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All About Blu-ray
By: Siddharth Bhatia   |   Feb 23, 2008

The format war is over, and Blu-ray has won. During the war the Sony camp was referred to as the Boys in Blue, while HD DVD were the Boys in Red. Slowly and steadily the latter became less and less of a contender, and then it happened: one of the biggest Reds (Warner) upped and left. After that HD DVD came crashing down, and the lights finally went out late last week.

So Blu-ray is our next form of optical storage, and it will become popular in India soon. Demand has to be created for the product – and this time let's please not dilly-dally, we always lag behind when it comes to tech stuff (whiny tone). We enjoyed some HD content through our PS3, and it looks insane. So it's about time.

Tech2 spoke to leading Blu-ray brands in India, like Samsung, Sharp, Sony, and asked them to send us their latest players and discs, so we can start having some high-def fun. But before that let's consider some basics, pointers, and trivia about our new friend...

Image sourced from www.blu-raydimensions.com

Why Blu
Before explaining why and how Blu-ray functions, one must know that an optical disc stores digital info (1s and 0s) in the form of bumps burnt in on the aluminum layer, in the form of concentric rings. The laser scans outwards, reflects off these bumps and flat part sequentially. The reflected rays obviously are different, and thus an optical sensor records a ‘1’ for bump and ‘0’ for no bump. (Here 1 means a higher signal level and not the number 1!). A bitstream is created and sent to the DAC (digital-analog converter).

So how does this relate to Blu-rays having more info? The answer is in the type of laser used, the numerical aperture of the lens, the distance between bumps (track pitch), its thickness etc. They are all lessened or increased accordingly. E.g. while DVDs use a red laser of 635-650nm wavelength to read information on discs, the amount of data that can be stored and read is only 4.7 GB for single layer discs.

Back in around 2003, when terrestrial digital broadcasting started, the great minds in the heads of great companies (now known as the BDA) figured out that recording about two hours of HD media on to a disc would need 22GB, something that a DVD cannot provide. Thus Blu-ray discs were born (and also HD DVD, then known as AOD).

The abbreviation is BD, and the cause for having such a name is due to the type of laser used: a blue violet laser of lesser wavelength, 405 nm. This facilitates a more accurate focus, and thus more info can be written and read from the same space. Another point is that the numerical aperture is made larger: 0.85 from 0.60 in DVDs. This facilitates a smaller diameter of the laser point (more accurate), allowing more info to be assimilated on the discs. That explains why BD discs are of the same diameter and thickness (120mm and 1.2 mm respectively) as normal discs, though the storage capacity is 25GB for single layer and 50GB for dual layer.

One cool thing of BDs is that they have a harder coating; the data is read off this itself, and thus they claim to be very resistant to dirt and other stuff. But this we will have to look at more closely before we commit ourselves...


Page 1 of 2 (Why Blu)
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The info provided is good but Indian need to wake up from penny wise pound foolish when it comes to computers. They want cheap and hence cannot get good things.
Pankaj Doshi @ Mar 22, 2008
waiting for it to bcome popular so that it may be useful and economic....
Shankar @ Mar 03, 2008
yea and that group is called BDA, blu ray disc association or something, i checked the rate of teh players sony has 2 models, for about 30 K and 60 K
shaxeb @ Feb 28, 2008


Blu Ray is technology brought out by Joint efforts of:
Hitachi, LG, Matushita, Pioneer, Philips, Samsug, Sharp, Thomson..
& last but not the least - SONY!
Neeraj @ Feb 26, 2008
i want to know about blu-ray writer, please let know any blu ray writer available in indian market and whats a price? and if i write a full blu-ray disk, how much time will it take?
Atul Panchal @ Feb 26, 2008
Well since blu ray comes in are other kinds of storage going to be extinct? I would like to know will the blu ray discs be more faciliated for rugged use?
Nabeel Al Makkawi @ Feb 25, 2008
With no competition now,Sony is gonna do its thing..rootkits,inflate costs,leave early adopters in the dark.btw,wit hregion coding we in India are pretty much screwed.Pirating it is gonna be a major headache(that explain all studios supporting it,HD-DVD's AACS was cracked and the whole Digg fiasco came up)HD-DVD was region free so any disc can be played anywhere.New movies costs upward of 15£ now aand its gonna take atleast a year for prices to come down.There are lots of stiff that needs to be considered before BD becomes the standard in India.
Ravi Shanker @ Feb 25, 2008
what is its cost ?
TECHNOSWAROOP @ Feb 24, 2008
Good Information !
Pankaj Nathani @ Feb 24, 2008
CAN I KNOW WHO INNOVATED bd ........PLS TELL AND HATS OFF TO HIM
CHANDER @ Feb 24, 2008
Brilliant technology the world was waiting for large storage .But now that time is come .Thankyou to that engg.Who made that possible.
Karamveer singh dhaliwal @ Feb 24, 2008
Hurrah!!! Sony has done it again. It beat the ___ out of other competitors. Way to go. Am just waiting for the prices to drop and get reviews from users around the world. So that we can know the pros and cons and am sure there will be more pros than cons. In some time I hope India in BD compliant with Indian entertainment pushing the BD far enough.
Paul @ Feb 23, 2008
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