Taiwanese Company to Mass Produce Rewritable HD Discs
Lucas123 writes "Ritek Corp. plans to start mass producing BD-RE and HD DVD-RE next quarter. 'Initially, however, BD-RE and HD DVD-RE discs will be pricey. The average cost per disc will remain around $10 in retail outlets, despite production costs of around $5 per disc, said Eric Ai, a Ritek representative. Prices won't likely come down until other mass disc producers in Taiwan win accreditation to make the discs, and ramp up volumes.'"
$10 retail on something that costs $5 to produce is pretty standard.
paintball
This was the same story for CDR, DVDR, etc. Eventually, a spindle will be available for 12 bucks at Fry's. I am hoping it's not a long wait, this kind of storage will be great for those of us who make frequent backups of our home directories.
It's especially cheap compared to the value of that time. I've been trying to back up photos on DVDs, but with the amount of pics and movies I can take with a 2 GB card, it's a pretty time-consuming process. On the other hand, with 500 GB external drives for ~$140, that's less than $6 for 20 GB, so that's still a cheaper option at the moment.
Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
This is straight from the corporate website. Confusing Taiwanese with Thai can get you shot in certain parts of the world :)
Corporate Name RITEK Corporation
Establish Date December 29, 1988
Date of IPO April 23, 1996
Headquarter No. 42, Kuan-Fu N. Road, Hsin-Chu Industrial Park, 30316, Taiwan
Employees 3723(Q4, 2005)
Capital 698 million USD (Q4, 2005)
Slashdot editors cant distinguish between Thailand and Taiwan.
I dont have an account, didnt feel like creating one just to point out American idiocy.
"Confusing Taiwanese with Thai can get you shot in certain parts of the world :)"
:P
So can confusing Taiwan and China
RE? Short for REwritable? Why in the world can't they just keep things uniform and stick with the RW designation. Does it really need a new acronym? What is the major different that would warrant that.
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"And may your days be long upon the earth."
Until regular old read-only drives become cheap and plentiful--nay, let's just even say available for now--my enthusiasm is somewhat dampened.
"The average cost per disc will remain around $10 in retail outlets, despite production costs of around $5 per disc"
Of course, the higher the price of media, the less likely people will make backups of their HD movies. At $10 a crack, it's not too much more to buy another copy of the movie. I'm sure that benefit to copyright holders is factored into the cost of the media to some degree. The story makes mention of an accreditation process, which the studios undoubtedly have influence over (they had a say in developing the standard itself). Thus if the media isn't sold at the price the industry wants, the manufacturer could suddenly have problems maintaining their accreditation.
Dan East
Better known as 318230.
Does anyone actually use RW media?
I only occasionally see it in stores and have never seen actual discs used in the wild.