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Toshiba tests 2.5 terabit per square inch hard drive

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Electronista Staff

Toshiba said today that it had successfully tested a new hard disk technology that packs in 2.5 terabits of data per square inch. This marks a four-fold increase in density over today’s hard disks. While Toshiba has yet to prove that it can read and write data using this next-generation approach to bit patterned media, news of the breakthrough is significant as it comes at a time when the rotating media industry has not settled on an industry roadmap for the next generation of hard disks.

Toshiba’s bit patterned method involves using an etching mask as a template to create a servo pattern readable by a hard drive using 17nm self-assembling polymer dots. However, Western Digital has argued that this new approach is far from becoming the next industry standard as it cannot yet be delivered cost-effectively. Western Digital, along with its alliance partners Hitachi and Seagate, while still investigating a bit patterned media approach, are also buoyant about a technique called single magnetic recording (SMR). It's likely that this approach could reach the market in two years, delivering drives packing densities of 1.5 to 2 terabits of data per square inch using a heat-based laser writing method.

While it's not quite the war that Toshiba fought and lost with Sony over the direction of digital optical media in the battle between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, Toshiba has yet indicate whether it will join Western Digital, Hitachi and Seagate as a member of the International Disk Drive and Equipment Materials Association (IDEMA). This is seen as an important collaboration as the cost of developing the next generation of hard disk drives can amount to hundreds of millions of dollars. A common development road map will minimize costs significantly, although it is generally agreed that, ultimately, both the bit patterned approach and SMR will jointly form the long-term future hard disk development.

Technology has moved relatively quickly, as Toshiba reached 1 terabit per square inch in early 2007.

 

SAPPHIRE makes Eyefinity Easy with HD 5770 FleX edition

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SAPPHIRE makes Eyefinity Easy with HD 5770 FleX editionSAPPHIRE Technology introduces the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX, the latest graphics card in the highly successful SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series. This is the first graphics solution to support three screens in ATI Eyefinity mode, out of the box, without the need for DisplayPort monitors or active adapters. The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX can also support four monitors in ATI Eyefinity mode with a single card.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX is a SAPPHIRE original design based on the latest 40nm graphics architecture from the ATI division of AMD. It supports the advanced graphical features of DirectX 11, and delivers spectacular video clarity, speed and visual effects.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX is the first card on the market to support three DVI monitors in ATI Eyefinity mode and deliver a true SLS (Single Large Surface) work area without the need for costly active adapters. The majority of HD 5000 series cards with ATI Eyefinity support require the third monitor to be DisplayPort compatible, or an active DisplayPort to DVI or VGA adapter to be used.

With the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX, the first two monitors are connected to the DVI outputs, as usual. A third DVI monitor can be connected to the HDMI output with the passive cable adapter supplied or to the DisplayPort output with a simple passive adapter. This allows users with existing DVI monitors to use three of them in ATI Eyefinity mode without any additional investment.

Four monitors can all be used in ATI Eyefinity mode with this card – but in this case the fourth monitor does have to be DisplayPort connected.

With 800 Stream processors and 1GB of the latest GDDR5 memory, together with clock speeds of 850MHz core and 1200MHz (4.8GHz effective) for the memory, the SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX delivers excellent performance. Its dual heatpipe cooler and profiled fan with dust resisting sealed ball bearings keep the card cool yet running quietly even under load.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5770 FleX speeds through DirectX10.1, DirectX 10 and DirectX 9.0 games and applications, as well as supporting stunning new levels of detail, transparency and lighting effects in newer releases of software using DirectX 11. All of this comes with modest active power consumption and Dynamic Power Management delivering super low-power operation in 2D or idle.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series has an on board hardware UVD (Unified Video decoder), considerably reducing CPU load and delivering smooth decoding of Blu-ray™ and HD DVD content for both VC-1 and H.264 codecs, as well as Mpeg files. In the SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series the UVD has been enhanced to be able to decode two 1080p HD video streams simultaneously and to display HD video in high quality with Windows Aero mode enabled. HDMI capability has also been upgraded to HDMI 1.3a with Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

This series of cards supports the latest features demanded by Microsoft DirectX 11, including DirectCompute 11 instructions, hardware Tessellation and multi-threaded communications with the system CPU. These combine to provide new capabilities for the interaction between transparent objects, new lighting and accelerated post processing effects as well as physics calculations, image rendering and accelerated video transcoding.

The SAPPHIRE HD 5000 series is supported by AMD's DirectX 11 WHQL certified graphics driver which delivers support for all of the key DirectX 11 level features required for new gaming experiences and acceleration of next generation high performance applications.
 

Spice Up the Summer with Hot New Blu-ray Releases from Sony

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Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Sony Pictures Bluray Club
Action Unleashed
New!
 
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

An epic set against the breathtaking landscapes of ancient China, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon combines the exhilarating martial arts choreography by Yuen Wo-Ping (The Matrix) - now available on Blu-ray™ High Definition!

Rated PG-13 for martial arts violence and some sexuality.

Buy the Blu-Ray
 
Jason and the Argonauts
Jason and the Argonauts

The classic fantasy tale of the fearless sailor who must find the Golden Fleece before he can claim his throne - for the first time ever on Blu-ray™!

Rated G

Buy the Blu-Ray
 
The Bounty Hunter
The Bounty Hunter

Milo Boyd (GERARD BUTLER), a down-on-his-luck bounty hunter, gets his dream job when he is assigned to track down his bail-jumping ex-wife, reporter Nicole Hurly (JENNIFER ANISTON). Milo expects an easy payday, but nothing is ever easy with him and Nicole. The exes continually one-up each other – until they find themselves on the run for their lives.

PG-13 for sexual content including suggestive comments, language and some violence.

Buy the Blu-Ray
 
A Single Man  
A Single Man

Based on the novel of the same name by Christopher Isherwood, A Single Man is the story of a British college professor (COLIN FIRTH) who is struggling to find meaning to his life after the death of his long time partner.

 Rated R for some disturbing images and nudity/sexual content.

Buy the Blu-Ray
 
The Runaways  
The Runaways

KRISTEN STEWART and DAKOTA FANNING star as Joan Jett and Cherie Currie in the music-fueled coming-of-age story about the groundbreaking, all-girl rock band, THE RUNAWAYS.

Rated R for language, drug use and sexual content - all involving teens.

Buy the Blu-Ray
 
Chloe  
Chloe

A seemingly perfect marriage reveals its flaws when the wife
(JULIANNE MOORE) enlists an escort (AMANDA SEYFRIED) to test the faithfulness of her husband (LIAM NEESON).

Rated R for strong sexual content including graphic dialogue, nudity and language.

Buy the Blu-Ray
Enhance Your Blu-Ray™ Collection!
Enhance Your Collection
 
 

Why Apple Macs will never get built-in Blu-ray optical drives

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"Ever since 2008 when Blu-ray and HD-DVD were battling for consumer mind share, Mac users have been speculating about Apple’s next optical drive technology," Adam Jackson reports for TheAppleBlog. "An email response from Steve Jobs last week [encapsulates] Apple’s stance on Blu-ray and pretty much sums up why we’ll never see the technology included in future Macs: 'Blu-ray is looking more and more like one of the high end audio formats that appeared as the successor to the CD — like it will be beaten by Internet downloadable formats.'"

"Steve thinks that with a Time Capsule or an online backup system (like SugarSync and Mozy) paired with YouTube for sharing video and iTunes at the center of it all with media consumption, the industry has made Blu-ray obsolete before it even makes it to Mac machines and I agree," Jackson writes. "DVD Studio Pro and products like Toast from Roxio support Blu-ray if you buy a drive separately and plug it into your Mac. Apple just won’t be shipping support for the technology anytime soon and it may never include it in its machines and I bet that most consumers are okay with that."
 

Blu-Ray Will Be Beaten by Internet Downloadable Formats

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Anton Shilov

The Blu-ray disc (BD) format has enjoyed steady growth after its rival HD DVD threw the towel in early 2008. Sales of both players and movies have been increasing pretty rapidly and the quality provided by BD is now considered as reference for high-definition video. But Steve Jobs, the chief exec of Apple, believes that Blu-ray will eventually become another Super Audio CD or DVD Audio.

“Blu-ray is looking more and more like one of the high end audio formats that appeared as the successor to the CD – like it will be beaten by Internet downloadable formats,” said Steve Jobs in an email exchange with a user, reports MacRumours web-site.

The end-user was complaining that Apple’s latest Mac Mini, which is based on Intel Core 2 Duo 2.40GHz (with 3MB cache, meaning that it is slower than the four years old model E6600) microprocessor and an Nvidia core-logic along with GeForce 320M graphics core, did not feature  a Blu-ray drive despite rather whopping price of $699.

Even though Apple is a part of the Blu-ray disc association, it has never released a single product that supports Blu-ray out of the box. The end-users can still acquire an external driver from a third party and enjoy Blu-ray technology without Apple’s help.

It is pretty understandable that Mr. Jobs does not want to have another physical format: Apple makes tremendous amounts of money on its iTunes business, which sells music and which lends movies. Regrettably, neither iTunes nor competing online platforms allow watching movies with the same quality and bit-rate as Blu-ray does, but for Mr. Jobs even 720p resolution seems to be enough. In fact, the head of Apple does not see any value in the physical formats at all nowadays.

“The downloadable movie business is rapidly moving to free (Hulu) or rentals (iTunes) so storing purchased movies or TV shows is not an issue. […] We may see a fast broad move to streamed free and rental content at sufficient quality (at least 720p) to win almost everyone over,” added Mr. Jobs.

But despite of criticism from various parties, physical video formats – Blu-ray and HD DVD – enabled a great progress for the high-definition home entertainment industry. The BD and HD DVD essentially brought high-quality 1080p video to homes back in 2006, something online services cannot do even now, the Blu-ray 3D is set to bring stereo-3D experience and the standards that will follow are likely to take advantage of ultra high-definition resolutions. Will online services be able to compete head-to-head?

 
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