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News
Blu-ray Disc Association Welcomes Apple to Its Board
of Directors (20/3/2005)
The Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) today
announced that Apple(R) will become a member of the consortium's
Board of Directors. Apple has been a leader in driving consumer
adoption of DVD authoring since January 2001, with the introduction
of its SuperDrive(TM), the industry's first high-volume CD- and
DVD-burning drive, and its revolutionary iDVD(R) and DVD Studio
Pro(R) software applications. Apple is also helping bring High Definition
(HD) to market with a complete line of HD content creation tools
for consumers and professionals alike including iMovie(R) HD, Final
Cut(R) Express HD and Final Cut Pro(R) HD editing software.
Additionally the next release of Apple's
QuickTime(R) software, QuickTime 7, will feature the MPEG developed
H.264 Advanced Video Codec (AVC) which has been adopted for high
definition DVDs. Apple will release QuickTime 7 in conjunction with
the release of Mac OS(R) X version 10.4 "Tiger," the fifth major
version of Mac OS X that will ship in the first half of 2005.
"Apple is pleased to join the Blu-ray Disc
Association board as part of our efforts to drive consumer adoption
of HD," said Steve Jobs, Apple's CEO. "Consumers are already creating
stunning HD content with Apple's leading video editing applications
like iMovie HD and are anxiously awaiting a way to burn their own
high def DVDs."
"Apple has a long history of technical innovation
around DVD hardware and software, and their support of the Blu-ray
Disc format is a testament to their commitment of ongoing innovation.
The Blu-ray Disc format provides the immense capacity and the revolutionary
functionality that Apple's loyal customer base will be sure to enjoy,"
said Maureen Weber, chief BDA spokesperson and general manager of
HP's Optical Storage Solutions Business. "We're thrilled about Apple
joining our 16-member board, and we look forward to working with
them on the development and promotion of the Blu-ray Disc format."
The BDA was created to broaden support for
Blu-ray Disc -- the next generation optical disc for storing High
Definition movies, photos and other digital content. Blu-ray Discs
will have five times larger capacity than today's DVDs, with a single-layer
Blu-ray Disc holding up to 25 gigabytes of data and a double-layer
Blu-ray Disc holding up to 50 gigabytes of data. Current DVDs hold
4.7 gigabytes on single-layer discs and 8.5 gigabytes on dual-layer
discs.
www.blu-raydisc.com
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