The new HD DVD recorder that
Toshiba has just revealed is likely to become a hot item on the market with the
occasion of the approaching winter holiday shopping season. The new HD DVD
recorder, through which Toshiba hopes to hit the rival Blu-ray Disc camp, represents
quite a tough device because it can record high definition video to regular
DVDs.
The new HD DVD recorder that
Toshiba has launched is called Vardia RD-A301 and the company has said it is to
launch it in Japan
in mid-December. It represents a powerful device because it can record high def
video to regular DVDs as well as transcode high def MPEG2 broadcasts on the fly
to MPEG4, which represents a more efficient compression format. The MPEG4 video
format features also the quality that it takes up less space and this way
people will be able to store even more on an HD DVD disc or on the device’s own
built-in 300 GB hard disk drive.
The increase in recording
capacity through this process of transcoding appears to be quite fantastic, as
the hard disk drive’s capacity jumps from 39 hours to no less than 159 hours
for terrestrial digital TV (the Japanese ISDB-T standard at 17 Mbps).
The process of recording high
definition video to the tradition DVD disc has become possible only recently,
thanks to the HD Rec, which represents a recently standardized format from the
DVD Forum. The HD Rec makes it possible for the users to store up to 2 hours of
transcoded high definition video on a tradition 4.7 GB DVD-R disc. This way,
people are able to enjoy the high def quality and also to save money by using
DVD discs, not the still expensive HD DVDs.
However, the playback of the DVDs
created with Toshiba’s Vardia RD-A301 is limited at present only to this
device. Toshiba’s new recorder will be available in Japan only and it will cost about
100,000 Yen ($875).
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