Apple's had high-def support for DVDs for quite a long time actually. The latest version of DVD studio pro, while not supporting HD-DVD and Blu-Ray themselves, DOES support compressing your HD video to a standard DVD using h.264. The idea here is that if a studeo wants to preview things like shows and footage in-house, its a lot easier just to burn a DVD and hand it to someone, who can put it in their Powerbook/MacBook/Powermac.
“The other one is a biggie, and it's something very noticeable in the videos: touch sensitivity is pretty bad. Using the virtual keyboard proved to be far too painful, and we're pretty sure it wasn't multitouch-friendly.”
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Apple's had high-def support for DVDs for quite a long time actually. The latest version of DVD studio pro, while not supporting HD-DVD and Blu-Ray themselves, DOES support compressing your HD video to a standard DVD using h.264. The idea here is that if a studeo wants to preview things like shows and footage in-house, its a lot easier just to burn a DVD and hand it to someone, who can put it in their Powerbook/MacBook/Powermac.