Product ReviewsCD/DVD drives
Image 3 We've already seen Blu-ray drives pre-installed in two Sony systems - the VAIO VGC-RC204 desktop and the VAIO VGN-AR11S notebook - but now the technology is becoming more widely available. Along with the Samsung SH-B022 BD Writer, these drives are among the first to go on general release in the UK. Pioneer's BDR-101A is a twin-speed drive, which meant it filled our 25GB test disc in just under 45 minutes. It can only handle a comparatively small number of formats, but it will read both dual- and single-layer Blu-ray discs - encouraging news for anyone who plans on watching Blu-ray films. However, the drive can't write to dual-layer discs, handle double-layer BD-RE (rewritable) discs or, as it happens, any form of CD: Pioneer was unable to confirm whether updated firmware would correct this in the future. DVD support is better, with every kind of DVD except DVD-RAM being both readable and writeable. The bundled software may vary between retailers, although Pioneer told us it expects most to bundle Roxio DigitalMedia LE 7. Sony's BWU-100A drive is compatible with the widest range of formats here, including dual-layer Blu-ray discs. Dual-layer BD-R and BD-RE media aren't available yet, but when they are the maximum capacity the BWU-100A can handle will double from 25GB to 50GB per disc. You also get backwards compatibility with all existing DVD formats, including DVD-RAM. As another 2x drive, the BWU-100A offers little in the way of speed - a single-layer BD-R disc was again filled in just over 45 minutes. The BWU-100A (along with the LG, below) comes with CyberLink's impressively full-featured BD software. The obvious drawback is the high estimated price, although this is likely to drop once the drive is released. The LG GBW-H10N has the lowest price here, although it still isn't cheap. It's also the quickest, offering
Conclusion While drives are now starting to arrive in numbers, if there's anything that convinces us Blu-ray isn't ready yet it's this selection. There's nothing inherently wrong with them - the prices are high, but that's to be expected with brand-new technology. The question is what uses you can put a Blu-ray drive to - movies are all but non-existent, and with discs costing about 60p per gigabyte it's difficult to make an argument for Blu-ray as backup. A hard disk such as the Western Digital My Book Pro will do the same job for more like 30p per gigabyte. As such, there's simply no compelling reason to invest yet. Blu-Ray and films Blu-ray's most touted killer application is high-definition film playback. If you've got a compatible TV, you'll definitely notice the difference between DVDs, with their maximum vertical resolution of 480, and high-definition films, which have a vertical resolution of either 720 or 1,080. Presently, though, there isn't much point in splashing out, not least because of the lack of availability of Blu-ray films in the UK. There are also question marks against what kind of encryption and copy protection Blu-ray will use - it's widely reported that the huge delays around Sony's PlayStation 3 console have been principally due to problems with its Blu-ray drives. We tried playing a Blu-ray movie on each of our drives, and failed each time. But LG, Pioneer and Sony reassured us that each drive will play films once a software update (from CyberLink, in the case of Sony and Pioneer) has arrived. We won't be dumping our DVD collection for quite some time yet. By Sponsored Links
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