Wednesday, May 28th 2008
LaCie Intros 4x Blu-ray External Burner
LaCie announced today that is has doubled Blu-ray burn speeds to 4x and has updated the aluminum alloy case and software suite for its external d2 Blu-ray drive. Coming with a shape designed by Neil Poulton, the drive records, rewrites and reads 25GB or 50GB BD-R (recordable) and BD-RE (rewritable), as well as DVD±RW DL and CD±RW media. The 4x Blu-ray burner ships with a full-featured Roxio software package and dual FireWire 400 and USB 2.0 connection options. The drive also boasts 8MB of buffer memory. "In early 2007, LaCie was the first vendor to ship worldwide an external solution for professional Hi-Def video recording for both Mac and Windows. Since that time, Blu-ray technology has proven to be the dominant source for video recording and playback," said Patrick Salin, LaCie Business Development Manager. LaCie d2 Blu-ray drives are available now via LaCie's specialized dealer network with a suggested retail price of $649.99 and 2 year warranty. For more product information, visit this page.
Source:
LaCie
26 Comments on LaCie Intros 4x Blu-ray External Burner
Burning DVD at 4X would take ages... imagine trying to burn 50GB at 4X speed???
Madness
A CD written at 8X is slow compared to a DVD written at 8X. Im pretty sure the bandwidth throughput will be higher than that of a DVD.
Would have thought that USB and FireWire would not have the bandwidth required for this but I might be wrong.
Burning DVDs at 4x speed takes only around 20mins. ;)
Many people dont want to put things together themself, but thank god it has firewire... it'd be useless on USB.
Slip streaming Vista (removing unnecessary features) can be done with a DVD.
I'm sorry but for $650 that's way to expensive. I recall Plextor selling top of the line CD and DVD players for less then that. And Plextor was the most expensive players back in the day. They want more then double the price for 2x the speed. Also with the price of disks at nearly double the price of a DL DVD its not hard to stick with DVD.
personally I have never had to back anything up thats larger than dual layer DVD....
but i guess for users that have large databases etc to backup... then that will be a good option...
(but at the price of the thing you could just aswell buy an external 1TB HDD)
Here's an example: www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817146256
I have over 3,000GB of stored files. I kinda see a reason that blu ray burners MIGHT be handy... 700+DVD's is a little excessive for me, when it comes to backups.
Oh and i definately agree with a few points above - E-sata would be better than the second firewire port, and YES i would definately make my own. I really see this going to the apple fanatics and the groups who are obsessed with looks and havent the faintest clue what firewire even is, other than someone said it is faster than USB.
Thats like saying no one should have a DVD or CD drive, just a floppy - why not, everything else fits on a HDD.
Blu ray is primarily for movies, but when you use it secondarily for storage it has a large size advantage over DVD and CD.
I just checked newegg...you could buy 3, 500GB ESATA drives and it still cheaper then 1 of those BR drives (@$689.99 not $650) + 60 BR 50GB disc you would need. Also note, I've only seen those discs in packs of 2 making 30 packs. I'm sure someone would sell them in bulk.
I just looked at the price of the 50GB BR discs and from what I've seen they are somewhere around the $50 mark. Maybe it can be found for cheaper and I haven't found it. But that's pretty expensive for backing up your data.
Backing up the large amount of saved data that most users are compiling these days, whether it be personal music, digicam footage, wedding video's etc etc is vital. And for most users will be a viable option soon as prices of the units decrease and speeds increase.
Picked up a Kodak cd-rw burner back in the day for over $1000au.
I recall a guy in my neighbourhood picked up a cd-r burner for almost $5000au, years before they were released in Melbourne.
And i totally agree with the price of discs these days in combination with the price of the burner, its stupid when you can pick up a few 1Tb HDD's and still save money.
in the uk can buy a decent brand dvd burner for as little as £16 ,the cheapest BR is last time i checked well over £100,no surprise that they are not exactly flying off the shelves :)