Sony is expected to show off its new
recordable DVD technology at Fall Comdex '97 as it
begins shipping samples of the drives to manufacturers in November,
according to Nikkei's JapanBizTech news service.
Sony, along with Hewlett-Packard, Philips, Mitsubishi Chemical, and Ricoh, is working on a noncompatible
alternative to DVD-RAM called Phase-Change ReWritable, or DVD+RW. While the
two recordable DVD technologies wouldn't be able to read each other's
disks, they both will still read DVD-ROM discs.
Sony's recordable DVD drives can store up to 3.0GB of data, while DVD-RAM
technology proposed to date has only offered 2.6GB per side. The drives are
expected to be commercially available in the spring of 1998 but no pricing
has been set, according to the report.
Meanwhile, DVD-RAM drives are set to ship at the end of this year from Hitachi, Toshiba, and Matsushita Electric, and will be priced
at around $800, the report says.
Sony has said it expects to be able to advance DVD+RW technology so that it
can store 4.7GB per side, equaling the amount of data that can be stored on
a DVD-ROM. Ostensibly, one of the reasons that Sony decided to forge ahead
with its own recordable DVD technology is that it feels DVD+RW drive
technology can be advanced more easily than DVD-RAM technology.
The DVD Forum, an industry consortium which is attempting to set DVD-RAM
standards, has responded by saying it has started work on new DVD-RAM
technology so that it can store 4.7GB per side, equaling the amount of data
that can be stored on a DVD-ROM. The large capacity DVD-RAM drives could be
on the market early 1999.
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