Toshiba/CUBE didn't say how long you could record for....Cebits site had this Hitachi interview up........
eBIT News: What are Hitachi's plans DVD in Europe.?
Kubota: We will carry applications for both the computer and entertainment business. However, probably we will start from the computer peripheral business -- DVD ROM drive or DVD RAM drive.
CeBIT News: Some companies have already launched DVD ROM in Europe even though there is little software. You haven't been tempted to launch early?
Kubota: No we haven't. We are actually producing one hundred thousand DVD ROM drives a month. We are mainly supplying these to the major PC manufacturers in the USA. There is not much DVD ROM software available so far but PC manufactures are putting in DVD ROM drives in some high end models as a replacement for the CD ROM drive expecting the amount of software to gradually increase.
CeBIT News: Do you think more should be done to help the DVD software market develop?
Kubota: In the US market they have already launched DVD video, the entertainment software. There are already more than six hundred titles in the market and even now by using DVD ROM drives, by adding an MPEG board, the customer is able to watch them, through the PC.
CeBIT News: Do your drives normally include an MPEG decoding chip set?
Kubota: No not in the ROM drive. In any case with Pentium II Intel has a sort of "higher grade" of MMX processor and as speeds increase, this will allow software decoding. In that case no additional board is needed.
CeBIT News: When will that happen?
Kubota: In the US some companies have already introduced software decoding. Some major PC companies are already offering this software on their machines.
CeBIT News: DVD video has been promised has been promised at least three times in Europe. How do you feel that market will develop given that people have waited so long for this product to arrive?
Kubota: At IFA Time Warner, Sony, Phillips and some other companies announced the launching of DVD software in the March/April time frame of this year and after that unfortunately, we had difficulty with the availability of the MPEG multi-channel encoding systems. As a result we have decided to go with dual format with MPEG 2 multi-channel and we have added Dolby AC3 which is already in the US market. So we are hoping the software will appear in April.
CeBIT News: So when you launch a DVD video player in Europe will it have AC3 built in, or will it just have some form of digital out with customers buying their own decoding equipment?
Kubota: I don't think so. Both systems should be incorporated in the player. Since the format has been decided in such a diverse way the player absolutely has to incorporate both systems for playback. Both systems will be incorporated inside the player. That's Hitachi's strategy.
CeBIT News: Lets talk about recordable DVDs. What is your position on RAM and the DVD+RW from Phillips, Sony and others. Are you supporting that technology?
Kubota: No we are not supporting the Sony/Phillips format. We are only supporting DVD RAM which is officially approved by the DVD consortium. In fact we are just starting the mass production of DVD RAM drives in Japan and we have just started launching it on the Japanese market. We will discuss with our sales force in Europe when we will launch here.
CeBIT News: Do you see DVD RAM being for computers of for the home consumer market?
Kubota: So far we are concentrating on computer applications because even the huge recording capacity of 2.6Gbytes is still not enough for the digital recording of the TV program or something like that.
CeBIT News: To record you are going to need an MPEG encoding chip aren't you?
Kubota: DVD video for the movies uses MPEG 2 compression. However, this is very carefully treated. An average picture transfer rate will be about 3.5 Mbits/s. But for recording TV programmes you need real-time encoding. In that case the 3.5 is not enough. Digital broadcasting in America and, in the very near future, in Europe with DVB, uses a mean value of 6 Mbits/s. All the current definition systems, such as NTSC and PAL, will need that type of digitalizing needing around 6Mbits/s. In that case the recording time will be shortened. The current DVD disc will hold a maximum of 135 minutes but DVD-RAM can only record slightly longer than one hour, we do not think people will accept that. It is of almost no use. The US market, and particularly in the European market with it's love of soccer, would reject this solution. You really need a more-than-three-hour format for the product to be successful.
CeBIT News: Will DVD RAM drives be able to read CD R and CD RE?
Kubota: They will be able to read the whole CD family.
CeBIT News: Even the recordable and re-writable?
Kubota: We can read re-writable CD's but not record them.
CeBIT News: But in Europe quite a lot of the machines that are coming out now have warnings on them that they will not be able to read CD R. Is that a temporary state of affairs?
Kubota: That means that they must be very old 1 x, first generation DVD drives. They must have a small number of old DVDs and they will change over soon to second generation DVD rom drives all of which are compatible with CD R. you don't have to worry about those kind of things.
Cromac was right, bring on those VCR-PCs with hours of storage.... |