Don't post false information based on ignorance. Check out the website I posted above for an explanation:
http://www.danielsternlighting.com
Relevant to this discussion, here is a quote from the website:
"It's a name gain: Osram, the well-established German lampmaker sells a line of automotive bulbs thy call "Silver Star". These are Osram's top-of-the-range headlamp bulbs, equivalent to Narva RangePow+50, GE Night Hawk, Philips VisionPlus and Tungsram Megalight Premium. They produce the maximum legal amount of light while staying within legal power consumption limits. They have colorless clear glass.
"Osram bought the well-established American lampmaker Sylvania in the early 1990s, so Osram is now Sylvania's parent company. Sylvania also sells a line of automotive bulbs they call "Silver Star", but it's not the same product. The Sylvania Silver Stars have blue glass. Light output is of legal levels, but as with all blue-filtered bulbs, you do not get more light from them. The Sylvania SilverStar bulbs have a very short lifetime, because the filament is
overdriven (emphasis mine) to get a legal amount of light despite the blue glass."
If the Sylvania blue-tinted SilverStars produce more heat, it's not from the tint. It's because of the greater current required to force the bulb to emit a legal amount of light. Extra heat can only be caused by extra current, not by a tint.