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Blu-ray camcorders now available from Hitachi

Hitachi has announced the arrival of the world's first Blu-ray camcorders, offering 1920x1080-pixel HD recording onto miniature BD-R (recordable Blu-ray) discs. And in a parallel move, recording media companies Imation and Verbatim heralded the arrival of the blank discs the camcorders will use.

Imation and Verbatim have announced the availabiility of blank 8cm Blu-ray discs. The discs have a capacity of 7.5GB, and can store an hour of 1920x1080i video, or two hours of 1440x1080i. Two versions are available: BD-R is a one-shot recording medium, while BD-RE is erasable and rewritable.

Source: whathifi.com

If you cannot decide which format to go for, and you like to record home cinema as well as watch films, then maybe Blu-ray is the best option with the availability of Blu-ray camcorders.

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Source / Further Information Published on Monday, August 27, 2007 | Blu-ray camcorders now available from Hitachi
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Blu-ray and HD DVD war gets nasty

Home Cinema News reports on the ongoing battle between blu-ray and HD DVD:

Last week saw the HD DVD group proudly announcing that sales of HD DVD hardware have outstripped sales of Blu-ray hardware by three-to-one in Europe's main markets so far this year. But surprise surprise, the Blu-ray camp isn't prepared to take that lying down.

The Blu-ray Disc Association European Promotions Committee has reacted by saying that the HD DVD camp's claims are 'misleading and misrepresentative of the real and clear market trends in Europe'. Ouch. For while HD DVD does indeed have the sales advantage in the standalone player market for what the Blu-ray camp describe slightly amusingly as 'several reasons', if you look at the HD market as a whole things aren't so simple. In other words, in the PC HD market, Blu-ray is apparently outselling HD DVD by two to one from a total sales figure of 24000 units so far in 2007. Plus the HD DVD claims didn't include the Blu-ray sporting PS3, and when you factor that into the equation, the Blu-ray camp reckons its format actually accounts for almost 96 per cent of all next generation hardware sales.
Source: Homecinemachoice



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Time will tell who comes out on top, but if we hark back the the Betamax v's VHS v's Video2000 wars, experience tells us that this battle could well go on for some time. Best not to wait for the victor if you want hi-def video, just pick one of the two. Toss a coin if need be. Check which films are available on each format, see which players are by preferred brands etc. It is unlikely that either Blu-ray or HD DVD will fail in the immediate future, so risk is minimal in the short to medium term (i.e. over the next 5 years). So dive in, and go Hi-Def today!

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Source / Further Information Published on Monday, August 27, 2007 | Blu-ray and HD DVD war gets nasty
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