Comments on: Blu-ray recorders coming to U.S. in 2009?
HD Guru Gary Merson reports that Panasonic Blu-ray recorders will be released in the US in 2009.
HD Guru Gary Merson reports that Panasonic Blu-ray recorders will be released in the US in 2009.
The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com
Add this feed to your online news reader
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
Also we need a way to back up these new AVCHD format SD digital camcorder files that's also viewable in all Blu-Ray players.
They need to get the burners down to about 100 dollars, for people like me who have disposable income but wait until there are good deals on things to buy them.
The optical disc may continue to evolve as BD becomes a more popular purchase option for high quality content, but as a way to store memories and watch TV, DVD will remain king. Networked homes will jump right over this step for non-studio produced content.
Most people in the US do not archive their videos to PCs and even the newer HDD and SD based cameras which record video pose a major issue to the average user PC. Unless you've got a Mac or some beefy Windows PC chances are there's little you can do with the footage other than store it. Storage will also become a growing issue b/c those who like to use their cameras can't afford to line their offices with terabyte drives (not to mention that drives still FAIL).
I'm in desperate need of a SIMPLE way to hook my camera to a Blu-ray recorder and start offloading years of Mini-DV footage.
What bothers me about the whole pricing market here is that not only is a $1,000 standalone burner unreasonable I can get an Internal Burner for $250 and then buy a whole Shuttle XPC to put it into for less money. What this means to me is that the industry is just raping us for cash because the level of effort to make this technology today is WAY lower than it's ever been. They're minting devices in droves overseas and US branded units simple have a modified firmware pack.
So come on manufacturers, just close the gap and let us rid ourselves of 480i like we did the 8 Track cassette player.
http://www.pioneerelectronics.com/PUSA/Shop/DVD-Burners/Blu-ray+Drives/ci.BDR-202.Shop.
I would love to burn DVDs of HD recordings of sporting events so I can keep them forever, and I think a lot of people who have ESPN HD, ESPN2 HD, ESPNU HD, VERSUS HD, GOLF HD, TENNIS HD, etc, all the broadcast channels in HD would agree. What's the point in having all these HD channels if you can't make recordings you can keep FOREVER in HD?
Plus, HD TVs make your SD recordings just look worse.
C'mon Panasonic, Sony, etc...Bring the Blue-Ray DVD Recorder to the USA! If you doubt how much of a market there will be, I',m sure you will be pleasantly surprised.
No question at all that the picture & sound quality far surpasses VHS but I'm stunned at how even commercial dvds are so sensitive to little scratches and fingerprints that they become unplayable.
I was hoping that Blu-Ray disc would be much more durable.
- by dcornibe July 21, 2009 11:07 AM PDT
- You all are forgetting something. What about for professional/broadcast use? The current HDCAM and XDCAM, etc., recorders are too expensive, and so is their media. Even at $8-$10 a disc for Blu-Ray, that's a wonderful bargain for archiving. In my case, I work for a local government access TV station, and soon we're looking to upgrade our cameras used for county meetings to HD (really because the pan & tilt mounts are getting old and failing, and HD conference-style cameras are about all they're making these days for that application). So, looking ahead, we'd like to replace our DVCAM's with a professional video recorder that takes in HD-SDI from the switcher and records to a Blu-Ray disc. Still a lot cheaper than going to professional HD tape. And there's also, believe it or not, no solid state HD video recorder yet. At least not a rack-mountable, studio version (only portables, like Panasonic's P2 recorder, but in any case to archive each meeting to one or more P2 memory cards would cost $1000-$2000 a piece!). Being able to directly record and archive our broadcasts to Blu-Ray, given today's technology, would be ideal for us.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(16 Comments)