|  | Posted by Little Red Hen on 12/03/06 04:41 
<aniramca@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:1165096215.295727.171560@j44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
 > Do you think that the video format war for the DVD will be over soon?
 > I still do not see that one format is overpowering the other. I have a
 > few questions about these formats
 > - Which one was the one first to come out?
 > - When you buy a DVD movie from a store. Is it a DVD-R?  It has the
 > same symbol as DVD-R (The DVD+R symbol just a box with RW written on
 > it). The DVD movie, as well as DVD-R has the disk picture logo on it.
 > - Is dual layer DVD applicable for both the DVD-R and DVD+R?
 > - In the past, some movie's DVDs were written on both sides (sometimes
 > one language on one side and another on the other side). Could you buy
 > such a DVD in the market?. Do you have to have a special device to
 > record or to play?
 > - Technically, which one is more superior? DVD-R or DVD+R ? If DVD+R
 > came up later than DVD-R, did it means better and newer technology?
 > - Is it technically more complicated to produce a DVD recorder which is
 > capable to handle both DVDs? Or, it is just a simple switch technology
 > inside the box. If this is the case, then those DVD producer must have
 > vested interest with one type of DVD over the other. My LiteOn brand
 > DVD recorder is cheap (now under $100), and has the convenient to to
 > both? Why not other manufacturers follow suit (except for those who
 > invested one format over the other).
 > I seem to notice that DVD writers for computers appear to be accepting
 > both formats more readily than those stand alone DVD recorders/players
 > to record from TV.
 > - When people invented CD-R or DVD disk years ago, they indicated that
 > using the CD or DVD technology is different from a music/video tape, or
 > LPs. Unlike those other old cassette, LPs, there is NO contact when you
 > play a Cd or DVD. However, I notice that CD and DVD have lots of
 > scratches after a while. How do these scratches created?
 > - Final question - where do you find a DVD disks that guarantee that
 > the recorded data will last a long time. Is there a special DVD (DVD
 > gold or something) that can guarantee the data will not disappear
 > (permanent) after it is recorded. I seem to only notice one type or
 > grade for DVD disks, but I may be wrong.
 >
 > I know that these DVDs may be replaced with either Sony's Blu-ray or
 > the HD-DVD. However, I still do not see that DVD-R or DVD+R comes as a
 > winner, unlike the battle between Sony Betamax and VHS format. It is
 > more convenient when you look at CD-R, there is only one type available.
 >
 
 "When you buy a DVD movie from a store. Is it a DVD-R?"
 
 Neither - commercial (bought) DVDs of movies etc are pressed like vinyls not
 burnt like DVD-R or DVD+R.
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