoft in the Audioholics magazine in January 2006
indicated that HD DVD movies will be stored in 1080p format like BD,
even if initial players can only output at 1080i. You can read the full
interview
here.
So far, all of the HD DVD movie releases have been in 1080p as promised.
One of the stated reason for the lack of 1080p HD DVD players when
initially released was said to have been the lack of HDMI 1.3
specifications at the time of launch (the interview above seems to refer
to this as well). This does not seem to be true as 1080p is supported by
all version of HDMI (Dolby and DTS's lossless audio, on the other hand,
is only supported by HDMI 1.3). The real reasons for the lack of 1080p
in early HD DVD hardware was the use of the Broadcom chip, which is
limited to 1080i output. In fact, Samsung's first Blu-ray player
also uses the same chip and then had to use another chip to de-interlace the
1080i signal produced by the Broadcom chip to produce the 1080p output.
Toshiba still currently (November 2007) offers a 1080i HD DVD player as
the budget choice, while all other players have 1080p output as
standard. 1080p/24 output has been added to certain players in the line
up as well.
The actual quality difference between 1080i and 1080p is actually an
active debate, since it has to take into account various factors such as
the source material, the native resolution of the display, and even the
de-interlacer. For more information, please refer to section A.2.
4.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
HD DVD will use the same set of video compression codecs as BD (see
section 3.7). And just approved by the DVD Forum (14th September 2005),
China will have its own HD DVD sub-format, that will use the Advanced
Audio Video Coding Standard (AVS), as opposed to the more expensive to
license MPEG and VC-1 codecs.
The majority of HD DVD releases to date (November 2007) has been encoded
using VC-1.
4.8 What about the audio?
The supported mandatory formats will be the existing DVD audio formats,
Dolby Digital AC3 and DTS. Other mandatory formats supported include
Dolby Digital Plus (DD+), Dolby TrueHD and Linear PCM audio. A secondary
optional audio track may use DTS-HD, DTS-HD Master Audio (lossless - see
section A.2).
4.9 What can you tell me about the recordable HD DVD formats?
The initial recording speed will only be 1x at 36.55 Mbps, which is
actually equal to about 30x in CD transfer terms (or 3.4x in DVD
transfer terms). Faster recording speeds will be available, possibly at
launch time.
The DVD Forum steering committee meeting on the 14th September 2005 also
agreed on the specifications for 1x dual layer recording, suggesting
that dual layer recording (for standalone or computer based recorders)
may be available at launch or shortly after.
Toshiba has already demonstrated player/recorders at electronic shows.
4.10 What kind of equipment will I need to play back HD DVD movies?
The first thing you will need is a HD DVD capable player. No existing
DVD player will be able to read a HD DVD, and there is no software or
hardware upgrade that can be performed to enable HD DVD playback. Buying
a new player is, therefore, the only choice if you want HD DVD playback.
The requirements for HD DVD is very similar to that for
Blu-ray, so please refer to section 3.10 for more information.
4.10.1 HD DVD Performance Levels
Unlike Blu-ray, HD DVD's specifications were finalized at launch.
However, within the single specification, there are two performance
levels differing in certain optional features.
Performance Level 1, the level that is used by all early HD DVD
players, makes connection to additional/external Persistent Storage
optional, as well as 5.1 audio decoding for all mandatory audio
codecs. 24p video output is also optional.
Performance Level 2 simply makes all the optional specifications of
PL1 mandatory.
A table of the level differences can be found here.
4.10.2 CH DVD
CH DVD is the approved format for the Chinese HD market. CH DVD
players will be compatible with HD DVD discs, but CH DVD discs will
not be playable on HD DVD players because CH DVD movies will be
aimed at the Chinese market and priced lower in order to combat
piracy. Therefore, CH DVD standalones hardware will feature similar
components as HD DVD players.
By having a one-way compatible standard in China, the HD DVD group
hopes to decrease hardware manufacturing cost as more and more CH
DVD players are produced for the Chinese market, the same
manufacturing process can be re-used for HD DVD player productions.
4.11 What about my existing DVD collection? Out the trash like my old VHS collection?
HD DVD is marketing itself as the natural successor to DVD (both
approved by the DVD Forum, although the DVD Forum is not as official as
it sounds), and so, DVD playback should not be an issue for HD DVD
players.
4.12 Will BD/HD DVD players be able to play back the other high definition DVD formats?
See section 3.12
4.13 What about copy protection? Will it be as weak as DVD's CSS?
See section 3.13
4.14 So why have AACS if it might not work?
See section 3.14
4.15 What about region coding?
It appears (at least from statements made in October 2005, by the DVD
Forum) that HD DVD will be region free. This is not a total surprise as
DVD region coding can only be considered a failure, as it achieved none
of the goals it set out to.
Update: In May 2006, the DVD Forum creates a team to investigate adding
region-coding to HD DVD. This suggest HD DVD may yet consider region-coding,
although the players and software on sale at this time (May 2006) do not
have region coding support. It is still highly unlikely that HD DVD will
introduce region control, as this would mean all existing players will need
to be modified. HD DVD being region-free is now one of the major
advantages that the format has over rivals Blu-ray, allowing importing
of films from overseas to build up your collection.
4.16 Xbox 360

4.16.1 Since the Sony PS3 will support BDs, will the Xbox 360 support HD DVD?
The Xbox 360 did not include a HD DVD drive nor were there plans to
have support for HD DVD at launch, although Bill Gates has hinted
that an updated Xbox 360 with HD DVD support may be available in the
future (see update below). At the time of release, however, Xbox 360
will rely on the DVD format for distribution, with no support for
any of the future high definition formats. The game console itself
will be able to output high definition pictures (at 1080i), so the
exclusion of HD movie playback support is a bit confusing. But this
is probably the price Microsoft has to pay in order to release their
console earlier than the competition, and without having to choose
one format over another (Microsoft's VC-1 codec is supported by both
major high definition formats, and this gives you an indication of
the fence-sitting attitude that Microsoft will take towards this
issue).
Update (October 2nd, 2005): Microsoft has officially backed the HD
DVD format, along with Intel. While there is still no official news
that the Xbox 360 will have HD DVD capabilities, this news does
suggest that the Xbox 360 will have this capability in the future if
the HD DVD format is not a total failure.
Update (January 8th, 2006): At the CES 2006, Microsoft announced
that it will provide HD DVD support for the Xbox 360 in the form of
an external drive/add-on, to be release later in 2006.
Update (August, 2006). Microsoft has announced that the HD DVD add
on drive will be available for Christmas at around $200. The drive
would only be used for HD DVD movie playback, with no support for
HD DVD games.
The Xbox 360 HD DVD drive is now available for sale and it has
become the most popular Xbox 360 accessory on sale to date (November
2007).

4.16.2 Xbox 360 HD DVD Playback Details
This section briefly goes over the details of the Xbox 360's HD DVD
playback capabilities. For a more detailed report and comparison
with PS3's Blu-ray playback capabilities, please refer to this article.
A remote control is available with the add-on drive, which is
similar to that of the Toshiba HD-A1 and HD-XA1 standalone's, with
better ergonomics and being backlit, despite losing some advanced
features.
Loading time is considerably better than that found on the Toshiba
HD-XA1 standalone player. Noise is a concern during playback, since
the internal cooling fans of the Xbox 360 can be quite intrusive
during quiet moments in the movie.
Connectivity is limited to the set of outputs on the Xbox 360, since
the add-on drive only has one USB connection that connects to the
main console. This means there is no support for HDMI output, and
1080p output is only available through a separately sold VGA cable
(assuming your TV/monitor supports VGA input at 1080p). Component
output would then seem like the default connection. Audio output is
at best through the optical output, but only at Dolby Digital 5.1
(1.5Mbps). This means while decoding of certain formats is
supported, like Dolby TrueHD, the console will only downconvert the
audio to Dolby Digital 5.1 for output. There is no pass-through
mode. DTS 5.1 decoding is supported, but no support for DTS-HD is
present.
Video quality is comparable to that of the Toshiba standalone, even
just through component output. The internal architecture of the of
the add-on drive is based on Toshiba's second generation standalone
player's, and so the good quality was expected. As mentioned above,
1080p output is only available through the optional VGA cable, and
only if your TV/monitor supports 1080p input (many do support VGA
inputs, but sometimes only at standard computer resolutions such as
1280x768).
4.16.3 Using the Xbox 360's HD DVD add-on drive on your PC
One of the most interesting aspects of the add-on drive is the
ability to use the drive on your PC (both Windows XP, Vista and Mac
OS X). Connection is made through USB.
Drivers have been made available for Windows XP (although some
report not needing them in any case) that will allow it to recognise
the add-on drive just like any other external drive. Playback is
then possible using PowerDVD Ultra (see section 2.4.1).
On the Mac OS X, the drive is recognised, but there is no HD DVD
player yet for this operating system.
Windows Vista compatibility should be straight out of the box, with
no drivers required.
What this really means that for a very low price ($US 180), you can
buy yourself an external HD DVD drive that works on multiple OS's
and also with your Xbox 360. This might even tempt non Xbox 360
owners from purchasing the add-on individually for use as a HD DVD
drive for their PC.
For instructions on how to use your Xbox 360 HD DVD add-on drive in
Windows, and how to then get HD DVD playback happening, please read
my new Using the Xbox 360 HD DVD Add-on Drive in Windows guide
4.17 Technical details
| Laser Type: | Blue-violet laser |
| Laser Wavelength: | 405nm |
| Track Pitch: | 0.40µm (HD DVD-ROM, DVD-R) |
| 0.34µm (HD DVD-Rewritable) |
| Read Power: | 0.50mW |
| Disc size: | 120mm |
| Capacity: |
| Single Layer: | 15GB |
| Dual Layer: | 30GB |
| Triple Layer: | 45GB |
| Transfer Rate: | 1x => 36.55 Mbps |
| Video Resolution: | 1080i (1920x1080 HD, 50i, 60i) |
| 1080p (1920x1080 HD, 24p) |
| 720p (1280x720, 50p, 60p, 24p) |
| SD (720x576/480, 50i, 60i) |
| Video Compression: | MPEG-2 |
| MPEG-4 AVC |
| Microsoft VC-1 |
| Audio Resolution/Compression: | Dolby Digital AC3 |
| DTS |
| Linear PCM |
| Dolby Digital Plus (DD+) |
| Dolby TrueHD |
| Optional: DTS-HD High Resolution Audio |
| Optional: DTS-HD Master Audio (lossless) |
| Copy Protection | AACS |
| File System: | DF 2.6 |
4.18 Hardware availability
This section will provide some details of early HD DVD hardware (for
computers or standalone devices) that will be available around launch.
This section is not meant to be an all inclusive list of all available
hardware, but rather, a list that is designed to give you a
general idea of the specifications (and if available, costs) of the
early generation hardware.
NEC HR-1100A

Type: Computer Drive (ATAPI interface)
Supported Read Media
- HD DVD (2x)
- DVD-ROM (8x)
- DVD-RAM (5x)
- DVD-R/DVD+R/DVD-RW/DVD+RW/DVD-R(DL)/DVD+R(DL) (8x)
- CD (32x)
Supported Write Media:
Shipping Date: March 2006
Estimate RRP: $USD 500
Toshiba HD-A1

Type: Standalone Player
Supported Read Media:
- HD-DVD
- DVD
- DVD-R/DVD-RW/DVD-RAM
- CD-R/CD-RW
Supported Write Media:
Interface: HDMI
Video Support:
Audio Support:
- Multichannel 24-bit/192-kHz audio DACs
- MP3 and WMA playback
- Onboard Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, and Dolby TrueHD (2 channel)
- Onboard DTS and DTS-HD decoding with 5.1 analog audio outputs
- Four 32-bit floating-point DSPs to decode multichannel streams
DVD Playback: Yes, with up-conversion to 720p/1080i through HDMI
Shipping Date: March 2006 (available to pre-order now)
Online Pre-order: http://tinyurl.com/duscx
Estimate RRP: $USD 499.99
Toshiba HD-XA1

Type: Standalone Player
Supported Read Media:
- HD-DVD
- DVD
- DVD-R/DVD-RW/DVD-RAM
- CD-R/CD-RW
Supported Write Media:
Interface: HDMI
Video Support:
- 720p or 1080i
- High performance video processor
- Selectable user interface
Audio Support:
- Multichannel 24-bit/192-kHz audio DACs
- MP3 and WMA playback
- Onboard Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, and Dolby TrueHD (2 channel)
- Onboard DTS and DTS-HD decoding with 5.1 analog audio outputs
- Four 32-bit floating-point DSPs to decode multichannel streams
DVD Playback: Yes, with up-conversion to 720p/1080i through HDMI
Shipping Date: March 2006
Estimate RRP: $USD 799.99
4.19 Software (Movies) availability
This section list some software (currently only movies) that have been
scheduled for release. This is not a complete list of
all available BD movies - for a list of BD movies, please refer to dvdloc8.com's HD DVD movie list.
List of initial releases for 2006:
- Aeon Flux (2005)
- Aviator, The
- Band of Brothers
- Batman Begins
- Bourne Supremacy, The
- Braveheart
- Four Brothers
- Friends
- Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
- Italian Job, The (2003)
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider
- Lord of the Rings Trilogy, The
- Manchurian Candidate, The (2004)
- Matrix Trilogy, The
- Sahara
- Seven
- Sleepy Hollows
- Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
- Terminator 3
- U2 - Rattle & Hum
- Ultimate Star Trek Movie Collection, The
- We Were Soldiers
5. EVD

5.1 What is EVD?
EVD stands for Enhanced Versatile Disc, and it was developed by a
consortium of Chinese companies. EVD is actually just a DVD disc with a
different set of video/audio specifications, one using a better
compression algorithm than MPEG-2, and hence, allows high definition
movies to be stored onto a DVD.
5.2 When was EVD officially launched?
EVD was officially announced way back in November 2003, and while
players and discs are available, it has not been a total success story.
When the other major high definition DVD formats are launched, it will
be interesting to see if EVD can market itself as the cheap DVD based
alternative to high definition movie distribution.
5.3 Who is behind EVD?
EVD was developed by Beijing E-World Technology, a consortium of major
electronic firms in China, backed by the Chinese government. These firms
include:
- SVA
- Shinco
- Xiaxin
- Yuxing
- Skyworth
- Nintaus
- Malata
- Changhong
- BBK
The video compression technology used is On2's VP5/VP6 video codec, but
there was a dispute between On2 and E-World over licensing fees.
5.4 What about EVD recordable formats?
EVD is really just a DVD disc with a different set of video/audio
codecs, so it can't really be classified as a recordable media format.
EVD is mainly a playback format.
5.5 Why develop EVD?
EVD was developed as a response to the relatively high licensing cost of
DVDs (around $US 15 per hardware player, as opposed to EVD's $2). DVD
licensing and royalty cost includes CSS, Macrovision, MPEG-2 and the
various surround sound systems. EVD will essentially be royalty free.
Also see section 2.6 and 3.14.
5.6 What resolution will the video on an EVD be?
EVD supports 1080i (1920x1080 at 50i or 60i) and 720p (1280x720)
resolutions, comparable to HD DVD, although not to Blu-ray's 1080p
support. Standard DVD definitions are also supported, as EVD was
originally designed to be a DVD replacement, as well as a next
generation DVD format.
5.7 What kind of video compression will be used?
EVD uses On2 Technologies' VP5 and VP6 video
compression codecs.
5.8 What about the audio?
EVD uses an audio codec from called EAC 2.0
(Enhanced Audio Codec). EAC supports 6 channel audio and is more
efficient that Dolby Digital or DTS used in DVDs.
5.9 What kind of equipment will I need to play back EVD movies?
While EVD shares the same media as DVDs, existing DVD players will not
be able to play back EVDs, since they do not support the decoding of
EVD's video and audio codecs.
The specifications are similar to HD DVD (see section 4.10),
although being developed as a DVD replacement, the expected user base
will be primarily people who can watch DVDs, as opposed to a new user
base featuring people with high definition displays.
FVD discs can also be read by standard computer DVD-ROM drives, so
playback on the PC is a software issue only.
5.10 What about my existing DVD collection?
EVD is a DVD replacement, so there is no mandatory support for DVD
playback. But as in the case for Blu-ray (see section 3.11),
support for DVD playback is almost always present due to competition and
the need to support the popular format.
5.11 Will EVD players be able to play back the other high definition DVD formats?
While players compatible with both Blu-ray and HD DVD will be
available, these players are unlikely to include EVD (or FVD) playback
support, due to the limited geographical nature (mainly aimed at the
Asian market) of the format. However, Chinese or Taiwanese made BD or HD
DVD player may include EVD playback functionality, since it isn't
difficult or costly to include support for this type of "enhanced" DVD
format.
5.12 What about copy protection?
EVD features copy protection, but details of it are hard to find. Copy
protection will be less of an issue if the format is primarily aimed at
the Chinese market (where legal retail discs aren't all that more
expensive than pirated ones, and damn cheap compar |