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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Duncan Baird who started this subject2/26/2003 6:10:56 PM
From: TimF   of 1576823
 
Microsoft Takes Sides in DVD Battle
Software giant is the latest to join the DVD+RW Alliance.
Joris Evers, IDG News Service
Tuesday, February 25, 2003

In a move that could influence the rewritable DVD format battle, Microsoft is joining the DVD+RW Alliance, the group that promotes and develops the DVD+RW format.

The Redmond, Washington, software maker will become the ninth member of the Alliance's policy-setting team, which also includes Koninklijke Philips Electronics, Hewlett-Packard, Sony, Dell Computer, and Ricoh, the DVD+RW Alliance said in a statement on Monday.

Although Microsoft will support other formats in its operating system software, the software maker has now made it clear that DVD+RW is the format it prefers, Hans Driessen, a spokesperson for Philips and the DVD+RW Alliance said.

"Microsoft will actively promote DVD+RW and invest in the development of the format," Driessen said.
Product Plans

Microsoft already was working closely with some on the DVD+RW Alliance in a group called Mount Rainier to design technology that will make a rewritable CD and DVD as easy to use in a PC as a floppy. The Mount Rainier group last year announced a version of its specification for DVD+RW drives, which Microsoft demonstrated.

Microsoft is happy to become part of the DVD+RW Alliance and will help promote writable DVD standards that are aligned with the Mount Rainier technology, Tom Phillips, general manager of Microsoft's Windows Hardware Experience Group said in Monday's statement.

Rivaling the DVD+RW format are the DVD-RW and DVD-RAM formats, supported by the DVD Forum. The DVD-RW format is being pushed by Pioneer, while Hitachi, Toshiba, and Matsushita Electric Industrial are in the DVD-RAM camp.

The DVD+RW Alliance claims its format is the better one because DVDs created on a PC can be played back on most DVD players and DVD-ROM drives in PCs. This is not possible with DVD-RAM, which uses a disc in a cartridge. DVD-RW offers compatibility only when discs are created using a special recording mode, limiting edit capabilities, Driessen said.

pcworld.com
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