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[1.1] What is DVD?
DVD is the new generation
of optical disc storage technology. DVD is essentially a bigger,
faster CD that can hold cinema-like video, better-than-CD audio,
still photos, and computer data. DVD aims to encompass home entertainment,
computers, and business information with a single digital format.
It has replaced laserdisc, is well on the way to replacing videotape
and video game cartridges, and could eventually replace audio CD
and CD-ROM. DVD has widespread support from all major electronics
companies, all major computer hardware companies, and all major
movie and music studios. With this unprecedented support, DVD became
the most successful consumer electronics product of all time in
less than three years of its introduction. In 2003, six years after
introduction, there were over 250 million DVD playback devices worldwide,
counting DVD players, DVD PCs, and DVD game consoles. This was more
than half the numbers of VCRs, setting DVD up to become the new
standard for video publishing.
It's important to understand the difference between
the physical formats (such as DVD-ROM and DVD-R) and the
application formats (such as DVD-Video and DVD-Audio). DVD-ROM
is the base format that holds data. DVD-Video (often simply called
DVD) defines how video programs such as movies are stored on disc
and played in a DVD-Video player or a DVD computer (see 4.1). The difference is similar to that between CD-ROM and Audio
CD. DVD-ROM includes recordable variations: DVD-R/RW, DVD-RAM, and
DVD+R/RW (see 4.3). The application formats include DVD-Video, DVD-Video Recording
(DVD-VR), DVD+RW Video Recording (DVD+VR), DVD-Audio Recording (DVD-AR),
DVD Stream Recording (DVD-SR), DVD-Audio (DVD-A), and Super Audio
CD (SACD). There are also special application formats for game consoles
such as Sony PlayStation 2 and Microsoft Xbox.
[1.1.1] What do the letters DVD
stand for?
All of the following have been proposed as the
words behind the letters DVD.
- Delayed, very delayed (referring to the many
late releases of DVD formats)
- Diversified, very diversified (referring to
the proliferation of recordable formats and other spinoffs)
- Digital venereal disease (referring to piracy
and copying of DVDs)
- Dead, very dead (from naysayers who predicted
DVD would never take off)
- Digital video disc (the original meaning proposed
by some of DVD's creators)
- Digital versatile disc (a meaning later proposed
by some of DVD's creators)
- Nothing
And the official answer is? "Nothing." The original
acronym came from "digital video disc." Some members of the DVD
Forum (see 6.1) tried to express that
DVD goes far beyond video by retrofitting the painfully contorted
phrase "digital versatile disc," but this has never been officially
accepted by the DVD Forum as a whole. The DVD Forum decreed in 1999
that DVD, as an international standard, is simply three letters.
After all, how many people ask what VHS stands for? (Guess what,
no one agrees on that one either.
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