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                    What 
                    is Blu-ray Technology 
                     
                    
                     Blu-Ray 
                    vs. HD-DVD 
                    
                    
                    What is
                    
                    
                    HDMI
                    
                    
                         
                    What is HDCP  | 
                  
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    Plasma screen burn-in and gas 
                    recharging Information 
                    
                    
                    
                    The top 5 reasons to go 1080p  
                    and what it is.  | 
                 
                
                  | 
                     
                    Make sure 
                    you have the right sound system and cables. 
                    If you need sound with your video, consider adding a pair of 
                    powered speakers to your plasma rental. We carry many 
                    different types of speakers along with the factory side 
                    mounted audio system, this is sure to make your sound as 
                    perfect as your images. You can display computer images, 
                    video game consoles, live DV camera, and DVD/VCR feeds. The 
                    number of input feeds varies by make and model so be sure to 
                    enquire about which best fits your needs.   | 
                 
                
                  
                    
                      
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               Blu-ray Disc Player  
               
              DMP-BD10
   | 
              
               
               
              Blu-ray, also 
              known as Blu-ray Disc (BD), is the name of a next-generation 
              optical disc format jointly developed by the Blu-ray Disc 
              Association (BDA), a group of the world's leading consumer 
              electronics, personal computer and media manufacturers (including 
              Apple, Dell, Hitachi, HP, JVC, LG, Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Pioneer, 
              Philips, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, TDK and Thomson). The format was 
              developed to enable recording, rewriting and playback of 
              high-definition video (HD), as well as storing large amounts of 
              data. 
               
              The format offers more than five times the storage capacity of 
              traditional DVDs and can hold up to 25GB on a single-layer disc 
              and 50GB on a dual-layer disc. This extra capacity combined with 
              the use of advanced video and audio codecs will offer consumers an 
              unprecedented HD experience. 
               
              While current optical disc technologies such as DVD, DVD±R, DVD±RW, 
              and DVD-RAM rely on a red laser to read and write data, the new 
              format uses a blue-violet laser instead, hence the name Blu-ray. 
              Despite the different type of lasers used, Blu-ray products can 
              easily be made backwards compatible with CDs and DVDs through the 
              use of a BD/DVD/CD compatible optical pickup unit. The benefit of 
              using a blue-violet laser (405nm) is that it has a shorter 
              wavelength than a red laser (650nm), which makes it possible to 
              focus the laser spot with even greater precision. This allows data 
              to be packed more tightly and stored in less space, so it's 
              possible to fit more data on the disc even though it's the same 
              size as a CD/DVD. This together with the change of numerical 
              aperture to 0.85 is what enables Blu-ray Discs to hold 25GB/50GB.
              
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                The Showdown: Blu-Ray vs. HD-DVD 
                Posted by Admin on Sunday, March 27, 2005 - 06:39 am: [ Submit 
                News ] [ Reply ]  
                 
                -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
                By Michael Grebb  
                 
                Alan Parsons wishes it wasn't so. But like it or not, the senior 
                vice president of Pioneer's industrial solutions business group 
                has become a wary foot soldier in the battle over the future of 
                the DVD format. As music blares from a band playing at a nearby 
                exhibit at the 2005 International CES, Parsons sits at a small 
                table in a meeting room contemplating how the next couple of 
                years might play out. He remains relatively reserved, trying not 
                to let his passion for the next-generation Blu-Ray Disc format 
                devolve into vitriol against rival format HD-DVD. "I don't like 
                the rock throwing," he insists. "I just want to excite 
                consumers."  
                 
                That may be true, but Parsons still finds it hard to resist 
                getting in a few digs on the HD-DVD rival, which at about 15 
                gigabytes per layer has roughly 40 percent less storage capacity 
                than the Blu-Ray format. "They might end up with something 
                ho-hum," he says. "They're saying that [their capacity] is good, 
                but people used to think that five gigs was good enough." 
                Parsons shrugs his shoulders a bit, wearing a look of calm but 
                certain exasperation. "Why would we limit ourselves to a lower 
                capacity?" he asks.  
                 
                To be sure, Parsons is among several CE manufacturers backing 
                the Blu-Ray format, which they claim is superior to HD-DVD. But 
                the HD-DVD format has its own backers, who while fewer in 
                numbers, are equally adamant that their format will win out 
                because of its lower transition and manufacturing costs—as well 
                as other technical benefits and its expected quicker time to 
                market. Indeed, either format is a vast improvement over the 
                current DVD design, which maxes out at about 4.7 gigabytes. Even 
                at standard-definition quality, that's barely enough space for a 
                two-hour movie and a few hours of special features. And with 
                that much space, forget about high-definition TV.  
                 
                VHS vs. Beta all over Again?  
                 
                Both Blu-Ray and HD-DVD discs enable HDTV reproduction because 
                of their massive storage capacities. Using dual-layer 
                techniques, HD-DVD can store as much as 30 gigabytes of data 
                while a Blu-Ray disc can pack in a whopping 50 gigabytes. In the 
                lab, techies already are working on several-layered discs that 
                could allow more than 100 gigabytes of storage on one disc. 
                That's enough for several HDTV movies, special features and 
                compelling interactive content. Or a content provider could put 
                more than 100 hours of standard-definition quality programming 
                on one DVD. All 180 episodes of Seinfeld on one disc, anyone?
                 
                 
                The benefits for backward compatibility are clear: new players 
                will be able to handle both old and new DVD formats in the same 
                machine (outfitted with both red- and blue-laser diodes)—a major 
                consumer benefit that manufacturers hope will drive unit sales.
                 
                 
                Blu-Ray and HD-DVD both use blue lasers, which operate at lower 
                wavelengths (405 nanometers) than current red lasers (650 
                nanometers). That microscopic difference goes a long way. Longer 
                wavelengths suffer more diffraction, which limits their ability 
                to focus tightly on a surface. But a blue laser's shorter 
                wavelength allows it to read and write data over a much tighter 
                surface area, which in turn allows storage of far more data on a 
                disc that's roughly the same diameter of current DVDs. The 
                benefits for backward compatibility are clear: New players will 
                be able to handle both old and new DVD formats in the same 
                machine (outfitted with both red- and blue-laser diodes)—a major 
                consumer benefit that manufacturers hope will drive unit sales.
                 
                 
                But while consumers won't have to worry about obsolescence when 
                it comes to their old DVD collections, the format war brewing 
                between new Blu-Ray and HD-DVD discs does present an age-old 
                problem that evokes the VHS vs. Beta fiasco of the 1980s. The 
                HD-DVD format—like the VHS format that won out over Beta—could 
                become far more widely available to consumers sooner and at a 
                lower price (at least initially) than Blu-Ray discs. That's 
                because the HD-DVD format utilizes manufacturing techniques very 
                similar to those used for the current generation of DVDs. 
                Translation: Third-party duplication houses won't have to retool 
                their factories significantly to make HD-DVDs a reality. That 
                means that HD-DVD discs likely will be the first to market by at 
                least several months, probably by the end of 2005.  
                 
                On the other hand, Blu-Ray discs require an entirely new 
                manufacturing process with transition costs borne largely by 
                duplicators (unless Blu-Ray backers devise a subsidy system. 
                That, along with other issues, is expected to delay the 
                introduction of Blu-Ray discs until sometime in 2006, which 
                could hand a major advantage to the HD-DVD format. (add hard 
                return here) "In this kind of battle, the guy who is out there 
                first and cheaper is going to be the winner," says Fariborz 
                Ghadar, director for the Center for Global Business Studies at 
                Penn State University. "The more expensive and later one is 
                going to be the loser." (The Blu-Ray camp contends that it will 
                bring manufacturing costs nearly in line with HD-DVD during the 
                next year. Parsons says that HD-DVD's cost advantage will amount 
                to only "pennies" per disc over the Blu-Ray format). (add hard 
                return here as well) "Unlike Blu-Ray discs, HD-DVD discs can be 
                manufactured with similar equipment in the same plants that make 
                current DVDs," said Jodi Sally, vice president of marketing for 
                Toshiba America Consumer Products digital audio video products.
                 
                 
                Duking It Out  
                 
                Still, the nature of the next-generation rollout itself may 
                force consumers to take sides early. Because of the vastly 
                different physical attributes of Blu-Ray and HD-DVD discs, it's 
                cost-prohibitive for manufacturers to produce next-generation 
                players that can handle both Blu-Ray and HD-DVD formats in one 
                machine. "You would need two pickup heads, and it would be very 
                expensive," explains Stephen Balogh, business development 
                manager at Intel's corporate technology group. So manufacturers 
                have lined up on opposite sides of the fence, ready to produce 
                players that only work with one or the other format. That could 
                spell consumer confusion as buyers fear picking the wrong one 
                and ending up with an obsolete player and content library.  
                 
                Each side wants to convince consumers that they should avoid the 
                other side's format. HD-DVD backers are planning a "you want it, 
                and we're here now" marketing strategy, whereas the Blu-Ray camp 
                largely plans to adopt a "we won't be first, but we'll be 
                better" campaign designed to warn consumers away from HD-DVD.
                 
                 
                So what's the breakdown of forces on each side? On the Blu-Ray 
                side is a large group of CE manufacturers, including Dell, 
                Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, LG Electronics, Mitsubishi Electric, 
                Panasonic (Matsushita Electric), Pioneer, Royal Philips 
                Electronics, Samsung Electronics, Sharp, Sony, TDK and Thomson. 
                Some content providers also are onboard. In addition to obvious 
                backing from Sony-affiliated movie studios Sony Pictures 
                Entertainment and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the Walt Disney Company 
                and its home-video division Buena Vista Entertainment offered 
                its non-exclusive endorsement of Blu-Ray in December. In 
                addition, video gaming powerhouse Electronic Arts, along with 
                Vivendi Universal Games, both came out for Blu-Ray at the 2005 
                International CES in January.  
                 
                Most gaming companies have yet to pick sides, although Blu-Ray's 
                larger storage capacity may win some of them over. "If you show 
                Blu-Ray to a game manufacturer and say you can have an extra 20 
                gigabytes of storage, it's a drop-dead deal," says Blu-Ray 
                backer Richard Doherty, managing director for Blu-Ray and 
                professional AV at Panasonic Hollywood Labs. Of course, most 
                PC-based games haven't even moved up to the current generation 
                of DVDs from CDs, so it's unclear whether most gaming companies 
                will utilize high-definition DVD formats for some time.  
                 
                The main backer of the HD-DVD format is Toshiba, which by itself 
                has more market dominance than several CE backers on the Blu-Ray 
                side combined, along with smaller players NEC and Sanyo. Toshiba 
                plans to launch its first HD-DVD players in late 2005. In 
                December, even Thomson—which is actually a Blu-Ray disc 
                backer—announced that it also would sell HD-DVD players by late 
                2005. And an impressive list of entertainment content companies 
                has thrown their weight behind HD-DVD, including Paramount, 
                Universal Studios and Warner Bros. (along with Time Warner-owned 
                New Line Cinema). All of these studios have already announced a 
                significant amount of titles on HD-DVD to be available at the 
                time HD-DVD players are introduced.  
                 
                Toshiba is dedicated to the HD-DVD format and executives 
                staunchly believe they will win the marketing battle for 
                consumers even before Blu-Ray gets its format off the ground in 
                2006. "The key part of this is going to be driven by content," 
                says Maciek Brzeski, vice president of marketing in Toshiba's 
                storage device division.  
                 
                He says consumers won't care whether the disc has 30 gigabytes 
                or 50 gigabytes of capacity—only that the content they want is 
                ready and available at a good price. Brzeski questions the Blu-Ray 
                camp's ability to jazz consumers about a format that he says 
                offers little more than a few extra gigabytes of storage. 
                "They're going to be marketing technology, and we're going to be 
                marketing products," he says. "It's hard to sell technology to 
                consumers."  
                 
                "Our rich heritage in the development of DVD technology means 
                that we are well equipped for the market transition from DVD to 
                HD-DVD," added Sally, who also serves as Vice-President for the 
                Digital Entertainment Group. "With proven backwards 
                compatibility and real software titles available at launch, we 
                are certain that we can deliver the very best solution in HD-DVD 
                technology for both consumers as well as the content providers."
                 
                 
                In December, Toshiba and other HD-DVD backers formed the HD-DVD 
                Promotion Group to promote the format, and to ensure early 
                product launches and subsequent market penetration.  
                 
                Other pros and cons seem to bleed together as both formats offer 
                similar features. For example, while HD-DVD touts the ability to 
                create discs with red-laser standard DVD format on one side and 
                blue-laser HD-DVD standard on the other, a Blu-Ray Disc 
                Association spokeswoman points out that JVC announced in 
                December a disc that allows both standard DVD and Blu-Ray 
                content on a single side of the disc. The Blu-Ray camp has 
                argued that single-sided discs are more consumer friendly.  
                 
                The Pricing Strategy  
                 
                In the vital area of picture quality, both formats also have a 
                difficult time differentiating between one another. "Either 
                format can produce a very good image," says Richard Dean, 
                director of technical business development at THX Inc. "To me, 
                it boils down to the price of the equipment and the availability 
                of content."  
                 
                Dean, who has helped master the DVD releases of the Star Wars 
                trilogy and other blockbuster movies, says that consumers won't 
                notice any real quality difference between the formats. But he 
                says HD-DVD may end up with an advantage if it can under price 
                Blu-Ray discs and players. "I think that's going to play a very 
                large role." As for Blu-Ray's greater storage capacity, "more 
                space is always an advantage," Dean says, "but the question is 
                how much more space is really needed." Notes Parsons: "If you 
                start doing HD bonus features, it will suck up capacity very 
                quickly."  
                 
                Intel executives, who first got involved in the working groups 
                for next-generation DVD formats to help avoid a format war, 
                already are bracing for an era of consumer confusion as a 
                Blu-Ray-vs.-HD-DVD scenario takes shape. "We didn't want two 
                formats coming out," says Balogh. "Now we have an even standoff, 
                so neither side wants to compromise whatsoever." Making matters 
                worse, he says, the entertainment studios also are split between 
                Blu-Ray and HD-DVD, although more big studios have backed HD-DVD 
                at this point.  
                 
                "The studios will be the kingmakers here," he says. Ultimately, 
                consumers may struggle to figure out what kind of players and 
                media to purchase during the next couple of years. "The most 
                important benefit to the consumer is that the HD-DVD players 
                that we'll be introducing to the market this year will be fully 
                backward compatible with the current DVDs that are already in 
                consumers' homes. With the Blu-Ray formats' backward 
                compatibility isn't so simple," adds Sally.  
                 
                Still, many are wary. "It would be best if we went to market 
                without two formats," says Panasonic's Doherty. "We're very 
                disappointed that we're in a format war." As the battle heats up 
                in 2005 and well into 2006, consumers will decide which format 
                will succeed.  
                 
                This material has been adapted from VISION -- a bi-monthly 
                magazine of the Consumer Electronics Asssociation 
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        The 
        truth about Plasma 
        screen burn-in and gas recharging 
         
        Plasma screen TVs have had some bad publicity thanks to the ignorance of 
        some salespeople at national retail stores. This page is dedicated to 
        giving you the true facts about plasma burn, so you can make your own 
        choice about buying a plasma TV screen. 
         
        About plasma screen pixel burn-in and dead pixels? 
        A lot of people worry about pixel burn-in when researching Plasma screen 
        TVs. Screen burn-in is when an image stays on the screen for a long 
        period of time, and appears to get permanently burned into the screen 
        itself. Screen burn-in can potentially happen, when running a computer 
        presentation that has fixed blocks of solid color.  
         
        However, for most plasma owners, screen burn-in will never be an issue, 
        and you are much more likely to upgrade your Plasma TV before anything 
        goes wrong. To put your mind at rest, most newer plasma TVs have a 
        feature called white flash·that provides correction if screen burn-in 
        ever occurs. There is also a calibration tool called PixelProtector that 
        makes sure your plasma TV is always set up to combat screen burn. 
         
        If you do have Plasma bun contact the 
        manufacture for recommendation on fixing this problem 
         
        Very occasionally LCD and plasma TVs suffer from dead pixels when a 
        pixel is either always on (lit up when the screen is black, for 
        example), or the pixel is always off (black when it should have color or 
        be white). A few dead pixels here and there are not noticeable, and 
        manufacturers normally state that a small percentage of dead pixels are 
        allowed.  
         
        The best way to avoid any problems with dead pixels is buy a plasma 
        screen made by a reputable manufacturer (such as Sony, Panasonic, NEC 
        and Sharp), as the build quality of the plasma panels is higher you are 
        less likely to have problems, and if you do, the screens will have a 
        guarantee/warrantee enabling you to get the problem repaired or the 
        screen exchanged.  
         
        Do you have to "re-gas" Plasma TV screens? 
        This is one of the most common, and the most wrong myths about Plasma 
        TVs. All plasma screens are completely, permanently sealed when 
        manufactured. Each individual pixel in a plasma panel is sealed, and 
        therefore cannot, and does not ever require any refilling, or 
        recharging. 
         
        Next time some salesperson tells you about "re-filling" the gas in a 
        plasma TV, ask them how long it takes to manually insert three different 
        types of gas into every single pixel in the screen. 
         
        Someone told me that Plasma TVs don't have a very 
        long life-span, is this true? 
        If you buy your Plasma screen from a quality brand you will get a TV 
        with a rated lifetime of around 30,000 hours. What this means is if you 
        watch TV for five hours, every single day it will last over 16 years. 
        I'm guessing that you'll be looking to replace your plasma TV long 
        before that happens, and on average most people buy a new home TV every 
        eight years anyway! The lifetime of a plasma TV is measured by something 
        called it's "half life" (this is the industry term for the period of 
        time it takes for the display to appear half as bright as the day it was 
        first used). All different types of TV screens, including LCD lose their 
        brightness over time, but because it's so gradual, it's practically 
        impossible to notice.  | 
                     
                   
                  
                 
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              What is LCD 
              Technology? 
              LCD stands for Liquid 
              Crystal Display. This technology has been around for a number of 
              years but is finally able to deliver fast motion video quality 
              displays. The thin and light form factor is attractive to 
              consumers. While the panel (the set itself) looks thin, the 
              technology inside is quite extensive. 
              An LCD is made up of pixels (picture elements). Pixels are 
              individual, distinct, points of light. Each pixel is made up of 
              sub pixels consisting of red, green and blue. Together the red, 
              green and blue sub pixes combine to form a single color picture 
              element. A panel's resolution is determined in part by how many 
              pixels there are. A display can have hundreds of thousands of 
              points of light (pixels) to millions of points of light, depending 
              on the resolution. 
              Projector Models for
              rent. | 
                     
                   
                  
                 
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              The top 5 reasons to go 1080p 
               
              Why all the hoopla about 1080p? Most early adopters saw no 
              improvement from their "up-converting" DVD players, even after 
              going digital with HDMI™. Why? Because all they were really seeing 
              was enhanced 480p on a 1080i display. The early hype about 1080p 
              made us think it was the next big thing. Is it? New HDTVs that are 
              "full HD 1080p" are shipping now so let's take a look at the top 5 
              reasons to go 1080p. 
              
              More...  | 
                     
                   
                  
                 
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