Future Chronicles - Page Four
Volume 1, #
2 May 1997
DVD Chronicles
By H. L. Siddons,
JR
Category: Consumer
Electronics
UPDATED: We
look at consumer electronics, more specifically, DVD
DVD or Digital Versatile
Disc is the next generation storage medium promoted
by both the computer and music industry as the eventual
replacement for the CD, the CD-ROM and even the laser
disk and VHS tape. This format was conceived jointly by Sony-Phillips, the same corporate duo
that developed the compact-cassette in the sixties and the CD in the eighties, as well
as the relatively unsuccessful DCC (Digital Compact
Cassette).
A Personal
Historical Perspective - History of CD's and CD-ROM's
In 1979, I read
in an article published by the Popular Science magazine about a new
medium that would use lasers to play back music, more
specifically, digital music, from a 5 1/4 inch silvery
disk. Featured in their popular What's New section, they
reviewed a Sony prototype of a compact disk player
(which had a list price of around $10,000 at the time).
The promise of this new technology was a quantum leap in
audio reproduction, distribution and ease of use. Of the
major features, the most remarkable was the virtual
elimination of surface noise such as scratches and nicks
that can easily be associated with vinyl (we most all of
us still remember records and LP's, right?) and the
expansion or extension of the range of sound frequencies
that could be recorded and played back, close to studio
quality (limited to digital recordings of course).
I made a mental bookmark to revisit this new technology
when it finally arrived on the market for the consumer...
Well, in 1983,
I purchased Sony's first commercial model, the CDP-101 for whopping $850! Today
you can buy a comparable player for under $100! (us
technophiles always pay premium prices to be first)
It worked
flawlessly, but had little in the way of features (at
least compared to the players of today). At the time,
only a handful of CD's were available and they sold for
around twenty to twenty-five bucks. What was truly
remarkable was the sound quality I witnessed on the
digitally recorded classical Telarc CD that featured COPLAND: Fanfare, Rodeo
& Appalachian Spring: the drums pounding even through
my humble speakers sounded so realistic. I still have the
first CD produced for the medium, Billy Joel's 52'nd
Street.
Well,
I quickly told friends and relatives of my discovery
and relished in demos of my new toy. Surprisingly, many
thought my purchase and divergence to be dubious and
perhaps hasty (not to mention frivolous). Some
pointed out 8-track tape and quadraphonic records as parallel
possibilities. But I stood my ground and intuitively knew
this medium would storm the industry, so much so that I
made a prediction that within five years, the CD would
stock 50% of the inventory of record stores and
departments! History shows I was just a tad too
conservative, because by 1986, records and LP's were in
the minority at these places and by the end of the decade
you were hard-pressed (no pun intended) to locate
records at all. Today the music CD is as ubiquitous as
the record was fifteen years ago.
Back to 1984 and forward: I was
hooked. Eventually CD's were coded with 3 letters, like
DDD or ADD, which informed the consumer as to how the CD
was recorded or pressed. Before long, I had begun a
12 year quest to replace my vinyl and now have over 300
CD's, and have purchased/owned five new players since
then, two of boombox genre, and one in my 1994 car (factory
installed). My mother still has my original Sony
CDP-101. I wonder if it is a collector's item?
Another byproduct
of the CD revolution (along with MTV), was the revitalization of the
music industry as a whole which has benefited enormously.
In 1985 having
already jumped upon the CD craze, I read about using a CD
player and CD as a peripheral for static storage on a
computer. This was using existing technology but
different storage standards and requirements. CD-ROM or
CD - Read Only Memory promised over 600 MB of storage
that a computer could access. The possibilities were
endless. In 1986 I bought CD-ROM: The New Papyrus,
published by Microsoft. In 1987, I ventured
out again and bought my first CD-ROM, an Amdek (Hitachi)
from Sears for over $900!
Once connected to
my computer I could now buy new disks like Microsoft
Bookshelf (still available today) or Microsoft's
Programmer Reference (which included all of the
documentation for most all Microsoft developer software)
and now known as the Microsoft Developer Library. What
was really remarkable about having virtual books on CD
was the search/find and bookmark capabilities;
I also could cut and paste snippets of source code!
This capability mirrored the Windows help design and
foreshadowed the World Wide Web.
Well, I felt
the CD-ROM would proliferate much faster than CD, but
this time I was too optimistic. It's taken almost
ten years for the CD-ROM to become an expected and
required peripheral, but the implications are remarkable:
computer games and multimedia both fostered and benefited
from the CD-ROM and today it is replacing floppy disks as
the preferred distribution medium for software
installation.
As the speed of
CD-ROM has approached over 8 times, improving
performance, the music CD has remained relatively
unchanged.
But as with many
technologies, there seems to be built-in obsolescence.
You cannot record on CD's (at least not the average
consumer), and storage breakpoints have reached
saturation (600MB is relatively small), since new
applications - both computer and video are vying for more
space and are gluttons for gigabits: Enter DVD!
DVD has
remarkable features which practically guarantee success:
MPEG 2 video, over 4 GB of storage (17 GB max) and the
future compatibility with recordable DVD a.k.a DVD-RAM.
Once the DVD-RAM players and software becomes
available, we should see steady replacement of current
video formats including laser disk and videotape (VHS),
with a slower replacement of the current generation of
music Compact Disks which DVD is backward compatible
with. In the PC/computer arena, the first generation
CD-ROMs will experience a similar fate into the next
century. However, the DVD-RAM, may be incompatible with
the first DVD units available.
The latest DVD news is that industries
concerned with copy protection (music, movies, software,
etc.) have finally agreed upon a scheme, which paves the
way for the first players to hit the streets in 1997...
I recently
witnessed my first demonstration of a DVD system at a
local consumer electronics store. The Panasonic DVD-100/300 series playing a demo
version of "Twister" was unimpressive compared
to Laser Disk quality, but an obviously digitally
recorded video tape reproduced on a DVD disk was
remarkable.

Finally,
I have just purchased the Pioneer DVL-700, a DVD/LD/CD combo
player. I now have both Twister and Blade Runner which I bought at the
only place in Orlando that sells/rents DVDs (also laser
disks), LASERIFIC.
1997 PREDICTION:
Computer based DVD units and software will explode
this year and grow exponentially into the next century,
while audio/visual units for TV/stereo will grow at a
more moderate rate, not replacing CD's, Laser Disks or
VHS tape until DVD-RAM establishes itself when the next
century begins...
Other DVD Links
DVD Info a comprehensive site
worth looking at with just about everything you would
want to know.
alt.video.dvd FAQ a Frequently Asked
Questions page on DVD. Also diehard DVD fans should
frequent the USNET group alt.video.dvd.
Latest DVD news
DVD Revolution (PC Computing)
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