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"Father of Java" James Gosling says he sees Blu-ray's victory over HD DVD as a catalyst for more interesting forms of entertainment for the disc format.
Speaking at the Sun Tech Day in Sydney, Gosling told ZDNet Australia's Builder AU that he hopes that Blu-ray Disc win--combined with the possibility of having
"There's actually this Profile 2.0 spec for Blu-ray, which almost all of the Blu-ray players out now don't implement...that adds all this networking ability. So you can actually use a Blu-ray box to do things other than play Blu-ray discs," Gosling said. "You can do things that are hybrids between playing discs and content over the network."
Gosling cited the primitive nature of many current Blu-ray players as a reason for holding back the Blu-ray experience.
"The Blu-ray spec right now has really primitive graphics, which is kind of surprising for a spec that should be all about compelling visual experiences. But the folks in the consumer electronics industry tend to be really conservative--I mean, they want to be able to sell Blu-ray players for 50 bucks," he said.
"So they really cut down on some of the levels of aspiration," he said.
The mentality of developers was also in Gosling's sights for criticism.
"I think that a lot of the software development community--which I find really, really frustrating--is fixated on Web apps. They write their stuff on the server, it generates HTML, and there is this really big piece of the community that thinks that that is the universe," Gosling said.
"There's a lot more to it," he said. "Blu-ray is a pretty interesting corner of it."
Chris Duckett of ZDNet Australia reported from Sydney.
MaxAgent86
Mar 7, 2008, 2:15 PM PST
JasonAtThirty
Mar 6, 2008, 4:43 PM PST
MadLyb
Mar 6, 2008, 7:37 AM PST