Universal Media Disc
Overview
Overview
ECMA-365: Data Interchange on 60mm Read-Only ODC Capacity: 1.8 GB (UMD)
Dimensions: approx. 64mm (diameter) 4.2mm (thickness)
Maximum capacity: 1.80 GB (dual layer), 900 MB (single-layer)
Laser wavelength: 660 nm (red laser)
Encryption: AES 128-bit
DVD region coding has been applied to most UMD movies and music, although no games except BattleZone enforce regional lockout, making them, in effect, region free.
Region 0: Worldwide (in-flight-movies, cinemas, ferries, etc.)
Region 1: United States, Canada, U.S. territories, Latin America
Region 2: European Union, Japan, Middle East, Egypt, South Africa, Greenland, French territories
Region 3: Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, South Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia, Hong Kong
Region 4: Australia, New Zealand, Pacific Islands, Brazil
Region 5: Russia, Eastern Europe, Pakistan, India, the majority of Africa, North Korea, Mongolia
Region 6: Mainland China
Applications
The primary application for UMD discs is as a storage medium for PSP games, although the format is also used for the storage of motion pictures, and to a lesser degree, television shows for playback on the PSP. The video is encoded in the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC format, with the audio in ATRAC3plus.
The BBC released a number of its TV titles on UMD in the UK, including The Office, The Mighty Boosh, Doctor Who and Little Britain.
Some adult films have been released on UMD in Japan.
Circumvention
Despite Sony's efforts, the UMD format has been cracked. Using a combination of custom firmware and reverse engineering, the Sony PSP will run a variety of homebrew games, and backup ISO images. Each disc uses a file system whose format follows the ISO 9660 standard. The ISO image can then be stored on a Memory Stick, and run via a special disc image loader program, such as Devhook, or launched in the XMB with a custom firmware.
Criticism
UMD
The UMD discs offer large capacity and the capability to store quality audio/video content, however, the format's proprietary nature and the lack of writers and blank media has made adoption difficult. In comparison to Sony's MiniDisc format, there are a number of features lacking; the sliding shield which prevents direct disc contact on MiniDiscs is absent from all UMDs released to date, though it is an option according to the ECMA specification. The smaller capacity of the UMD discs necessitates that bonus content from DVD releases be removed in large part or entirely before the movie is released on UMD for PSP playback.[citation needed] This has made the UMD movie releases a difficult sell in the face of affordable portable DVD players that can output to TV sets and can play the full-featured DVD releases.
An image of Multimedia Recovery's UMD replacement case.
Provisions
According to the official ECMA specification Sony designed the UMD to support two possible future enhancements and products.
1. Protective Shutter: Similar to the MiniDisc and 3" floppy disc, this protective shutter will shield the inner disc from accidental contact.
2. Auto-Loading: UMDs were designed for possible future slot loading devices with Auto-Loading mechanisms. These would be very similar to the auto-loading mechanism used in slot loading MiniDisc home and car decks. It would also be similar to the VHS U-Matic auto-loading mechanism. Unlike the current clamshell loading design the PSP uses, a slot loading device using an Auto-Loading mechanism would be motorized and completely automatic. You would insert the disc into the device slot, similar to the way you insert a VHS cassette into a VCR, and a disc into the PS3, and as you begin to insert it, the motorized mechanism would then take over and completely draw the disc inside the drive, and complete the loading process. The disc would also be ejected fully automatically by the motorized mechanism, like a VCR. This would also mean that power would be required in order to insert or eject a disc.
Availability & Support
The UMD format never saw implementation on any device other than the PlayStation Portable. As a result, the market is very limited compared to those for other optical media formats. But, although poor sales early on in the format's life had caused major studios Universal and Paramount to rescind their support (and even Sony had announced they would cease UMD video production), Sony, Columbia, and other film publishers continue to distribute their films on UMD. Capcom, HBO, Disney and various other content producers have also continued their support of the format, releasing TV shows, cartoons and OVAs on UMD as well. Retail support of the film experienced similar troubles, with speculation in 2006 that Wal-Mart would soon be pulling UMD videos from their stores completely. However, to this date Wal-Mart still carries a selection of UMD videos.[citation needed]
In late 2009, Sony began pushing developers away from the UMD format and towards digital distribution on the PlayStation Network in preparation for the launch of the digital-download-only PSP Go, which is the first PSP model to not include a UMD drive. However, the new system has experienced lackluster sales compared to previous models, with most consumers still choosing the UMD-compatible PSP-3000 model, which continues to be sold along side the PSP Go. And despite the earlier push for PSN releases around the PSP Go's launch, over half of the PSP's library is still only available in UMD format, though there have been a few PSN-only releases since the PSP Go's launch, such as LocoRoco Midnight Carnival and What Did I Do To Deserve This, My Lord?. Still, most new games continue to be distributed via UMD, and, aside from those published by SCE, not all have been released on the PSN.
See also
List of movies and television shows released on UMD
References
^ a b c Ecma International (June 2005). "Data Interchange on 60 mm Read-Only ODCapacity: 1,8 Gbytes (UMD)" (PDF). http://www.ecma-international.org/publications/files/ECMA-ST/ECMA-365.pdf.
^ "PSP procures porn in Japan". GameSpot.com. June 2, 2005. http://au.gamespot.com/news/2005/06/02/news_6126863.html?sid=6126863. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
^ Arnold, Thomas K. (2006-03-30). "UMD losing H'wood game". The Hollywood Reporter. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002274591. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
^ Erickson, Kris (2008-08-15). "Sony Continues to Support UMD Format with New Pricing". GameFlavor. http://www.pspworld.com/sony-psp/accessories/-sony-continues-to-support-umd-format-with-new-pricing-009164.php. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
^ "Wal-Mart to cease UMD movie sale". QJ.NET. 2006-03-30. http://www.qj.net/psp/news/wal-mart-to-cease-umd-movie-sale.html. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
^ "Sony PSP2 Rumors Bogus". The Business Insider. December 17, 2008. http://www.businessinsider.com/2008/12/exclusive-sony-psp2-rumors-bogus-no-new-handheld-gaming-gadget-coming-sne. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
^ Moses, Asher (2009-10-20). "PSP Go a no-go as Sony struggles for sales". Fairfax Digital. http://www.theage.com.au/digital-life/games/psp-go-a-nogo-as-sony-struggles-for-sales-20091020-h5wn.html. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
^ Gantayat, Anoop (2009-11-02). "Enterbrain Shares PSP go First Day Sales". andriasang.com. http://www.andriasang.com/e/blog/2009/11/02/psp_go_first_day_sales/. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Universal Media Disc
The Digital Bits Guide to UMD Movies including a list of movies available on UMD
UMD Talk contains UMD articles, news, resources & technical details.
Sony PSP Movie Sales Strong Article on the early success of movie sales on UMD from MP3 Newswire
Breaking news: Sony's UMDs aren't selling well News story about the disappointing UMD sales.
UMD Movie Database
vde
Video storage formats
Videotape
Analog
Quadruplex (1956) VERA (1958) Type A (1965) CV-2000 (1965) Akai (1967) U-matic (1969) EIAJ-1 (1969) Cartrivision (1972) Philips VCR (1972) V-Cord (1974) VX (1974) Betamax (1975) IVC (1975) Type B (1976) Type C (1976) VHS (1976) VK (1977) SVR (1979) Video 2000 (1980) CVC (1980) VHS-C (1982) M (1982) Betacam (1982) Video8 (1985) MII (1986) S-VHS (1987) Hi8 (1989) S-VHS-C (1987) W-VHS (1994)
Digital
D1 (1986) D2 (1988) D3 (1991) DCT (1992) D5 (1994) Digital Betacam (1993) DV (1995) Digital-S (D9) (1995) DVCPRO (1995) Betacam SX (1996) DVCAM (1996) HDCAM (1997) DVCPRO50 (1997) D-VHS (1998) Digital8 (1999) DVCPRO HD (2000) D6 HDTV VTR (2000) MicroMV (2001) HDV (2003) HDCAM SR (2003)
Videodisc
Analog
Phonovision (1927) TeD (1975) Laserdisc (1978) CED (1981) VHD (1983) Laserfilm (1984) CD Video (1987)
Digital
VCD (1993) MovieCD (c.1995) DVD/DVD-Video (1995) MiniDVD (c.1995) CVD (1998) SVCD (1998) EVD (2003) XDCAM (2003) H(D)VD(2004) FVD (2005) UMD (2005) VMD (2006)
High Definition
HD DVD (2006) Blu-ray Disc (2006) HVD (2007) CBHD (2008)
Solid state
P2 (2004) SxS (2007)
Digital tapeless
MOD (2005) AVCHD (2006) AVC-Intra (2006) TOD (2007) iFrame (2009)
Non-video TV recording
Kinescope (1947) Electronicam kinescope (1950s) Electronic Video Recording (1967)
vde
Standards of Ecma International
AIT ANSI escape code C++/CLI C# CD-ROM CDFS CLI DDS DLT E4X ECMAScript Eiffel FAT FD HVD NFC Office Open XML OpenXPS Super DLT U3D UDF UDO Ultrium-1 UMD UWB VXA
List of Ecma standards
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Categories: Optical disc authoring | Audio storage | Video storage | 2004 introductions | Ecma standardsHidden categories: Articles needing cleanup from July 2009 | All pages needing cleanup | Wikipedia introduction cleanup from July 2009 | Articles needing cleanup from December 2008 | Articles with sections that need to be turned into prose from December 2008 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2010
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