blue-ray

zed

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Dec 28, 2007
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wt is this blue ray dvd rom
is that a new tecnology or something

plees dont post wiki articles hear

(me gane danne kenek therene basawekeen podi wistharayak dennoooooooo)
 

sw7x

Well-known member
  • Nov 12, 2007
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    yako blu ray dan nadd blu ray kiyanne dvd 5 k allana disc 1 k eka aluten awe
    rom 1 lankawe tiyenawada
    rply me
     

    ufirst

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    Mar 11, 2007
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    Panadura
    Building a Blu-ray Disc

    Blu-ray discs not only have more storage capacity than traditional DVDs, but they also offer a new level of interactivity. Users will be able to connect to the Internet and instantly download subtitles and other interactive movie features. With Blu-ray, you can:

    record high-definition television (HDTV) without any quality loss
    instantly skip to any spot on the disc
    record one program while watching another on the disc
    create playlists
    edit or reorder programs recorded on the disc
    automatically search for an empty space on the disc to avoid recording over a program
    access the Web to download subtitles and other extra features


    Discs store digitally encoded video and audio information in pits -- spiral grooves that run from the center of the disc to its edges. A laser reads the other side of these pits -- the bumps -- to play the movie or program that is stored on the DVD. The more data that is contained on a disc, the smaller and more closely packed the pits must be. The smaller the pits (and therefore the bumps), the more precise the reading laser must be. Unlike current DVDs, which use a red laser to read and write data, Blu-ray uses a blue laser (which is where the format gets its name). A blue laser has a shorter wavelength (405 nanometers) than a red laser (650 nanometers). The smaller beam focuses more precisely, enabling it to read information recorded in pits that are only 0.15 microns (µm) (1 micron = 10[SIZE=-1]-6[/SIZE] meters) long -- this is more than twice as small as the pits on a DVD. Plus, Blu-ray has reduced the track pitch from 0.74 microns to 0.32 microns. The smaller pits, smaller beam and shorter track pitch together enable a single-layer Blu-ray disc to hold more than 25 GB of information -- about five times the amount of information that can be stored on a DVD.

    blu-ray-5.gif


    Each Blu-ray disc is about the same thickness (1.2 millimeters) as a DVD. But the two types of discs store data differently. In a DVD, the data is sandwiched between two polycarbonate layers, each 0.6-mm thick. Having a polycarbonate layer on top of the data can cause a problem called birefringence, in which the substrate layer refracts the laser light into two separate beams. If the beam is split too widely, the disc cannot be read. Also, if the DVD surface is not exactly flat, and is therefore not exactly perpendicular to the beam, it can lead to a problem known as disc tilt, in which the laser beam is distorted. All of these issues lead to a very involved manufacturing process.


    For more: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/blu-ray1.htm
     

    drcurry1406

    Well-known member
  • Feb 17, 2008
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    yes it is a new technology of media storage. Blu-ray DVD which consist of High Definition i.e. 1080p Full HD video/resolution. The black blu-ray discs come in 25GB and 50GB. Blu-ray is used by Sony for Playstation 3 games.

    Xbox 360 uses HD-DVD ( High Definition DVD)
     

    zed

    Member
    Dec 28, 2007
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    ufirst said:
    Building a Blu-ray Disc

    Blu-ray discs not only have more storage capacity than traditional DVDs, but they also offer a new level of interactivity. Users will be able to connect to the Internet and instantly download subtitles and other interactive movie features. With Blu-ray, you can:

    record high-definition television (HDTV) without any quality loss
    instantly skip to any spot on the disc
    record one program while watching another on the disc
    create playlists
    edit or reorder programs recorded on the disc
    automatically search for an empty space on the disc to avoid recording over a program
    access the Web to download subtitles and other extra features


    Discs store digitally encoded video and audio information in pits -- spiral grooves that run from the center of the disc to its edges. A laser reads the other side of these pits -- the bumps -- to play the movie or program that is stored on the DVD. The more data that is contained on a disc, the smaller and more closely packed the pits must be. The smaller the pits (and therefore the bumps), the more precise the reading laser must be. Unlike current DVDs, which use a red laser to read and write data, Blu-ray uses a blue laser (which is where the format gets its name). A blue laser has a shorter wavelength (405 nanometers) than a red laser (650 nanometers). The smaller beam focuses more precisely, enabling it to read information recorded in pits that are only 0.15 microns (µm) (1 micron = 10[SIZE=-1]-6[/SIZE] meters) long -- this is more than twice as small as the pits on a DVD. Plus, Blu-ray has reduced the track pitch from 0.74 microns to 0.32 microns. The smaller pits, smaller beam and shorter track pitch together enable a single-layer Blu-ray disc to hold more than 25 GB of information -- about five times the amount of information that can be stored on a DVD.

    blu-ray-5.gif


    Each Blu-ray disc is about the same thickness (1.2 millimeters) as a DVD. But the two types of discs store data differently. In a DVD, the data is sandwiched between two polycarbonate layers, each 0.6-mm thick. Having a polycarbonate layer on top of the data can cause a problem called birefringence, in which the substrate layer refracts the laser light into two separate beams. If the beam is split too widely, the disc cannot be read. Also, if the DVD surface is not exactly flat, and is therefore not exactly perpendicular to the beam, it can lead to a problem known as disc tilt, in which the laser beam is distorted. All of these issues lead to a very involved manufacturing process.


    For more: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/blu-ray1.htm
    thanks
     
    Mar 10, 2007
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    Sri Lanaka ( Malabe )
    ufirst said:
    Building a Blu-ray Disc

    Blu-ray discs not only have more storage capacity than traditional DVDs, but they also offer a new level of interactivity. Users will be able to connect to the Internet and instantly download subtitles and other interactive movie features. With Blu-ray, you can:

    record high-definition television (HDTV) without any quality loss
    instantly skip to any spot on the disc
    record one program while watching another on the disc
    create playlists
    edit or reorder programs recorded on the disc
    automatically search for an empty space on the disc to avoid recording over a program
    access the Web to download subtitles and other extra features


    Discs store digitally encoded video and audio information in pits -- spiral grooves that run from the center of the disc to its edges. A laser reads the other side of these pits -- the bumps -- to play the movie or program that is stored on the DVD. The more data that is contained on a disc, the smaller and more closely packed the pits must be. The smaller the pits (and therefore the bumps), the more precise the reading laser must be. Unlike current DVDs, which use a red laser to read and write data, Blu-ray uses a blue laser (which is where the format gets its name). A blue laser has a shorter wavelength (405 nanometers) than a red laser (650 nanometers). The smaller beam focuses more precisely, enabling it to read information recorded in pits that are only 0.15 microns (µm) (1 micron = 10[SIZE=-1]-6[/SIZE] meters) long -- this is more than twice as small as the pits on a DVD. Plus, Blu-ray has reduced the track pitch from 0.74 microns to 0.32 microns. The smaller pits, smaller beam and shorter track pitch together enable a single-layer Blu-ray disc to hold more than 25 GB of information -- about five times the amount of information that can be stored on a DVD.

    blu-ray-5.gif


    Each Blu-ray disc is about the same thickness (1.2 millimeters) as a DVD. But the two types of discs store data differently. In a DVD, the data is sandwiched between two polycarbonate layers, each 0.6-mm thick. Having a polycarbonate layer on top of the data can cause a problem called birefringence, in which the substrate layer refracts the laser light into two separate beams. If the beam is split too widely, the disc cannot be read. Also, if the DVD surface is not exactly flat, and is therefore not exactly perpendicular to the beam, it can lead to a problem known as disc tilt, in which the laser beam is distorted. All of these issues lead to a very involved manufacturing process.


    For more: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/blu-ray1.htm
    Wow Thanks for the info thats Usefull