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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: D-VHS vs Blu-ray DVD....?
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Evans A Criswell
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1579
From: Huntsville, AL, USA
Registered: Mar 2000
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posted 05-06-2003 08:50 PM
quote: Over here in the UK our pal system is obviously better than standard NTSC (625 lines vs 525 and no 3/2 pull down)
625 lines is better than 525, but with PAL, you have to convert 24 fps to 50 fields per second. I hear this is typically done by running the film 4 percent fast, requiring some sort of processing on the audio so it doesn't sound too high pitched. This sounds like a horrible thing to have to do. At least with NTSC, the 2:3 pulldown can be detected enabling the conversion to 480p without combing artifacts (although it's still a 2:3 pattern of frames) and without having to change the speed of the film (except the 1000/1001 slowdown factor due to the change to color TV in 1954, resulting in a 59.94 field per second rate).
As for HDTV, I wish the cable companies would be more speedy about offering it. As for going with 720p because it's better for sports, ABC doesn't realize that very few HDTVs actually display 720p natively, but convert it to something else (1080i, 540p, or 480p), defeating any advantage of using it over 1080i.
I've been HDTV ready for 362 days now, and have watched nothing but cable TV and DVDs!
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Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."
Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 05-06-2003 09:28 PM
The HD-DVD issue is pretty murky. You have the Blu-Ray camp and then Time/Warner and Toshiba want their own format. Basically we're going through the same format war garbage that stalled DVD itself for years.
Meanwhile prices are dropping for D-VHS players. D-VHS "D-Theater" movies may be on magnetic tape, but the picture quality is awesome nonetheless. You're getting 1080 HD video of much better image quality than DVD. The picture quality is even noticeably better than most compressed HD broadcasts. I forget the actual spec on data bandwidth but seem to remember the rate being around 25 to 30 million bits per second. The Dolby Digital data rate is also upped to 576kb/s (higher than the 448kb/s and 384kb/s rates standard for DD 5.1 on DVD).
On the downside, D-VHS movies have very little in terms of extras. However, for most folks the movie is the only thing that matters. My parents fit into that camp and have gone to buying D-VHS movies over DVD whenever possible. And here's a warning: don't leave the tapes anywhere near speakers or the slightest magnetic fields at all. They can erase very easily.
The HD-DVD camp is also pissing me off with talk of puny, low rates of bandwidth. I've heard rumblings that the Toshiba/Time Warner model of HD-DVD would have a bandwidth ceiling of only 15 million bits per second --just a mere 5 megabits above the current standard. They expect to go from 480p to 720p and 1080i with ONLY 5Mb/s extra? Are they on dope!!??
I do like disc-based media for instant data/chapter access, no rewinding, etc. But if the tech-folks cannot up that bandwidth rate at least into the 20Mb/s-25Mb/s ballpark, they might as well not even bother introducing the damned thing. D-VHS is already presenting a higher quality alternative. If they want to come off with a "we don't need to match or surpass D-VHS" attitude and just fob off something "good enough to get by" then they need to kiss my ass. I won't buy it.
On HD-DVD, the disc makers need to do the job right or not don't do it at all.
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 05-12-2003 02:04 AM
I can't see that D-VHS has much of a long-term future. DVD is in the process of sidelining analogue VHS for distribution of pre-recorded material, and therefore the expensive process of manufacturing and assembling all the mechanical components of a VHS cassette is going to become less economic as the number of shells being made decreases as a result of falling demand. Even if the encoding method is different with D-VHS, the tape transport mechanism and helical scan head assembly is still largely the same, and is becoming more expensive to manufacture than the laser pickup on a DVD drive.
I agree with Brad - recordable DVDs currently have several major drawbacks, not least fragility. But anyone who was using recordable CDs in the early to mid '90s would have had the same problems. A combination of better media manufacturing techniques and CD drives which are better suited to reading the dye surface has pretty much solved them. The number of audio cassettes being manufactured, meanwhile, continues to decrease every year, and blank CDs are now a lot cheaper than decent quality (e.g. Cr02, with a reasonable quality cassette shell) cassettes.
quote: And maybe that's the direction Hollywood should take in this copy protection garbage. Just hit us with extreme high rez video far too big for us to use in our computers at all.
It's too big at the moment, but the amount of data on a DVD (and the amount of processing power needed to do the digital to analogue conversion) is way too big for a PC made 10 years ago. Before too long we'll have PCs which can deal with this volume of data, and the absence of an effective copy protection system may well lead the studios to abandon D-VHS as a release format before it becomes obsolete in its own right.
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