DVD doesn't actually stand for anything. People have attached "Digital Video Disc" or "Digital Versatile Disc" to the letters to form an acronym, but officially the DVD trademark is simply DVD with no additional meaning behind it. At one point, it was defined as 'Digital Versatile Disc" but that definition never made it to any of the final press releases.
Because of that, the term Blu-ray DVD is incorrect as you are appending two wholly different trademarks to each other
the Nook Color proved it was an undercover tablet all along, Barnes and Noble has hit back with this latest Nook as proof of its focus on one thing: reading.
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DVD doesn't actually stand for anything. People have attached "Digital Video Disc" or "Digital Versatile Disc" to the letters to form an acronym, but officially the DVD trademark is simply DVD with no additional meaning behind it. At one point, it was defined as 'Digital Versatile Disc" but that definition never made it to any of the final press releases.
Because of that, the term Blu-ray DVD is incorrect as you are appending two wholly different trademarks to each other