Sony Adopts Blu-ray Disc PlayStation 3
fenimor writes "Sony announced today that it had begun preparations to adopt Blu-ray Disc ROM (BD-ROM) format as a medium for the next generation PlayStation. Single side double layer Blu-Ray discs have a huge memory size of 54 GB, being an ideal medium to distribute next generation entertainment content from movies and music to computer applications. Next month Sony plans to announce a 200GB 8-layer version of BD-ROM according to MacWorld."
how badly a small scratch will affect these ? How much data redundancy is there ?
Probably not this, anyone know ?
If the dollar is an "I owe you nothing", then the Euro is a "Who owes you nothing." - Doug Casey
with all that storage they could make the planet Irata truly shine...
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I think I will use a previous comment of mine to address this story.
c id=9973808
http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=118044&
The preceding message was based on actual events. Only the names, locations and events have been changed.
Does anyone else keep reading "Blu-Ray" as "BluRry"?
Will this be compatible with all my PS2 games?
size of 54 GB, being an ideal medium to distribute next generation entertainment content from movies and music to computer applications.
Yes, that allows a lot of bloat for computer applications. Windows anyone? Sorry.
Since most of us don't use this type of disc in our computers, and are unlikely to upgrade solely to copy videogame disks... could they be hoping on good old fashioned security by obscurity to be an extra hurdle against piracy?
I just want to know when I can get a BD-RW off of newegg.
Next month Sony plans to announce a 200GB 8-layer version of BD-ROM according to MacWorld."
Today is November 5, 2006, and in today's news, angry video store owners with pitchforks are lined up in front of Sony's front doors.
Kids will love these discs.
It would be cool if it didn't suck.
this way Sony can push the PS3 effectively. the question is will they have enough Blue ray HD movies available by the time the PS3 is released.
Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.
You all know it's coming, but seriously folks, before the Dreamcast and original Playstation came out, what console's games didn't come out on a proprietary format?
"Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
these would be perfect storage - i could fit almost all my divx'es into just one disk :-)
Actually we need a decent media reader. I have never had a playstation 1 or 2 for more than 2 years. The lens or lens motor always die on me. Will Blue Ray be better?
have dyslexia you that.
Dude, Dell is supporting Blu-ray.
Personally, I see this as the action that will establish BD-ROM as the leader of the next-gen disc formats.
I don't know many people who will rush-out to buy a new DVD player to play HD movies, but EVERYONE is going to buy a PS3.
With that installed base, it will be fairly easy to translate into the market for movies being sold in that format.
Does it make you happy you're so strange?
What Ken Kutaragi appears to have said was that the PS3 will have 54GB of storage Capacity in addition to playing DVDs and CDs. Since Bluray can hold 25/50GB one assumes he is alluding to the inclusion of an onboard HDD or flash memory device.
http://ps2.ign.com/articles/549/549950p1.html
With PlayStation, PlayStation 2 and PSP(TM) (PlayStation(R) Portable), SCEI will continue to expand the market and create a new world of computer entertainment. Have they made anything new for the PlayStation in the past 3 years? Or do they think making it smaller is a breakthrough.
Like people keep suggesting. More like late 06 early 07.
If they really want to stop piracy, they should do what Sega did with the dreamcast, using a non-standard format, the gd-rom.
It will be impossible for people to burn those other formats.
Chris
Interesting. I think I'm starting to see Sony's strategy. They're rolling out a console that can probably play blu-ray DVD movies. They recently bought MGM, giving Sony the rights to rerelease all of MGM's movies on DVD. With PS3 to put players into the market, and with MGM movies to release, it sounds like sony has put a lot of thought into making their blu-ray standard a success.
A modernized Streets of SimCity. :)
tasks(723) drafts(105) languages(484) examples(29106)
- Sony will be soon leveraging the Playstation 3 game console to push a proprietary Bluray-based video format they will be attempting to introduce at about the same time.
- Sony will be at about the same time attempting to leverage their upcoming PSP handheld game system to push another proprietary video format, this one based on Minidiscs, called UMD.
Something within this I'm not so comfortable with. We're about to get a bona fide Betamax vs VHS style format war between HD-DVD and BluRay. I don't think it's going to be pretty. I'm glad I don't have plans to buy an HDTV.Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
I thought that Blu Ray discs were gonna use Microsoft technology somehow? Why would Microsoft not include it in Xbox 2?
___ Shout Central - Crushes your nuts!
Most PS2 and XBox games don't even use both layers of today's DVDs. The only one I recall encountering is Rallisport 2 and it was only like 6.5 gig or so. What this does seem likely to do is drive up the production cost of the games and system, however this probably won't translate to higher game prices as competition will even that field.
LilMikey.com... I'll stop doing it when you sto
Square-Enix can finally achieve the dream of turning Final Fantasy XIV into nothing more than a 50 hour movie with save spots in between!
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
In the days of 20MB hard disks, it took about 50 360KB floppies to back up a nearly-full disk, more or less.
In the days of 40GB hard disks, it took 50 800MB CD-Rs.
With 250GB systems, it takes about 50 4.7GB DVD-Rs.
By the time 50-200GB burners are available for under $200 in 7-8 years, I'll probably be using 2.5-10TB systems at home, and the ratio will still be 50.
I don't know about you, but 50 disk-swaps is several too many. Even with incremental or differential backups, it's a pain in the ***.
Your disks-per-complete-backup ratio may not be 50 but it's probably fairly stable over time.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,117867,0 0.asp
I know it's driving you crazy, but calling it memory is fine. What did you think the "M" in DVD-ROM or CD-ROM stood for? And in case you're still not sure, ROM stands for "Read-Only Memory."
that's security by obesity
that's why they have these things call tape...
You actually back up your entire harddrive on 50 CDs/DVDS? Sorry, but that's just anal.
Anyone know if there will be a Blue-Ray version of the DVD-RAM standard? I want something reliable to store my data.
Damien
While current optical disc technologies such as DVD, DVD-R, DVD+R, DVD-RW, DVD+RW and DVD-RAM use a red laser to read and write data, the new format uses a blue laser instead, hence the name Blu-ray. The benefit of using a blue laser is that it has a shorter wavelength (405 nanometer) than a red laser (650 nanometer), which means that it's possible to focus the laser beam with even greater precision. This allows data to be packed more tightly on the disc and makes it possible to fit more data on the same size disc. Despite the different type of lasers used, Blu-ray Disc recorders can be made backwards compatible with current red-laser technologies and allow playback of CDs and DVDs.
ROYGBIV - Somewhere between green and indigo.
http://www.blu-ray.com/info/
Damn, unless it is impossible to hook a hard drive to it, it will be very hard to play pirated games since there are no blue-ray drives for computers.
Because it is memory...
External memory technically. Common conception that it is not. I just part of the memory hierarchy. Granted low on the pyramid, but faster than tape.
While I'm mildly concerned about the discs what I'm really worried about is the drive.
I've gone through 2 PS2 drives- the units function perfectly otherwise they just rarely load discs anymore. I'm sure there's plenty of people out there that this has happened to. I want to know if we're gonna get cheap drives that break every 8 months.
I have the capacity to take care of the discs pretty well but all I can do with the drive is use it as intended.
That said, yay for new tech adoption.
... in Japan!
X = 88 Z = 90 Blue = 392
I backup disk-to-disk for full backups augmented with removable media for stuff that has to be backed up offline.
It would be nice to have everything on a set of CDs or similar though.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Nice to see someone else knows what the hell I'm talking about. It's bad enough I have to talk to myself to have an intelligent conversation.
Had I said something about Microsoft or SCO being evil or the benefits of open source then I would not have been labeled as Offtopic (damn mods).
Though I have to admit, the one poster above who gave the values for X and Z compared to Blue certainly put things into perspective.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
As long as they can improve load times, that shouldn't be a problem.
The ps2 was absurd when it came to that and those games about a gig or so. I couldn't imagine waiting 5 minutes between levels.
How many fat chicks did you know in high school that got pregnant? Same deal. ;)
-Randy
Sorry for the people who didn't realize it. Glad for the people who did to be able to provide humor.
A friend of mine has a lot of "backups" for his DC.
Chris
Insightful? That's not even a valid comparison.
The individual sprites were very, very small... A c64 game wouldn't keep each individual background as a single file, it was building these from indexed sprites, most likely 2-4 bits of color (not sure of the specifics)
Point being, you have a bunch of 256 byte sprites that are repeadedly being drawin on the screen... The instructions to "draw this sprite again" are quite a bit smaller...
oh, hell... you were being funny weren't you? (*smacks self on head*) Thanks, mods!
No, I was being serious. And I know about sprites. But I was just commenting on the fact that programmers and game writers used to write much more enjoyable games when they had more limitations to work with.
Why would microsoft be microsoft??
You'd think they could see how wildly unpopular that stance would be.
Seriously, however, M$ seems to be putting their weight behind HD-DVD, leading many to conjecture that Xbox 2 will also utilize the format.
Of blankness, I know nothing.
Yes.
I agree with you to an extent, as I'm not a fan of the "Hey, let's have a 5:1 video to gameplay ratio" genre.
Then I go back and think about the glut of Atari 2600 games that were out there. Those were some pretty awful games there! Don't get me wrong, Activision was gold back then, but for every good game you'd end up with some crap like "Tax Avoiders" (or of course ET) that was just horrible.
The NES had this as well, what with all of the horrible movie licensed games...
And early computer games sure had there share of crap as well. Even in the C64 era.
I think that there have been some truly incredible games in the past few years, although you still have a pretty high "crap to gold" ratio. They certainly aren't in the majority, at any rate. There were truly incredible games in our past as well... I just think it's easier to forget the BAD games of the past, though, mainly due to nostalgia.
By using such a high capacity read only storage medium, I wonder if this signals even less need for an internal hard drive for the PS3. If the console has enough system memory and/or available memory cards with fast enough read write access and fast throughput, then most games should be able to support updates/patches on the fly. If the memory cards really are up to it, then even a large RPG should be doable without need for a console HD. Most of the game world is going to be static so it can live on the read only disk. Updates for patches and special events are small diffs relative to the global data, so those reside on memory cards and loaded on the fly. Major expansions come on all new disks.
What does this all mean? It means that the PS3 is even less likely to come out with a HD and by extension, the same can be said for Xbox 2 since it will likely use a disks of similar capacity (to keep up in the spec war). I'd expect to see memory cards for both boxes come in 128MB and 256MB flavors.
To the making of books there is no end, so let's get started
Sony was a pretty big player in the content biz even before they had MGM... they bought out Columbia Tri-Star a few years ago
Columbia Tristar is only one of the seven major American movie studios. If Sony just had Columbia Tristar, then what if Fox, Disney, Warner, Universal, and Paramount were to go HD-DVD only? Adding MGM brings the James Bond license to Blu-ray, not just for sales of 007 films but also for PS3-exclusive 007 video games.
Finally we will have media capable of holding Duke Nukem Forever.
Source 1.2 Why the name Blu-ray?
The name Blu-ray is derived from the underlying technology, which utilizes a blue-violet laser to read and write data. The name is a combination of "Blue" and optical ray "Ray". According to the Blu-ray Disc Association, the spelling of "Blu-ray" is not a mistake. The character "e" is intentionally left out because a daily-used term can't be registered as a trademark.
Chewie does not get a medal. Come on, George. Can a Wookie get a medal?
- ROYGBIV - Somewhere between green and indigo.
I can see it now...After this, they'll go to Violet...Only they'll call it 'Purple-Ray' and license the rights to the Prince music... "Purple Ray...Purple Ray"That doesn't make it any less stupid or more creative. :P
I think this may be why blue ray wins the format war. If PS3 uses it, and the average PS2 owner stay s true to their old behaviour, it won't be long before they are modding and burning and complaining about fair use. Before you know it, blueray dvdrw will be fly off the shelf, driving the price down, and making fence sitters say "hmmm do I get nearly equivilent option 1, or cheaper option 2?" Cheap wins (re: beta vs vhs) and boom blueray is your standard of choice. All thanks to the power of software piracy!
Geoffrey Peart McMaster University Sfwr Eng Coast of Araska
Yes, there are some good games recently, but then for every good game you have about 20 companies making basically a copy of the idea. And there aren't very many original ideas out there.
When you go back and look at c64 games there were a great number of highly original ideas. A lot of them where not about blasting things, which I think is a big challenge.
Now, it's all about having the best graphics. Sure, it was back then too to some extent, but I think people enjoyed games for the gameplay more.
what about when you run out of blue-ray discs, but then I remembered you can buy things on the internet. What a thought.
Please stop stalking me, bro.
Just kidding. 54 GB on a single sided Dual Layer rocks. Might we see the return of FMV in games? Phew, let's hope not.
Sony's like the Brain from Pinky and the Brain:
"What are we going to do tonight Sony?"
"The same thing we do every night, Pinky. Try to take over the home electronics business with a proprietary media format!"
I made due with 2 8 meg PS2 cards for 4 years. Why not have an 128 megs of internal flash and not deal with mem cards at all. The obvious answer is the marketing. There is good money to be had in those flash cards they sell, but it sure would be nice to see that feature internalized.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
True, for all sets of EVERYONE who is male, 20+, and still living in their parent's basement.
Can someone in the industry catch us up on the status / thinking on HD vs BlueRay?
We all realize that this battle will be deceided by marketing and content control. Would be interesting to understand a bit more about the relative strengths of the two techs under the hood.
With PS3 going Blu-Ray, perhaps XBox will go HD-DVD.
Are either of them simpler to use for storage etc for computers?
Technical bullet points pro and con between them.
Royalty hassles, which group will charge the most?
Which looks like it has the momentum so far.
In the article I linked above it seemed to indicate something to the contrary in this passage:
The Japanese unit of Microsoft Corp. said on Monday the company's next-generation operating system, Longhorn, would be compatible with HD-DVD, Reuters reported today. This announcement is considered a boost for the next-generation blue-laser DVD technology, which is promoted by Japanese corporations NEC and Toshiba.
Some further research indicates that they are talking about the AOD (Advanced Optical Disc format), which in it's current spec is read-only, and referred to as HD-DVD.
PS. The above Microsoft comments were largely tongue-in-cheek, lighten up. I mean we obviously don't like 'em, we live with 'em, and, for the most part, we laugh at all the ridiculous commentary we make about them while still harboring strange resentments and utilizing their software somewhere... Tell me that's not a tangled web.
Of blankness, I know nothing.
My title is wrong, but it's true that in my experience DVDs could benefit a lot from better error correction. I can't think of the last video tape I rented that had significant playback problems, but I can think of the last 5 DVDs that did. I would love to see a movie encoded on something like Blooray that has a full-on four way backup of the data, so it has to be scratched in exactly the wrong four places at once before it'll skip. I'm sure there are cleverer ways to make error checking more efficient, but you get the idea -- like the grandparent, I hope like hell they'll throw more data at this problem, because right now DVDs strike me as anything but permanent under normal use.
There is a mechanism which more or less works like you are suggesting, and it's been worked on for a couple of decades now. Remember "holographic" memory? First it was in cube format, then a disk format, but it never really panned out.
Still you could have a multi layer read merely by having multiple lasers and pickups. Might even be able to fire them all through the same focusing optics (trickey) but better would be to have mutiple "heads" so that they could also independantly seek. Imagine a device with 8 heads that could read any layer. The completely abysmal seek times of DVD players might approach respectability!
Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
The reason for this is cost. Back in the C64 and Atari days, an entire game could be made - and made WELL - by just one or two guys. In fact, many games - good games - were made by hobbyists.
Flash forward to now, where companies need millions of dollars to make a game just compete in the advertisements. So they put all of their money in things that are more likely to get that sale. Things like flashy graphics, expensive ad campaigns, and big license franchises. When they have paid for all of that and the latest development environments to make them with - gameplay gets $3.67 left in the budget.
There are a TON of games with GREAT gameplay that don't sell well because they don't have hookers and pimps or lowered honda civics. In todays market - if you make a great game, just throw it away - unless you can put in blood, gore, and sex. Otherwise it is relegated as a "kiddie" game.
If I am going to invest $20million on a game, I want it to sell - not to be fun...
Its no more proprietary than any other standard -- they even vied for position as the replacement for DVD. Go call up Sony and tell them you want to make some Blu-Ray devices and see what they say.
They'll ask for licensing fees and be happy.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
They're going to pack multiple games onto one disc, to cut down on material costs/waste.. that'd be nutty.
It's interesting to note that for as advanced as the PC is, here we are in 2004, and virtually every PC game is still using CDs. PCs have had DVD drives well before consoles have, but with the exception of a couple of AAA titles(UT2004, The Sims 2, etc), nearly everything is still being released on CDs, even if it's working its way up to 4 or 5 CDs(Far Cry, Enter The Matrix), at least as far as North America goes. I seriously swear we'll still be using CDs when major PS3 games move to BD's, and the consumers will still be left as clueless as ever as to why this hasn't changed.
Nope. Memory is memory is memory, whether it's volatile or not.
Maybe Sony should just stop working on optical drives -- from my perspective, they have a very poor track record because they're way late to deliver interesting amounts of storage space and whatever they ship only works with proprietary formats.
Put this in the context of a hard drive: Pricewatch says we can get a 400GB HD for a little over $1/GB right now (lower capacity hard drives offer faster rotation speed at less than $1/GB prices). Putting aside the price, these HDs currently deliver 4X the space of what Sony may deliver in 2007, and the hard drive will offer no proprietary hassles. I'm guessing that any HD will be faster to find what I want to read and faster to get the data to me than the upcoming Sony device.
Perhaps their upcoming drive would be interesting if the specs for it and the compatible blank media were distributed to any competitors, thus letting the market turn this into the new low-end optical drive+media. But since Sony is probably not going to do that, I doubt the market will change to this new format.
I recall a Sony CD-R replacement that offered slightly more space than a conventional CD-R, but only if you used their proprietary encoding scheme. The drive cost more than a conventional CD-R burner and the blank media would cost more than conventional CD-Rs as well. The press release came out and I knew nobody who was excited about it. It was obviously a bad exchange: initial hardware outlay would cost too much money, there was virtually no interoperability with one's friends, and any subsequent maintenance would cost too much (CD-R burners are about $20 and DVD burners are about $30 right now, by my skimming of Pricewatch).
Digital Citizen
ROYGBIV - Somewhere between green and indigo.
One of my physics teachers said Indigo was put into the spectrum for the sole purpose of allowing ROYGBIV (easy to pronounce), instead of ROYGBV (hard to pronounce).
-- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
As someone else said FFX has an option to have shorter summonings. The quality of the FF summonings will most likely increase rather then a "10 minute" summoning. Honestly, this was either an attempt at Funny or just a troll.
If you think about it though, you can probobly make that "screenshot" as small as the original using Javascript. Just take the original sprites for each object, and have a JS program render the scene using a map of where the sprites are placed. Since PNG has a better compression rate than bitmaps, it might even be *smaller* than the original : )
Of corse, it's going to take time.... but it looks like you have plenty to begin with : )
Wow, just imagine what George Lucas could do with one of these 54 gb disks? I predict many bastardizations of Star Wars Episodes 1 - 3. As if Episode 1 wasn't bad enough already. Like that'll stop about four re-releases in the year 2025.
Bad karma for correcting people I always say.
*thinks*
:P
500 PS2 games! 3-disc pack! Only $29.95. Includes PS2 emulator for your PS3.
Now THAT sounds interesting
I've seen STRONGBAD videos much better voice-sync'ed than 3D Anime sequences. You don't expect something to feel realistic when the characters speak like this:
OH, no! You (mouth closes) must stop (opens) her! (image keeps talking).
(Image starts talking) You're (stops) right.
Frankly, I wonder if the cheap hardware will win the race over nice rendering algorithms.
What I'd like to know is: What is the capacity in a PROPER unit, like LOC?
Black holes are where God divided by zero
This would be a nice informative article.... IF i hadn't known two years ago that sony had plans to do this. Unless it get's pushed back or forward the release date will be in fall of 05. at which point I should be reciving one of the first 300 on the U.S. Waiting List. As usual, it'll likely hit Japan and Europe first. As for data redundancy, currently zero, though I expect developers will be changing that in the future, of course you could always go buy a blue ray DVD burner (MSRP roughly 400-500 or so when they hit the market) and I'm sure nero and the xcopy line of burning software will follow suit.
What library is making you rent?
Home users who just do word-processing and email typically have a very small amount of data.
Now those with digicams or whose kids get RIAA subpeonas do have lots of data.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
My first DVD player had problems with some disks but (don't hate me because I bought a Microsoft product
Spell cheek you've failed me four the last thyme!