![]() ![]() My recommendation is that Firewire would be more suitable for writing to Bluray media at X5 speed. There are no internal Bluray drives as yet but plenty of rumours circulating that MacBook Pro and Mac Pro revisions may include them as early as this year! At 480Mb/sec, USB2 (also allowing for USB data encapsulation/control data) should be fast enough to carry hi-def content from Bluray media. As long as the data format is supported (like ISO9660 for CDs), you can read the data on the disk but not necessarily play the content back. ∼onsumers are already creating stunning HD content with Apples leading video editing applications like iMovie HD and are anxiously awaiting a way to burn their own high def DVDs. source - PR Toast 8 Titaniumsupports burning to Bluray. ∺pple is pleased to join the Blu-ray Disc Association board as part of our efforts to drive consumer adoption of HD, said Steve Jobs, Apples CEO. Protected content such as that from Apple TV / iTunes store streams or hi-def disks are probably not going to be accessible as files on a hard disk. ![]() I'd also suggest that this is raw video without HDCP, such as content from a hi-def camcorder. Here's what I've found: Quicktime supports the playback of high definition video, but the hardware requirements are pretty demanding. "Before you spend money on drives, remember that the HD formats are still in their relative infancy, so software support is quite minimal at the moment. Just thought id throw this in, from another forum user called Chester, so thanks to him for this. ![]()
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