GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

April 1, 2006

 

The (Almost) Obligatory Essay on Blu-ray and HD DVD

This year, two new formats for the delivery of high-definition video and audio will premiere. The first players that use the Blu-ray technology will be released in May, while March saw the first release of an HD DVD player. I could not care less.

The Blu-ray format was developed by the Blu-ray Association, comprising electronics companies such as Sony, Philips, and Samsung, and computer companies including Apple and Dell. Unlike the CD and DVD, which rely on red-laser technology, Blu-ray relies on blue-violet lasers. Because blue-violet light has a shorter wavelength than red light, it can be focused more tightly, which means more data can be squeezed into the same area and still be accurately read. A single-layer DVD can hold 4.7GB, a single-layer Blu-ray disc 25GB. The prices of three Blu-ray players have already been set: a Samsung model due in May will retail for $1000 USD, a Pioneer model will come in June for $1800, and July will see a Sony design for $1000. While a good number of film studios have signed on to the format, including Warner Bros., Walt Disney, and Paramount, the first batch of Blu-ray titles curiously includes such lackluster fare as xXx, Hitch, and The Punisher.

HD DVD has the same disc structure as DVD, which ensures backward compatibility -- something not guaranteed with Blu-ray. HD DVD’s data-storage capacity is 15GB for a single-layer disc. HD DVD is favored by Toshiba and NEC -- and Microsoft, who recently announced that it will support an external HD DVD drive for the Xbox 360. Toshiba set release dates for their first two players for last month, but I’ve yet to see them on store shelves. The less expensive model retails for $499.99 -- a lot more affordable than the Blu-ray players announced so far. Paramount, Universal Studios, and Warner Bros. have committed to releasing films on the format. HD DVD seems to have had better luck than Blu-ray in being launched with films that have large audiences, such as Batman Begins and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire -- but was anyone really clamoring for an HD DVD version of Constantine?

The biggest competition for both of the new formats will be, of course, the DVD, which has three important things in its favor: It can be made (and sold) very cheaply, it has saturated the market, and it’s good enough for the great majority of people. Inexpensive DVD players are easily available for as little as $35, and disc prices average less than $20. Even a player with HDMI and DVI outputs that can upconvert images to 720p or 1080i is regularly available at Costco for $70. For the $1000 you’d spend on one of the first Blu-ray players, you could buy a DVD player and 45 DVDs, or a player and more than three years’ membership in Netflix, the national mail-order DVD-rental service.

Remember SACD and DVD-Audio? Given their uninspiring performance in the marketplace, perhaps you don’t. They were going to be wonderful -- "veils would fall," and audiophile clichés would fail to describe what these new audio formats could provide. But what the formats’ developers failed to account for was that most people were perfectly happy with CDs and DVD-Videos, and felt no need for high-resolution audio formats.

My relationship with SACD has been of the love/hate variety. Multichannel SACD is excellent when done right, really annoying when done wrong. Very expensive SACD players can make a rather noticeable improvement in the playback of CDs, but a well-made CD player can easily trump a less expensive, similarly priced SACD machine. The minute I compared my Sony SCE-775 SACD player with a Rotel RCD-1070 CD player -- the Sony playing the SACD layer of a hybrid disc and the Rotel playing the same disc’s CD layer -- it was easy to hear that the Rotel sounded much better. If your CD player sounds better, doesn’t cost much more, and doesn’t need new software, who needs the hassle of SACDs?

Lately, people who know I write about audio and home theater have begun to ask me about Blu-ray and HD DVD. I answer by asking them two questions. So far, the answer to my first question -- are you happy with the performance of your DVD player? -- has always been "Yes." When I ask Question No.2 -- are you happy with your CD player (or iPod) for music playback? -- while not everyone says "Yes," most respond that they are content with what they have. So I tell them, "Ignore the new formats. Enjoy what you have, and, if you must buy something new, get a better CD player or upgrade your television."

I might be proved wrong about Blu-ray and HD DVD, but one thing I’m not wrong about is the excellent performance of the latest portable headphone amplification products from HeadRoom, the Micro Amp and Micro DAC -- the subjects of this month’s GoodSound! equipment review. If you’re already using your computer for audio, then the Micro DAC might be your next step toward high-quality music reproduction. And the Micro Amp can be used right alongside the Micro DAC, or alone with any other source. These HeadRoom products show that you don’t need new formats to impress people and get their business -- you just need to provide good performance at a good price.

…Eric D. Hetherington


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