Jump to content

DVD+R: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Dual Layer DVD+RW drives exist now
Line 3: Line 3:
For technical details see: [[DVD-R]]
For technical details see: [[DVD-R]]


In October of [[2003]], it was demonstrated that [[dual layer]] technology could be used with a DVD+R disc to nearly double the capacity to 8.5 GB per disc. Manufacturers are expected to incorporate this technology into commercial devices sometime during [[2004]].
In October of [[2003]], it was demonstrated that [[dual layer]] technology could be used with a DVD+R disc to nearly double the capacity to 8.5 GB per disc. Manufacturers have incorporated this technology into commercial devices since mid-[[2004]].


Unlike [[DVD plus RW|DVD+RW]] discs, DVD+R discs can be only be written to once. Because of this, DVD+R discs are suited to applications such as nonvolatile data storage, audio, or video.
Unlike [[DVD plus RW|DVD+RW]] discs, DVD+R discs can be only be written to once. Because of this, DVD+R discs are suited to applications such as nonvolatile data storage, audio, or video.

Revision as of 12:59, 7 July 2004

A DVD+R is a writable optical disc with 4.7 GB of storage capacity. The format was developed by a coalition of corporations, known as the DVD+RW Alliance, in mid 2002. Although DVD+R has not yet been approved by the DVD Forum, DVD+R discs are playable in 87%-95% of today's DVD players.

For technical details see: DVD-R

In October of 2003, it was demonstrated that dual layer technology could be used with a DVD+R disc to nearly double the capacity to 8.5 GB per disc. Manufacturers have incorporated this technology into commercial devices since mid-2004.

Unlike DVD+RW discs, DVD+R discs can be only be written to once. Because of this, DVD+R discs are suited to applications such as nonvolatile data storage, audio, or video.

One competing format is DVD-R. Hybrid drives that can handle both, often labeled "DVD±R", are very popular since there is not yet a single standard for recordable DVDs.

See also

External Links: