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Maxell Corporation of America. DVD Products Future Optical & Tape Technologies. Maxell’s DVD Quality Story. Manufacturing CD vs. DVD. DVD Quality Factors. Maxell Quality & Process Control
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Maxell Corporation of America • DVD Products • Future Optical & Tape Technologies
Maxell’s DVD Quality Story • Manufacturing CD vs. DVD
DVD Quality Factors • Maxell Quality & Process Control • Maxell quality standards exceed industry specifications • Dye Coating - use of only the highest grade Japanese DVD dye, co-developed by Maxell
DVD-RAM 100,000 Re-Write cycles Random Access Reads and Writes the same way as a hard disk. Faster access times More robust rewriting and erasing format 25% Compatible with existing DVD players / readers DVD-RW/DVD+RW 1,000 Re-Write cycles Sequential Recording - Ideal for videographers 65% Compatible with existing DVD players / readers DVD-RAM vs. DVD-RW/+RW
DVD RECORDING SPEED TIMELINE 1x 11.08MB/sec 1 Full DVD in 60 Minutes (4.7GB) 2x 22.16MB/sec 1 Full DVD in 30 Minutes (4.7GB) 4x 44.32 MB/sec 1 Full DVD in 15 Minutes (4.7GB) 8x 88.64 MB/sec 1 Full DVD in 7.5 Minutes (4.7GB) 16x 177.28 MB/sec 1 Full DVD in 3.75 Minutes (4.7GB) 1998 2000 2003 2004 2005
Digital TV vs. Analog TV Digital Television Formats Screen Resolution Picture Horiz. Horiz. Format Quality Lines x Pixels • High Definition HDTV Best 1080 x 1920 • High Definition HDTV Much Better 720p x 1280 • Enhanced Definition EDTV Better 480 x 704 • Standard Definition SDTV Good 480 x 640 Screen Resolution (Digital Equivalent) Analog Television Formats • Standard TV Fair 480 x 333 • Standard VCR OK 480 x 250
HI-DEFINITION TIMELINE & IMPACT ON DVD TECHNOLOGY • FCC Mandate • All TV receivers , based on screen size, must include a Digital TV tuner by 2007 • All TV Broadcasts must be digital or Hi Definition by 2006 13”-24” Screen - by July 2007 All TV Interface Devices that receive broadcast TV signals - TIVO, Recorders (VCR & DVD), etc. 25”-35” Screen by July 2006 36” Screen and above by July 2005 2007 2005 2006
From CD to DVD to Blu-ray Disc Blu-ray Disc Philips - September 2003
Blu-ray Forum • Hitachi • LGE • MEI • Mitsubishi • Pioneer • Philips • Samsung • Sharp • Sony • Thomson Philips - September 2003
Applications require: Major Steps in Storage Capacity and Data Rate Killer App Music Video HDTV Philips - September 2003
NEXT GENERATION DVD FORMATS Format Supporting Companies HD DVD - High Definition DVD Toshiba, NEC • Uses a Blue Laser • 20GB capacity on a CD / DVD size disc • DVD Compatible
OPTICAL DISC MIGRATION PATH Year Product 2000-2001 DVD 4.7GB *Approx. 2 hours standard difinition signal 2003 Blu-ray 23/25/27GB *Approx. 10 hours standard difinition signal **Approx. 2 hours high difinition signal 2004 DVD Dual Layer 8.5GB *Approx. 4 hours standard difinition signal **Approx. 1 hour high definition signal 2005 HD DVD 20GB *Approx. 10 hours standard difinition signal **Approx. 2 hours high difinition signal 2006 Blue Laser Technology Disc (Single-sided and Dual-layer) *Approx. 20 hours standard difinition signal **Approx. 4 hours high difinition signal * Standard Definition Signal: MPEG2 PS (-5Mpbs) ** High Definition Signal:MPEG2 TS (-24Mbps) Blue Laser Dual Layer 40-50GB Blu-ray 23/25/27GB HD DVD 20GB DVD Dual Layer 8.5GB DVD 4.7GB
NEW DVD+R Double Layer Recordable DVD Pre-recorded DVD All DVD+ formats are compatible with existing DVD-Video and DVD-ROM players DVD9 8.5 Gbyte DVD5 4.7 Gbyte DVD+R 4.7 Gbyte DVD+RW 4.7 Gbyte DVD+R DL 8.5 Gbyte
DVD+R Double Layer • Once thought impossible • World’s first recordable double-layer DVD • Compatible with DVD-ROM and DVD-Video • Single-sided: No need to turn the disc • Important Note: 8x or above recorder is required to write to double layer media
DVD+R Double Layer Status • Demonstrated at CEATECOctober 2003 • Format book available to licensees January 2004 • PC products and media expected spring 2004 • CE products anticipated 2nd half of 2004
Conclusion • Capacity increased from 4.7 Gbyte to 8.5 Gbyte • No need to turn over the disc • Compatible with DVD-video and DVD-ROM drives • 4 Hours of DVD quality video • 16 Hours of VHS quality video • 1 Hour of High Def. quality video • Write compatible with 8x recorders or above
NanoCAP Technology • NanoCAP (Nano Composite Advanced Particles) is a revolutionary new ultra-fine round shaped magnetic particle • Excellent magnetic strength & retentivity • NanoCAP is 200% better than the next best promising candidate for high density magnetic recording media (Barium-Ferrite magnetic particle) • Utilized in the development of ultra-thin magnetic layer computer backup tapes with 10TB class storagecapacities & above.
INDUSTRY TAPE ROADMAP MAXELL’S FUTURE ARCHIVAL TAPE STORAGE 1.25TB 1TB 750GB 500GB 250GB SuperDLT™ IV Super DLTtape LTO Ultrium LTO 4 SuperDLT™ III SuperDLT™ II LTO 3 SuperDLT™ I LTO 1 LTO 2 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Super DLTtape, the Super DLTtape logo are trademarks of Quantum Corporation of the USA and other countries. Linear Tape-Open, LTO, LTO logo, Ultrium and Ultrium logo are trademarks of HP, IBM and Seagate in the US, other countries or both.
DDS/DAT Roadmap 7th Gen DDS 6th Gen DDS 5th Gen DDS (DAT 72) 2007 2005 DDS-4 2003 DDS-3 1999 DDS-2 1995 DDS-1 1993 1991 Native Capacity Native Transfer Rate 120-160GB 36GB 70-80GB 12GB 2GB 20GB 4GB ≥5MB/s ≥8MB/s ≥3MB/s 183kB/s ≤1.5MB/s 1-3MB/s ≤720kB/s