Sony Developing Successor to Blu-ray

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joshuaboy
joshuaboy Members Posts: 10,858 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited July 2010 in IllGaming
New 1TB discs could become the new standard for games, TV, and movies.

Today Sony in partnership with Tohoku University announced they have developed a new laser technology that will allow them to encode discs with twenty five times the data of any standard Blu-ray disc, with a total capacity of 1TB on a single disc.

The all-semiconductor laser technology uses a extremely condensed wavelength of 405 nanometers and generates high-powered optical pulses at three picoseconds (three-trillionths of a second). The nitty gritty technical details aside, this ultimately could mean big things for a next generation disc format, particular for high definition films and television and gaming.

Currently a standard dual-layer Blu-ray disc provide 50GBs of maximum data capacity, which as it stands, is rarely ever reached by games or movies. However, with up to 1TBs of data at their disposal, publishers could pack multiple titles on a single disc. With that much space, as The Examiner reports, studios could pack up to fifty HD films onto a single disc or entire seasons of television series.

The potential applications for games are also pretty substantial; with more space comes more capacity for more elaborate graphics, longer games, uncompressed multi-channel audio, more elaborate gameplay, or as we mentioned with movies and television, multiple games on a single disc.

While Sony did not announce any clear cut plans for the technology in terms of implementation on a consumer level, they did note that there are "high expectations" for the new laser system and that it could be particularly valuable in reducing the size of devices due to it's smaller light source.

All things considered, it seems fairly obvious that it will be years before this technology becomes commercially available, let alone adopted as a standard, but when the time comes it could lead to some pretty interesting developments in high-fidelity, high-capacity disc-based media.


http://gear.ign.com/articles/110/1108505p1.html

Comments

  • Bcotton5
    Bcotton5 Members Posts: 51,851 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    Didnt Toshiba or somebody already make a250 gig Bluray disc that works on PS3s?


    No need for a 1TB anytime soon
  • joshuaboy
    joshuaboy Members Posts: 10,858 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    So discs wont become obsolete?



    People always talking about the "future" is going to be digital download..................but how long would it take to download a 30+ GB movie? Imagine buying 4 or 5 movies at the same time.
  • joshuaboy
    joshuaboy Members Posts: 10,858 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    Didnt Toshiba or somebody already make a250 gig Bluray disc that works on PS3s?


    No need for a 1TB anytime soon



    This is beyond Blu-Ray.........next gen down the line......maybe 10 years or so
  • Bcotton5
    Bcotton5 Members Posts: 51,851 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    They already got prototype holographic discs too though
  • major pain
    major pain Members Posts: 10,293 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    Didnt Toshiba or somebody already make a250 gig Bluray disc that works on PS3s?


    No need for a 1TB anytime soon

    I doubt if it was Toshiba... they are still salty about the HD-DVD failure.
  • KillaCham
    KillaCham Members, Moderators Posts: 11,417 Regulator
    edited July 2010
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    “This latest successful development is an all-semiconductor laser picosecond pulse source with a laser wavelength of 405 nanometers (1 nm = one-billionth of a meter) in the blue-violet region. It is capable of generating optical pulses in the ultrafast duration of 3 picoseconds (1 picosecond = one-trillionth of a second), with ultrahigh output peak power of 100 watts and repetition frequency of 1 gigahertz. Advanced control of the newly-developed and proprietarily-constructed GaN-based mode-locked semiconductor laser and semiconductor optical amplifier have enabled peak output power in excess of 100 watts to be achieved, which is more than a hundred times the world’s highest output value for conventional blue-violet pulse semiconductor lasers.”

    [Mase]Wooooow[/Mase]

    But.... PS4 = $999???
  • themadlionsfan
    themadlionsfan Members Posts: 9,133 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    Sony wins......
  • joshuaboy
    joshuaboy Members Posts: 10,858 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited July 2010
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    But 10 years from now?

    We should have crazy download speed by then.



    True........but at what costs? I just had to take a downgrade in speed.