Philips Australia predicts that DVD recording technology will hold 50 percent of the DVD home entertainment market by the year 2004.
IBM has lodged a patent for a DVD system which places television-like advertisement breaks on DVDs
The man notorious for cracking the DVD code and Apple's FairPlay DRM, is looking to make a legitimate business out of his expertise.
In the latest sign that a standards war is petering out, Toshiba has introduced dual-format DVD recordable drives.
Panasonic's parent company is set to release a DVD recorder based on the Blu-ray Disc format, as a standards battle over next-generation DVD technology heats up.
While news that Australia's copyright law will be updated is welcome -- so copying CDs onto a digital music player is no longer illegal -- there's still plenty to dislike about the proposed new regime.
There are times when the tone of Australia's broadband discussions makes me want to laugh, and others when it just makes me want to cry. The past week has been one of the latter, after two very different broadband-related stories made their way across my desk.
When comparing the Windows Vista and Mac OS X user experiences, this step-by-step walk-through of Vista's Windows Easy Transfer application shows that there is still some work to be done in Redmond.
No other sporting event captures the world's imagination like the FIFA World Cup. How will local companies be contributing during this month-long extravaganza, both online and offline?
The next generation in DVD technology will let consumers carry the equivalent of a hard drive on a disc, but what are they supposed to do with all that capacity? Interact, supporters say.
Companies not forward-thinking enough with data archiving strategies could find themselves in deep trouble, Gartner has warned.
Don't want to take Windows Vista for a test drive until you know what it has to offer? Join Windows expert Deb Shinder for a visual tour of Beta 2 as she points out some of the more dramatic changes and shares her impressions of the new OS.
Philips Electronics Singapore announced last Friday the availability of its first DVD player/recorder that uses DVD+RW discs for Asia and Australia. The DVDR 1000 can record and play TV programs and home movies.
LG's inexpensive DVD recorder makes a great entry point for anyone pondering upgrading from the humble family VCR. Read our Australian review.
Philips Australia predicts that DVD recording technology will hold 50 percent of the DVD home entertainment market by the year 2004.
Japan-based electronics giant Sony will soon introduce what it claims to be the word's first dual-format home DVD recorder.
The days of video cassette tapes are gone. Digitised media has taken the scene by storm. Riding the gale this time is Toshiba with the world’s first DVD-RAM video recorder that features a hard drive.
Microsoft slams Google on privacy
Google's approach to privacy is a decade behind Microsoft, the Redmond software giant's chief privacy strategi… Watch it now
MyPerfect.com.au has potential
Storage infrastructure on the tender track
Apple has killed the video store; will ISPs be next?
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