Sony to launch 23GB optical data disc in November
Sony will launch a new optical disc format in November that allows for
storage of up to 23.3GB per disc, according to the company.
The format, called Professional Disc for Data, is being positioned by the Tokyo
company as a replacement for the 5.25-inch MO (Magneto-Optical) disc format that it
currently sells in the professional data storage space. MO has been on the market
for around 15 years and the highest-capacity version sold by Sony can store 9.1GB
per disc.
The key to the higher capacity of Professional Disc is in the type of laser used to read and write information from and to the disc.
Unlike MO, CD and DVD formats, which all use red lasers, the new format uses a blue laser. Because the wavelength of blue light is shorter than that of a red laser, the beam from a blue laser, with suitable optics, makes a much smaller spot on the recording layer of the disc. A smaller spot means less space is need to record one bit of data and so more data can be stored on a 12-centimeter disc.
The discs are enclosed in cartridges to help keep dirt and dust off the disc surface.
Sony will put on sale an internal drive, BW-F101, and write-once (recordable) and rewritable versions of Professional Disc media, PDDWO23 and PDDRW23 respectively, in major world markets from November, said Aki Shimazu, a spokeswoman for Sony in Tokyo.
The first-generation drive will cost around ¥360,000 ($3,300) and blank media will cost between $45 and $50 per disc for both types, according to Sony's marketing center for the format and Shimazu. That's roughly the price Sony promised when it first unveiled the format in prototype form earlier this year.
As MO technology continues to improve, Sony has plans to increase the capacity and sustained write transfer rate of Professional Disc beyond the 23.3GB and 9MBps that are features of the first products that will be launched in November.
Sony's roadmap has two steps, the first in 2005 when transfer rate will be increased to 18MBps and capacity increased to 50GB through the addition of a second recording layer in the discs. The second step is scheduled for 2007 when transfer rate and capacity will be doubled again to 36MBps and 100GB, respectively; the latter through the use of double-sided discs, said Sony.
The new format is related to the Blu-ray Disc video disc format that Sony launched earlier this year. Both formats store the same amount of data on a cartridge that looks almost identical, with Blu-ray having additional 25GB and 27GB versions, although the data transfer rates to the discs are different. Blu-ray, which is designed to record high-definition television, records at a rate of 4.5MBps per second or half that of Professional Disc.
These differences mean the two formats, although similar, are incompatible.
While that incompatibility may sound like a disadvantage for consumers, Sony says the two are targeted at different markets so it shouldn't cause a problem. It also means Sony has full control over the Professional Disc format, which it developed alone, unlike Blu-ray which is controlled by a consortium of nine companies of which Sony is one.
"There are certain differences but it's pretty much the same format," said Shimazu. "There is no compatibility at this point. If you make it a Blu-ray (Disc), you have to ask the eight other companies involved in the project. (Professional Disc) is a Sony exclusive."
A version of the Professional Disc format has already been launched by Sony as part of its professional broadcasting product line under the name XDCAM. That variant uses similar discs but a different data transfer rate and is aimed at video acquisition, editing and post-production applications. Despite its similarities with the Professional Disc for Data, the two formats are also incompatible, said Sony.
Sony is not the only company looking at utilizing blue laser technology for data storage.
Plasmon Plc, a Cambridge, U.K.-based data storage systems company has developed its own format, called UDO (Ultra Density Optical), that it is also targeting as a replacement for MO. UDO can accommodate 30G bytes of data on an optical disc that is enclosed in a cartridge made to the same dimensions as current MO cartridges. Its future roadmap includes 60GB and 120GB versions of UDO.
Toshiba Corp. and NEC Corp. are also developing a blue-laser based format called Advanced Optical Disc (AOD), the format can store 20GB on a single layer, single sided disc or 36GB on a dual layer, single sided disc. It has been proposed by the two companies to the DVD Forum as a next-generation replacement for the existing DVD format.
The key to the higher capacity of Professional Disc is in the type of laser used to read and write information from and to the disc.
Unlike MO, CD and DVD formats, which all use red lasers, the new format uses a blue laser. Because the wavelength of blue light is shorter than that of a red laser, the beam from a blue laser, with suitable optics, makes a much smaller spot on the recording layer of the disc. A smaller spot means less space is need to record one bit of data and so more data can be stored on a 12-centimeter disc.
The discs are enclosed in cartridges to help keep dirt and dust off the disc surface.
Sony will put on sale an internal drive, BW-F101, and write-once (recordable) and rewritable versions of Professional Disc media, PDDWO23 and PDDRW23 respectively, in major world markets from November, said Aki Shimazu, a spokeswoman for Sony in Tokyo.
The first-generation drive will cost around ¥360,000 ($3,300) and blank media will cost between $45 and $50 per disc for both types, according to Sony's marketing center for the format and Shimazu. That's roughly the price Sony promised when it first unveiled the format in prototype form earlier this year.
As MO technology continues to improve, Sony has plans to increase the capacity and sustained write transfer rate of Professional Disc beyond the 23.3GB and 9MBps that are features of the first products that will be launched in November.
Sony's roadmap has two steps, the first in 2005 when transfer rate will be increased to 18MBps and capacity increased to 50GB through the addition of a second recording layer in the discs. The second step is scheduled for 2007 when transfer rate and capacity will be doubled again to 36MBps and 100GB, respectively; the latter through the use of double-sided discs, said Sony.
The new format is related to the Blu-ray Disc video disc format that Sony launched earlier this year. Both formats store the same amount of data on a cartridge that looks almost identical, with Blu-ray having additional 25GB and 27GB versions, although the data transfer rates to the discs are different. Blu-ray, which is designed to record high-definition television, records at a rate of 4.5MBps per second or half that of Professional Disc.
These differences mean the two formats, although similar, are incompatible.
While that incompatibility may sound like a disadvantage for consumers, Sony says the two are targeted at different markets so it shouldn't cause a problem. It also means Sony has full control over the Professional Disc format, which it developed alone, unlike Blu-ray which is controlled by a consortium of nine companies of which Sony is one.
"There are certain differences but it's pretty much the same format," said Shimazu. "There is no compatibility at this point. If you make it a Blu-ray (Disc), you have to ask the eight other companies involved in the project. (Professional Disc) is a Sony exclusive."
A version of the Professional Disc format has already been launched by Sony as part of its professional broadcasting product line under the name XDCAM. That variant uses similar discs but a different data transfer rate and is aimed at video acquisition, editing and post-production applications. Despite its similarities with the Professional Disc for Data, the two formats are also incompatible, said Sony.
Sony is not the only company looking at utilizing blue laser technology for data storage.
Plasmon Plc, a Cambridge, U.K.-based data storage systems company has developed its own format, called UDO (Ultra Density Optical), that it is also targeting as a replacement for MO. UDO can accommodate 30G bytes of data on an optical disc that is enclosed in a cartridge made to the same dimensions as current MO cartridges. Its future roadmap includes 60GB and 120GB versions of UDO.
Toshiba Corp. and NEC Corp. are also developing a blue-laser based format called Advanced Optical Disc (AOD), the format can store 20GB on a single layer, single sided disc or 36GB on a dual layer, single sided disc. It has been proposed by the two companies to the DVD Forum as a next-generation replacement for the existing DVD format.