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Microsoft demonstrates external HD DVD drive for Xbox 360

Dela @ Aug 09, 2006 00:58 | 43 comments

Microsoft has demonstrated the external HD DVD drive for the Xbox 360 console to attendees at the DVD Forum in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, Microsoft's senior program manager, Kevin Collins, remained silent about possible prices for the device but he did state that it would be among the least expensive HD DVD players to reach the market.

"All the audio and video processing is done inside the Xbox," Collins stated. He said that research is indicating that the majority of Xbox 360 owners already own an HDTV and that the drive will provide them with all the other required equipment to watch HD DVD movies. "This gives consumers choice and keeps their cost down," he added.

The picture quality produced by the combination of the Xbox 360 and the external drive has been deemed equal to that of most players shown at the event. Sony will launch its PlayStation 3 console worldwide in November. It will include an internal Blu-Ray drive used for both games and movies. Microsoft has insisted it will keep the Xbox 360's HD DVD drive as an external device to "give consumers the choice".

No release dates for the device were given but it is widely expected that Microsoft will have it ready in time for Christmas.

Source:

GamesIndustry.biz

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Comment by: psyantist (Aug 10, 2006 10:38)

Andrew691, I see your point with free roam games, however my point was for "most" games. "Most" games are not free roaming and are very linear in play, which would allow to easily be switched out. As far as free roamers go, who knows, maybe with the more powerful system they can compress files or maybe even have more effecient code.

I just remember playing Final Fantasy VII on playstation, that was 3 or 4 discs, and I didn't have a problem switching discs at all. I guess the gaming world is getting so lazy that getting off the couch has now become a major concern.

Comment by: tycobb (Aug 10, 2006 11:19)

@psyantist Before you "wow" at me get your facts strait. They get bigger in file size with every console generation.With ps1 they were on cd's which held 700mb and that was lot for then so when dvd's came out it seemed like over kill but now games are much bigger.The games will get bigger trust me.

This happens with every next gen release.

High def cutscenes are impossible with regular dvd just like high def movies are impossible with dvd.They compress the textures on dvd.The dvd game is in "higher" res but the textures are low resolution textures.Get it?

The typical video resolution for an NTSC disc is 720 × 480, while a PAL disc is 720 × 576. The specifications for video files on a DVD can be any of the following:

* Up to 9.8 Mbit/s (9800 kbit/s) MPEG-2 video

* Up to 1.856 Mbit/s (1856 kbit/s) MPEG-1 video

* PAL:

720 × 576 pixels MPEG-2 (Called full D1)

704 × 576 pixels MPEG-2

352 × 576 pixels MPEG-2 (Called Half-D1, same as the China Video Disc standard)

352 × 288 pixels MPEG-2

352 × 288 pixels MPEG-1 (Same as the VCD Standard)

* NTSC:

720 × 480 pixels MPEG-2 (Called full D1)

704 × 480 pixels MPEG-2

352 × 480 pixels MPEG-2 (Called Half-D1, same as the China Video Disc standard)

352 × 240 pixels MPEG-2

352 × 240 pixels MPEG-1 (Same as the VCD Standard)

All MPEG video must be 25 frames per second on PAL DVDs. On NTSC DVDs MPEG-2 video can be either 29.97 frames per second or 23.976 frames per second, (with the player repeating frames via 3:2 pulldown to achieve NTSC's standard 29.97 frames per second) while MPEG-1 video can only be 29.97 frames per second. Interlacing is only supported for MPEG-2 video on both PAL and NTSC DVDs. 16:9 anamorphic video is only supported at 720x576/480. Note that some DVD-hardware or software players may play discs whose MPEG files do not conform to the above standards- however these discs are non-compliant with the specification for DVD-video. Some hardware players will now play DVD-ROMs or CD-ROMs containing MPEG video files - these are 'unauthored' and lack the file structure that defines a DVD-video. (These files contain extra information, such as the number of video tracks, chapters and links to extra features, which DVD players use to navigate a DVD-video).

This is not the case with bluray as bluray can output 1080p natively at 60fps.That's great for games.They can also be encoded with high def formats like VC-1 to take advantage of the high def format.


pc games with gamepad support by tycobb.

http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/360823

Comment by: xhardc0re (Aug 10, 2006 15:34)

tycobb is right on the frame rate & other stuff with PAL (Europe) & NTSC (Japan/U.S./other) Question is, when will doing 60FPS games be a smart idea? Until enough HD televisions are sold to justify it, there's no reason to even include that mode. That is what takes up all the space on games these days. Not the programming. But the media. Audio/Video is probably 80% of a games size. Just like the internet, text is low bandwith but audio & video really +++ the bandwith.

Comment by: tycobb (Aug 10, 2006 18:08)

@xhardcore we're agreed for the most part there.

This 60fps( for games NOT movies) can be done anytime whether or not you have an HDTV.However you are correct people without hdtv's will not benefit from bluray or hd-dvd(with the exception of longer games).Therefore the only people which should buy this HD-DVD add-on should be people with hdtv's(common sense).

Be assured games have gotten much bigger as time goes on.Take gta san andreas for instance.Hey tombraider legend is 7.3 gb.It's not HDTV it's the 3d modeling software they use to make the charactors.


pc games with gamepad support by tycobb.

http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/360823

Comment by: lfzombie (Aug 10, 2006 18:21)

xbox core 299.00

xbox premium 399.00

xbox bundle 599.00

add HD-DVD drive 150.00 to 250.00

it will be more than the ps3 if you want to do everything

and yes i know the HD-DVD vs bluray but if i could get a game system and a blur ray player built into one im saving money ........ xbox you will need 2 disc drives to do every thing and a monthly online fee ..ps3 1 drive to do everything so far no online fee i for one dont do the online thing so that is no a selling point and down the road i could always buy a stand alone hd-dvd/blue ray movie player or when the replacemnt drives come out for the ps3 they might support HD-DVD and bluray

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 10, 2006 20:47)

lfzombie

Ya but the PS3 dosent mess with your head with the low end high end crap the main diff in the 360 low/high end is wired pads and a HD.

I'll admit the PS3 has more thought putinto it hardware wise but al in all its not much better than the 360.

Comment by: xhardc0re (Aug 11, 2006 01:51)

So, if the HD-DVD is only to play movies, Xbox360 owners are still stuck with DVD-9. That's really limiting developers, unless the HDD would be used to d/l additional content and push the limit from ~9GB to about 12 or more. That's still hours of time d/l on Broadband. There is no way I'd get a 360 unless the HD-DVD also played games. Can you say...vaporware?


Download great AMV/gaming videos at http://www.youtube.com

SlimPS2 v12US, TaiyoYuden DVD-R, SwapMagic_v3.6 & BreakerPro 1.1 (No mod)

Writer: HL-DT-ST DVD-RW GWA-4080N 0G03 Software: DVDDecrypt*r, lastest Nero Ultra 7 & Alcohol 120%

Comment by: glitchzoo (Aug 11, 2006 10:28)

i probaly wont get one either unless they play games.

but i might get one if their under 100 pounds otherwise it is a rip off and is pointless gettign one.

Comment by: goodswipe (Aug 11, 2006 11:35)

basicly it can't cost that much...$100 tops. They have to compete with sony, which already has blueray built in. So like the guy mentioned earlier..after you buy all the 360 crap then add on the external hd player..you looking at about the same price as a ps3. Now why would M$ want to come out with some expensive piece of hardware when people have the option to just go spend there money on a stand alone HD-DVD player..which they won't because if you could buy the external hd player for $100 dollars then M$ wins.

Comment by: glitchzoo (Aug 11, 2006 12:01)

yeah thats sounds abou right to me :P

so about 60 pounds for uk people

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 11, 2006 13:45)

xhardc0re

Look at the sega CD sicne it was a add on it didnt get alot of devs,altho if the HD-DVD add on got as many games as the sega CD it would be a mircle,the main problem in my eyes with the HD DVD add on it well tis a add on and I dout MS will try and ramp up dev support for it becuse they are cheap..and they didnt work on deving the 360 right....bascily unless MS stunk HD game abilty in the add on ,new format games on the 360 is a near imposabilty.

the PS3 is going infor the long haul and figured we can lose sales for the frist 2 years MS will have to have a new system out in 3 or 4 years jsut to catch up with a mature PS3.

Much like me preordering FF12 I just dont have the heart to waste 50+ on a game that is simpely not worth it.

So the only new console I can even think about pre orderign is the Wii ,even then I have 2 Ds's and 1 DS game to get,comp hardware 200-300,and mabye 200 more worth of odds and ends by december.

I need to update my HDs to raid sata,2 160GBs will be prefect in my eyes,altho 2 100GBs will be great to *L*

Comment by: tycobb (Aug 11, 2006 15:15)

@xhardcore Yep to the best of my knowledge it will only play movies.That's the big thing the ps3 has over the HD-DVD add-on.I have a 360 and would love bigger games like ps3 will have unfortunately it's not gonna happen :(


pc games with gamepad support by tycobb.

http://forums.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/360823

Comment by: DamonDash (Aug 11, 2006 15:31)

Quote:
will not even eclipse the 9gig mark.

That is not true they said that the PS2 games would never be as big as 1Gig they have pass that so far games grow everyday at a slow pace but im willing to bet you in 2 year there will be games for PS3 that would reach 20gigs.

1080p sets on the market

Samsung HL-R5078W 50" Widescreen 1080p DLP HDTV by Samsung

Westinghouse LVM-42W2 42" 1080p LCD HDTV by WESTINGHOUSE

Westinghouse 37" 1080p LCD Monitor - LVM37W3 by WESTINGHOUSE

Samsung HL-R6168W 61" 1080p Widescreen HDTV with Digital Cable Ready Tuner by Samsung

Samsung HL-S5087W 50" 1080p DLP HDTV by Samsung

Sharp LC-57D90U 57" AQUOS high-definition 1080p LCD TV by Sharp

Toshiba 56HM195 56" Theaterwide Integrated (1080p) HD DLP Rear Projection TV

Samsung HL-S5687W 56" 1080p DLP HDTV by Samsung

Sharp AQUOS 37" HDTV - LC-37D90U by Sharp

Zenith Z37LZ5D 37" LCD HDTV by Zenith

Sony VPL-VW100 1080p HDTV-ready SXRD front projector by Sony

40" 1080p LCD TV by JVC Company of America

Samsung HL-S6187W 61" 1080p DLP HDTV by Samsung

Mitsubishi WD-57731 57" 1080p DLP HDTV

Mitsubishi WD-57731 57" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Sony KDS-60A2000 Grand WEGA 60" SXRD 1080p Rear Projection HDTV by Sony

Mitsubishi WD-62627 62" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Westinghouse LVM-47w1 47" HDTV-ready 1080p LCD monitor by WESTINGHOUSE

Mitsubishi WD-52627 52" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Samsung HLS6188W 61IN 1080p DLP - Select by Samsung

Mitsubishi WD-62628 62" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Mitsubishi WD-73727 73" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Samsung HLS5088W 50 In 1080p DLP - Selec by Samsung

Toshiba 72HM195 72" Diagonal Theaterwide Integrated (1080p) HD DLP Rear Projection TV by Toshiba

Toshiba 62HM195 62" Diagonal Theaterwide Integrated (1080p) HD DLP Rear Projection TV

Samsung HLS5688W 56 In 1080p DLP - Selec by Samsung

Samsung LN-S4095D 40" 1080p LCD HDTV

Samsung LN-S4095D 40" 1080p LCD HDTV by Samsung

Samsung 71" Widescreen HDTV with 1080p Resolution - HLS7178W by Samsung

Sony KDS-50A2000 Grand WEGA 50" SXRD 1080p Rear Projection HDTV by Sony

Mitsubishi LT-46131 46" 1080p LCD HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Toshiba 62MX195 62" Cinema Series® High-Definition 1080p rear-projection DLP TV by Cinema Series

Mitsubishi WD52628 52 inch 1080p DLP HDTV by Mitsubishi

Toshiba 62HM196 62" 1080p DLP HDTV by Toshiba

Mitsubishi WD-52631 52" 1080p DLP HDTV by MITSUBISHI

SAMSUNG LT-P468W 46" Widescreen LCD TV HDTV Monitor with Multimedia Input by Samsung

Westinghouse LVM-37w3 37" HDTV-ready 1080p LCD monitor by WESTINGHOUSE

Ixos XHT458-200Pro Hdmi To Hdmi 1080p 2 M/6.5 Ft by Ixos

Mitsubishi LT-37131 37" 1080p LCD HDTV by MITSUBISHI

Hitachi Ultravision 55HDS52 55" Plasma HDTV by Hitachi

JVC HD70FN97 70" 1080p HDILA Rear Projection TV by JVC


(sign by Dvdback23 thxs)

Comment by: lfzombie (Aug 11, 2006 17:54)

all this is true think about this m$ has been late to everything and always 25% right as to what the public wants sony has a better grip as to what the public wants now and will need later it all boils down to one key factor how much will you get for the money you spend M$ will do nothing but supply you with hardware upgrades for the 360 and you will forced to upgrade because all the games will need it to play(sony learned that with the hard drive for the ps2)i think sony will win this match because of instance market of people that will want to play Blu-ray movies on a player that is cheaper that a stand alone player and you get to play games too

Comment by: psyantist (Aug 11, 2006 18:06)

From slashdot.com:

Sony's product manager for data storage, told CNET.com.au that due to copy protection issues and lagging software development, the drive will only play user-recorded high-definition content from a digital camcorder, and not commercial movies released under the BD format."

Yup, Blu-ray is the way to go for sure. I sure would like to pony up a bunch of money for a system that doesn't even have proven media storage.

At least with the ad-on HD DVD you aren't going to be left out in the cold either way.

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 11, 2006 18:13)

psyantist

I dout it Unless sony thinks it will get away wth a non BR movie playing BR palyer...Altho sony is knowen to pull shit...but then so is MS LOL

Comment by: xhardc0re (Aug 11, 2006 18:43)

@psyantist: What in the f**k!?!?!? Is $ony serious? Does that mean it won't play BD movies? Commercial movies (like Spiderman & The Da Vinci Code, both of which $ony make)???? If that's true, they are CRAZY. I'd never buy a PS3 in that case. I'll stick with the Wii & wait till $ony gets their arse clocked by Nintendo.

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 11, 2006 19:00)

xhardc0re

truth is stranger than fiction but in this case I dout,mostly becsue its the main selign point to the PS3 and well the games but..*L*

Comment by: DamonDash (Aug 12, 2006 10:14)

psyantist

Can we please have a link to this info you gave us because i just check their site and i didnt see anything on there about this info you gave us on the PS3 Blu-ray drive.


(sign by Dvdback23 thxs)

Comment by: dblbogey7 (Aug 12, 2006 11:11)

I think psyantist was referring to a BluRay PC drive not the PS3 drive:

http://www.cnet.com.au/desktops/dvdburners/0,39029405,40091720,00.htm

Notice that the statement came from a Sony rep in Australia. They may not have HDCP compliant hardware yet so this does not apply here in the US. We already have HDCP-enabled video cards from Nvidia and ATI. We expect the PS3 to play BluRay movies. Same thing with PC's with BluRay drives and HDCP enabled hardware.

Comment by: lfzombie (Aug 12, 2006 11:46)

he first Blu-ray (BD) disc drive for desktop PCs is here, but be warned -- it won't play commercial BD movies.

Sony officially announced its BWU-100A product at its "Experience More 2006" event in Sydney yesterday, all the while acknowledging that there's significant room for improvement before the product is viable for integration into media centre PCs.

Vincent Bautista, Sony's product manager for data storage, told CNET.com.au that due to copy protection issues and lagging software development, the drive will only play user-recorded high-definition content from a digital camcorder, and not commercial movies released under the BD format.

Bautista says that one of two reasons for this is the fact that commercial content is encrypted with High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP), which can only be decrypted using a HDCP-compliant graphics card that offers DVI or HDMI connections. Since there are currently no PCs for sale offering graphics chips that support HDCP, this isn't yet possible.

The second reason, according to Bautista, is that BD playback software that can decrypt HDCP isn't "released as a saleable item yet". Today, the only HDCP-supporting BD playback application is the OEM version of Intervideo WinDVD BD that's bundled with Sony's VAIO VGN-AR18GP notebook. The AR18GP also offers an HDCP-compliant HDMI connector, which makes it capable of playing commercial movies without issue.

Bautista is optimistic that both issues will be resolved "soon", and says that despite not being able to play commercial content, the drive is still useful as a "storage device", particularly for those looking to create and distribute their own high-definition home movies on BD-R and BD-RE discs.

The Sony BWU100A has a write speed of 2x and will be available this month for AU$1399.

Comment by: lfzombie (Aug 21, 2006 13:50)

Xbox 360 HD-DVD add-on will cost $200

Posted by Reverend on 17 Aug 2006 - 19:59 GMT | 0 comments Add a comment

The external HD-DVD drive add-on for Microsoft's Xbox 360 games console will sell for $200, according to media reports.

Taiwanese tech paper DigiTimes reported that the external USB drive will be available to buy before Christmas this year.

According to the paper, Taiwanese games developers and gaming service providers consider an external drive a better approach than Sony's plans to integrate a Blu-ray drive into the forthcoming PlayStation 3.

An external model offers greater flexibility, and the inclusion of an internal drive in the PlayStation 3 could reduce its competitiveness in the market despite Blu-ray's greater disc capacity.

Confirming the Xbox 360 HD-DVD USB drive at the E3 gaming conference in May, Albert Penello, director of global marketing for the Xbox 360, said that the add-on "carries with it an extension of the HD era that Xbox 360 offers, and provides the most visually stunning movie watching experience available".

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 21, 2006 14:17)

lfzombie

I guesss THEY have not learn that a add on system dose not work it has never worked well look at sega for christ sake devs arent willing to amke a game for add on for a non godly selling syste,with that said the only "flexibility" the add on gives is if one format DIES.......and with the advent of the dual drive..its more likely that both formats with live akin to + and -.

Comment by: lfzombie (Aug 21, 2006 14:27)

m$ attempt to play it safe is a bs move to sell more hardware

Comment by: ZippyDSM (Aug 21, 2006 21:21)

lfzombie

pretty much but then how much more life would it get if it had HD built in and digi HD out that could have a HDCP adaptor?

1 or 3 years and thats pushing it.....

   

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