Researchers at electronics giant TDK have developed a tough new coating that promises to make scratched DVDs a thing of the past and that will help usher in an emerging data storage format with 10 times the capacity of the current DVD standard.The article goes on to discuss how this development will improve the high-capacity Blu-Ray disc format. Read the rest.
In a test conducted by CNET News.com, a DVD treated with TDK's coating survived a determined attack with a screwdriver and a Sharpie permanent marker with no effect on playability--a remarkable feat considering how easily standard DVDs can be damaged, for example, by children.
'Wow, every family with a young boy could really use that,' quipped Elizabeth Berry, a Berkeley, Calif., resident and one-time Netflix DVD-by-mail subscriber, when told of the scratch-resistant coating. 'My 3-year-old must have destroyed half my DVD collection.'
Already one of the most popular technologies in history, the DVD is poised for further greatness as companies tinker with improvements such as better durability and increased storage."
Thursday, November 18, 2004
Try scratching this DVD
via CNETAsia
Duh... don't let your three-year-old handle your DVDs. How simple is that? My four-year-old has never touched them.
ReplyDeleteBut still, if this technology could make its way into the current DVD market, I'd certainly welcome it.