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	<title>Comments on: 8x Blu-ray Recordable (BD-R) developed by Moser Baer</title>
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		<title>By: NHK develops 15,000 rpm Blu-ray Disc system &#187; Blu-ray, HD DVD, info at WesleyTech.com</title>
		<link>http://wesleytech.com/8x-blu-ray-recordable-bd-r-developed-by-moser-baer/215/comment-page-1/#comment-20350</link>
		<dc:creator>NHK develops 15,000 rpm Blu-ray Disc system &#187; Blu-ray, HD DVD, info at WesleyTech.com</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 May 2007 14:34:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] NHK develops 15,000 rpm Blu-ray Disc system   Japanese company NHK has developed a professional Blu-ray Disc recording system that can reach approximately 7x consumer BD-R speeds. The rotations per minute limitation for current consumer Blu-ray systems is maxed out at approximately 10,000 rpm. NHK exceeded the current limitation with the help of a new type of flexible BD-R Disc that is a mere 0.1 mm thick, which was jointly developed with Ricoh Corporation, a long time innovator in optical disc technology. In order to playback these new flexible discs inside of a reading device, a new stabilizer plate was developed and added to the player hardware in order to hold the discs steady. Here is some more information from the PC World article. &#8220;Engineers at the Science and Technical Research Laboratories (STRL) of Japan&#8217;s public broadcaster, NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai), are working on an optical disc recording system based on consumer Blu-ray Disc technology that can spin as fast as 15,000 rpm without these problems and demonstrated it last week. It&#8217;s needed because broadcast quality HDTV signals of the type NHK records stream at 250M bps (bits per second) making a fast-spinning optical disc a necessity. A 1X Blu-ray Disc records at 36M bps so the new system is equivalent to 7X speed.&#8221; While this sounds like an interesting development, I have to wonder why they couldn&#8217;t use a standard Blu-ray system if they are only going up to 7x? We have already heard about 8x BD-R media by Moser Baer and consumer Blu-ray burners are expected to reach 12x / 10,000 rpms at some point. With this in mind, the NHK system doesn&#8217;t sound so great afterall (unless the consumer 8x BD-R is Z-CLV and the NHK Blu-ray system is CLV). On the other hand, perhaps NHK will be able to refine their system with time and exceed the speeds of consumer Blu-ray systems, possibly hitting faster write speeds than 12x? Even if this new system was able to achieve greater speeds, its&#8217; &#8220;purpose&#8221; is to record broadcast HD signals and a speed of 7x BD-R is sufficient enough for that. Looking at all of this, I am not very impressed with this new NHK system. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] NHK develops 15,000 rpm Blu-ray Disc system   Japanese company NHK has developed a professional Blu-ray Disc recording system that can reach approximately 7x consumer BD-R speeds. The rotations per minute limitation for current consumer Blu-ray systems is maxed out at approximately 10,000 rpm. NHK exceeded the current limitation with the help of a new type of flexible BD-R Disc that is a mere 0.1 mm thick, which was jointly developed with Ricoh Corporation, a long time innovator in optical disc technology. In order to playback these new flexible discs inside of a reading device, a new stabilizer plate was developed and added to the player hardware in order to hold the discs steady. Here is some more information from the PC World article. &#8220;Engineers at the Science and Technical Research Laboratories (STRL) of Japan&#8217;s public broadcaster, NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai), are working on an optical disc recording system based on consumer Blu-ray Disc technology that can spin as fast as 15,000 rpm without these problems and demonstrated it last week. It&#8217;s needed because broadcast quality HDTV signals of the type NHK records stream at 250M bps (bits per second) making a fast-spinning optical disc a necessity. A 1X Blu-ray Disc records at 36M bps so the new system is equivalent to 7X speed.&#8221; While this sounds like an interesting development, I have to wonder why they couldn&#8217;t use a standard Blu-ray system if they are only going up to 7x? We have already heard about 8x BD-R media by Moser Baer and consumer Blu-ray burners are expected to reach 12x / 10,000 rpms at some point. With this in mind, the NHK system doesn&#8217;t sound so great afterall (unless the consumer 8x BD-R is Z-CLV and the NHK Blu-ray system is CLV). On the other hand, perhaps NHK will be able to refine their system with time and exceed the speeds of consumer Blu-ray systems, possibly hitting faster write speeds than 12x? Even if this new system was able to achieve greater speeds, its&#8217; &#8220;purpose&#8221; is to record broadcast HD signals and a speed of 7x BD-R is sufficient enough for that. Looking at all of this, I am not very impressed with this new NHK system. [...]</p>
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