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Fri, 25 Aug 2000 19:22:20 -0700 |
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Hello, I have to throw in my two cents on this topic. At this point in
time, I personally would not get a DVD of any type for a computer. If I want
to watch a DVD movie, I believe that a stand alone DVD player connected to
the ol home theater is a better option. As to data, granted DVD holds tons
more, but until there is a "Standard DVD-RW" format that has been in use and
proven to me, the only reason for it today as I see it is to be able to by
programs on 1DVD vs. several CDs. Until such a time that DVD-RW is
standardized and as ubiquitous as CD-RW, I'll stick to CD.
My opinion.
Brad Loomis
There are several proposals to increase the capacity of normal CD-ROMs
although none have seemed to take off yet. Application of DVD is still
pretty limited and larger capacity is the primary draw for users. This
larger capacity is mainly used for movies and special-purpose DVD
players seem to be a more cost-effective way of using movie DVDs than
computers. What other application for computers would need DVD? There
doesn't appear to be a definite answer for that yet. This is the main
reason I suggest that people wait - see if DVDs are going to be more
widely used or if larger-capacity CD-ROM is the way to go.
----- Original Message -----
From: Michael C Soto <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 8:02 PM
Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] Shopping for DVD
> Hm... Earl, I agree with you that no current computer applications
really
> need DVD. Most I've seen is a few titles that take up a few feet of
shelf
> space at the computer superstore. But, I am a student heading off to
> college, and DVD movies don't sound half bad... That's the main reason
> I'm getting this drive. But, I was trying to get a 16XDVD to try to
make
> my computer as "futureproof" as possible. I do not see what other
> technology would replace the CDROM other than DVD's - what more could
you
> want besides the huge storage capacities? But then again, I probably
am
> being somewhat shortsighted. History has said something of the sort
with
> the advent of the 2.88MB floppy.
>
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