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Blu-ray set for Spring 06 debut

The Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) will formally roll-out its next-generation optical disc format in Spring 2006, the organisation confirmed yesterday.

The announcement came as BDA member companies start gearing up to make their own product plans known at next month's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

CES is similarly expected to play host to product announcements from supporters of Blu-ray Disc rival HD DVD. The Toshiba-led format was originally planned to launch in the US in Q4 2005, but a Q1 2006 debut is now more likely, and its backers will be looking to make a big impression at CES.

Absent from yesterday's event was Blu-ray backer HP, which has voiced criticism of some of the technologies the BD format will incorporate. It wants the format to support Microsoft's Windows Vista-friendly interactivity tool, iHD, in addition to Java, already part of the BD specification.

HP also wants BD to support 'Mandatory Managed Copy' (MMC), a feature that allows controlled copies to be made of disc content primarily to allow, say, the disc to be played on one machine but viewed on another, distant device, connected by a wired or wireless network.

Yesterday, the BDA said MMC would eventually be part of the BD specification. In the past, it has said it will consider HP's request to add Microsoft's iHD but will not delay the format's launch to ensure iHD is present from the start. ®

Tony Smith

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 News Archive
 2006
 January 5th:
Gates promises Windows everywhere
 January 4th:
News from the Consumer Electronics Show
 2005
 December 26th:
2006 full of broadband promise
 December 19th:
Elsevier MDL collaborates with NIH to catalog biological properties of small molecules
 December 16th:
MPs debate Science and Technology Committee's 10th report of session 2003–04, "Scientific Publications: Free for all?"
 December 15th:
Wellcome Trust and publishers reach agreement on open access
 December 14th:
Elsevier Collaborates with MIT Researchers to Increase Access to Scientific Web across the Developing World
 December 13th:
Toshiba to delay HD DVD player launch
 December 12th:
China overtakes U.S. as world’s leading exporter of information technology goods
 December 8th:
APIG Inquiry into Digital Rights Management
 December 7th:
45 Fellows have signed a letter to the Royal Society about Open Access
 December 6th:
New media and the creative industries - UK government inquiry
 December 5th:
CrossRef Announces Partnerships for Web Searching
 December 2nd:
Skype Launches Next Generation Free Internet and Video Calling for Everyone
 December 1st:
New Scholarly Index Directs Researchers to Valuable Content from Repositories
 November 30th:
Blu-ray set for Spring 06 debut
 November 29th:
ScholarOne® and Atypon Announce Collaboration
 November 24th:
New digitisation report calls for cross-sectoral e-content strategy
 November 24th:
BBC Two 'first to go broadband'
 November 23rd:
Microsoft seeks to make Office Open XML an international open standard
 November 18th:
Chmoogle Launches World's Premier Chemistry Search Engine
 November 16th:
Geochemical Transactions moves to open access with BioMed Central
 November 14th:
World Premier of 'Chippy Goes to War'
 November 10th:
Springer Science+Business Media Acquires Current Medicine Group
 November 1st:
ACS Directory of Graduate Research now available online
 September 30th:
What Is Web 2.0? Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software
 July 12th:
digilibri: DOIs for image content
 July 5th:
DOIs for Science Data -- latest developments
 June 24th:
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 June 14th:
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 June 4th:
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 June 1st:
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