Dell added Blu-ray Disc capability to its notebook PC line on Monday, making an effort to compete with Sony and Toshiba in the growing market for mobile high-definition video platforms.In addition to showing high-end movies and games, Dell’s XPS M1710 notebook could serve as a central node to support digital entertainment throughout the home, the company said. Customers can save 50GB of either data or video on a single Blu-ray Disc.The ability to read and write data to the discs differentiates Blu-ray from HD DVD, the competing standard for high-definition video, analysts said. Laptops with HD-DVD capability have lower prices but cannot save data to the discs, said Samir Bhavnani, research director at Current Analysis.“You are starting to see the different camps emerge within the computing companies, with Toshiba and Acer on the HD-DVD side and Sony and Dell on the Blu-ray side,” he said. Sony’s Vaio VGN-AR270 uses Blu-ray Discs, while Acer’s notebook and Toshiba’s Qosmio G35-AV650 use HD DVD. Blu-ray and HD-DVD are improvements over standard DVD optical discs; they hold more data and let users watch high-definition video. All three techniques are optical discs, storing data in a binary form that is read by a scanning laser. But a Blu-ray Disc can hold five times the capacity of a dual-layer DVD, Dell said.Movie studios and video game producers are eager to sell films on the new media, but the flow of new titles is only a trickle so far because content providers and hardware vendors can’t decide which standard will prevail. Pricing starts at US$3,699 for the XPS M1710, including an Intel Core 2 Duo processor with 4GB of memory and up to 160GB of storage on a serial ATA hard drive.-Ben Ames, IDG News Service (Boston Bureau)Related Links: Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD: Knocking Each Other Out? NEC to Ship HD DVD, Blu-ray Dual Format ChipCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost The steep cost of a poor data management strategy Without a data management strategy, organizations stall digital progress, often putting their business trajectory at risk. Here’s how to move forward. By Jay Limbasiya, Global AI, Analytics, & Data Management Business Development, Unstructured Data Solutions, Dell Technologies Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Management feature How Capital One delivers data governance at scale With hundreds of petabytes of data in operation, the bank has adopted a hybrid model and a ‘sloped governance’ framework to ensure its lines of business get the data they need in real-time. By Thor Olavsrud Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Governance Data Management feature Assessing the business risk of AI bias The lengths to which AI can be biased are still being understood. The potential damage is, therefore, a big priority as companies increasingly use various AI tools for decision-making. By Karin Lindstrom Jun 09, 2023 4 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence IT Leadership brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe