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DVD Video - alt.video.dvd Frequently Asked Questions |
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alt.video.dvd
Frequently Asked Questions Last Updated 8/6/05 Where can I get this FAQ? The most current version is on the Web at: http://avd.aww-faq.org/ What is the purpose of alt.video.dvd? Discussion of DVD hardware and software for computers and home entertainment systems; also information and entertainment (movies) released on DVD. Can I advertise in alt.video.dvd? All advertising, whether "on-topic" or not, is subject to being reported to the sender's ISP and/or web host. Advertising is: - Any offer to sell or trade. - Any message designed to drive traffic to the sender's web site. - Any message designed to generate email responses. A 4-line or less "sig" attached to a legitimate question or comment is not considered advertising. What is DVD? DVD stands for Digital Versatile Disk. It is a multi-purpose technology suited to both entertainment and computer uses. A DVD is identical in thickness (1.2 millimeters) and diameter (120 millimeters or 4.7 inches) to a standard Compact Disc, but that's where the similarities end. The DVDs storage capacity is seven times that of a CD, with a 4.7-gigabyte capacity on a single-side/single-layer DVD. That's the data-storage equivalent of a 133-minute movie, thus allowing 95 percent of all movies to fit comfortably on a single-layer DVD, eliminating the need for "flipping" the disc and leaving extra room for multiple audio, language, and subtitle tracks; bonus materials; menu screens; and other features unique to DVD. This capacity is nearly doubled (8.5 GB) on a single-side/dual-layer DVD, and quadrupled (17 GB) on a double-side/dual-layer DVD, allowing DVD to flourish not only as a movie-lover's format, but as an amazingly flexible medium (DVD-ROM) for high-definition computer games and multimedia applications. In short, this makes DVD the home entertainment and multimedia format of the new millennium. What are the features of DVD-Video? The main features of the various DVD formats are: - Backwards compatibility with current CD media. - All DVD hardware will play audio CDs and CD-ROMs - Physical dimensions identical to compact disc but using two 0.6 mm thick substrates, bonded together. - Single-layer/dual-layer and single/double sided options. - Up to 4.7 GB read-only capacity per layer, 8.5 GB per side maximum. - Designed from the outset for video, audio and multimedia, not just audio. - All formats use a common file system (UDF). - Digital and analog copy protection for DVD-Video and DVD-Audio built into standard. - Recordable and re-writable versions. Not only do movies look great on DVD, but they also include lots of interesting additional material and interactive options. The DVD format was designed from the beginning to support interactive features including menus and indexing, alternate audio and video tracks, and even user-controlled branching within the material. Most movies also include additional material such as movie trailers and behind-the-scene documentaries, and sometimes additional scenes that were cut from the movie. DVDs can provide support for the hard of hearing and for alternate languages. The alternate audio track also is often used for a director's commentary, in which the entire movie is accompanied by voice-over discussion by the creative team, describing their thinking while it was being created and edited. Some DVDs also provide multiple camera angles for the video, so you can switch points of view as it plays. Why is the quality of DVD-Video so much better than VHS? DVD video is a higher resolution than VHS. Standard VHS video has 320 dots per line and DVD video has 720 dots per line. However, DVD video quality still depends on many production factors (including the amount of compression used) and the display device it is viewed on. DVDs will usually (but not always, see dvd rot) last much longer than videotape. Will DVD replace VCRs? Eventually. DVD has many advantages over VCRs, including fundamentally lower technology cost for hardware and disc production. What is MPEG? DVD video is compressed from studio CCIR-601 format to MPEG-2 format. This is a "lossy" compression which attempts to remove redundant information (such as sections of the picture that don't change) and information that's not readily perceptible by the human eye. The resulting video, especially when it is complex or changing quickly, may sometimes contain "artifacts" such as blockiness or fuzziness. It depends entirely on the quality of compression and how heavily the video is compressed. At average rates of 3.5 Mb/s (megabits/second), artifacts may be occasionally noticeable. Higher data rates result in higher quality, with almost no perceptible difference from the original master at rates above 6 Mb/s. As MPEG compression technology improves, better quality will be achieved at lower rates. MPEG-4 is the current state-of-the-art for video compression technology. The two older technologies MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 already caused a widespread distribution of digital video on the PC and notebook. The successor of MPEG-4 is already on the horizon and is called MPEG-7. This video standard principally integrates an object search routine. MPEG-2 will also be extended; MPEG-21 is the succeeding standard. What are "regional codes," "country codes," or "zone locks"? Motion picture studios demanded that the DVD standard include codes which can be used to prevent playback of certain discs in certain geographical regions. Players sold in each region will have that region's code built into the player. The player will refuse to play discs which are not allowed in the region. This means that discs bought in one country may not play on players bought in another country. Regional codes are entirely optional. Discs without codes will play on any player in any country. It's not an encryption system, it's just one byte of information on the disc that the player checks. Some studios have already announced that only their new releases will have regional codes. Presumably, once a DVD movie has achieved worldwide release it could be re-released without encoding. There are 6 regions: - North America - Europe - Japan - Australia & Far East (except Japan) - Africa & Middle East - Central & South America Can I hack my DVD player to make it region-free? Many DVD players can be programmed to make them region-free. See: http://www.videohelp.com/dvdhacks I tried to copy a DVD. Why didn't it work? Copying DVDs is prohibited by the DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) and usually prevented with a Macrovision (or equivalent) circuit in every DVD player. Composite video output will have a rapidly modulated colorburst signal along with pulses in the vertical blanking signal to confuse the automatic-recording-level circuitry of VCRs. Unfortunately, this can degrade the picture, especially with old or nonstandard equipment. Macrovision is designed to guard against casual copying (which the studios claim causes billions of dollars in lost revenue), but it doesn't stop pirates. What is the DMCA? The DMCA is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, passed by the U.S. Congress in 1998, supposedly to update copyright law for electronic commerce and electronic content providers. Unfortunately, this law is very poorly written, and is now regularly used by corporations to restrain the three primary concessions of copyright and otherwise prevent free speech activity: 1. Fair use is the right to make unauthorized copies of works for certain protected purposes - mainly for academics, reporting, or criticism. When a student quotes a book in a high school paper, she is making a fair use, and can't be stopped by the copyright owner. 2. First sale is the right to sell purchased media over and over again, as long as you don't make any copies. When you read a book, then sell it to a used book store to be bought and read by someone else, you're exercising your rights under first sale. 3. Limited time - copyrights are granted for a limited time. After that time expires, the work goes into the public domain - it can be copied and used by anyone, for any reason. The DMCA has one particularly bad section, called the anti-circumvention provision. That section makes it a crime to break encryption used to prevent someone from getting access to electronic content, or to "traffic" in a tool used to do so. A friend told me that if you cover the inner ring of a DVD with a black marker, you will disable the Macrovision. Is this true? No, you can't disable Macrovision that way. There is an audio-CD copy protection that can be disabled that way - the disc contains phony data to throw off CD-ROM players so they can't read the CD. Audio-CD players will in theory not try to read that data and ignore it but some are affected anyway. The fake data is indeed located on the inner ring and can be made unreadable by using a marker. Is there a noticeable difference in the Superbit version of a movie...? The whole "point" of Superbit is to have superior sound and video quality for the movie. If you compare a superbit version with a non-superbit version, chances are, superbit is better quality, even if there are no extras... but now the studio seems to be getting into "Superbit Deluxe" where one disc is a high-quality video/audio transfer of the film, and the second disc is a bunch of extras. It takes good equipment to appreciate the difference. Like a really good player (Pioneer Elite, Philips, Marantz, Onkyo, etc.), good cabling, and an HDTV. HDTV's, particularly 16x9 HDTV's, can not only show the full resolution that a DVD sends, but can also engage an anamorphic mode which delivers 2-3 times the resolution normally allowed. With this kind of resolution available, the improved quality of Superbit can be seen. What happens if I scratch the disc? DVD includes a better error-correction system than CD. Most scratches will cause minor raw data errors that are easily corrected. Major scratches may cause anything from unrecoverable errors that will show up as a momentary glitch in the picture to a complete failure. Is CD-ROM compatible with DVD-ROM? Yes. All DVD-ROM drives will read CD-ROMs (Yellow Book). However, DVD-ROMs are not readable by CD-ROM drives. Will DVD support Digital TV (HDTV)? HDTV is not supported by DVD, but the designers have it in mind. Since HDTV uses MPEG-2 it will be easy to "upgrade" the DVD format. The limited data rate of DVD may make it difficult to support high-quality HDTV, but this can be solved by either increasing the spin rate (as with multi-speed CD-ROM drives) or using higher-capacity blue lasers. Some have speculated that a "double-headed" player reading both sides of the disc at the same time could double the data rate. This is impossible since the track spirals go in opposite directions. The DVD specs would have to be changed to allow reverse spirals on the second side. What are the outputs of a DVD player? Most DVD players will have the following output connections: Video: - RCA composite video (NTSC or PAL) - S-video (NTSC or PAL) Audio: - Dual RCA stereo analog audio (with Pro LLogic) - Digital audio (coaxial FM and/or IEC-9588 optical). Requires an external decoder or an amplifier/receiver with built-in Dolby Digital or MPEG-2 audio or PCM stereo) support. Some players may have additional connections: - Component (YCrCb; NTSC or PAL) - RF video output for connecting to TV witthout direct input. (Panasonic DVD-A300) - 6 RCA jacks for surround sound output frrom built-in decoder. (Panasonic DVD-A300, RCA.) What are the sizes and capacities of DVD? There are many variations on the DVD theme. There are two physical sizes: 12 cm (4.7 inches) and 8 cm (3.1 inches), both 1.2 mm thick. This is the same form factor as CD. A disc can be single-sided or double-sided. Each side can have one or two layers of data. The amount of video a disc can hold depends on how much audio accompanies it and how heavily the video and audio are compressed. The oft-quoted figure of 133 minutes is apocryphal: a standard DVD can actually hold up to 6 hours of video and audio if it's heavily compressed (which reduces the quality). What are aspect ratios? Video can be stored on a DVD in 4:3 format (standard TV shape) or 16:9 (widescreen). The 16:9 format is "anamorphic," meaning the picture is squeezed horizontally to fit a 4:3 rectangle then unsqueezed during playback. DVD players output widescreen video in three different ways: - letterbox (for 4:3 screens) - pan & scan (for 4:3 screens) - anamorphic or unchanged (for wide screens) Note: Some 16:9 discs are playable in widescreen and letterbox modes only, if the producer chooses. For letterbox mode the player uses a "letterbox filter" that creates black bars at the top and the bottom of the picture (60 lines each for NTSC, 72 for PAL). This leaves 3/4 of the height remaining, creating a shorter but wider rectangle. In order to fit this shorter rectangle, the picture is squeezed vertically by combining every 4 lines into 3. This compensates for the original horizontal squeezing, resulting in the movie being shown in its full width. For pan & scan mode the video is unsqueezed to 16:9 and a portion of the image is shown at full height on a 4:3 screen by following "center of interest" coordinates that are encoded in the video stream according to the preferences of the people who transferred the film to video. For anamorphic mode the video is stretched back out by widescreen equipment to its original width. In widescreen or letterbox mode if a movie is wider than 16:9 (and most are), additional thin black bars will be added to the top and bottom at production time or the sides may be cropped (possibly with a small amount of additional panning). Video stored in 4:3 format is not changed by the player. It will appear normally on a 4:3 screen. Widescreen systems will either stretch it horizontally or add black bars to the sides. Some producers may put 16:9 source on one side of the disc and 4:3 source on the other, since "full-frame" 4:3 movies have additional picture at the top and bottom rather than panning and scanning. (The cinematographer has two sets of frame marks in his viewfinder, one for 4:3 and one for 1.85, so he can allow for both formats). The 16:9 anamorphic format causes no problems with line doublers, since they simply double the lines on their way to the widescreen display which then stretches out the lines. What is progressive scan? One of the primary tasks of the MPEG decoder inside every DVD player is to take the 24 fps data stored on the DVD and convert it to 60-fields-per-second video for TV viewing. Since 24 doesn't divide evenly into 60, a process called "3-2 pulldown" is employed, where 3 video fields are created from the first film frame, then 2 fields from the next frame, then 3, then 2, 3-2-3-2-3-2, etc. The result is 60-fields-per-second interlaced-scan video, and that's the end of the story for non-progressive-scan DVD players. Progressive-scan DVD players add an important additional step to create a better-looking picture they generate a progressive-scan video signal through a process called de-interlacing (sometimes called "line-doubling"). The de-interlacer's first task is to look at the interlaced video signal as it leaves the MPEG decoder and determine whether its original source was 24-frame-per-second film or 30-frame-per-second video. The original frame rate determines the type of processing necessary to create an optimized progressive-scan signal. At least that's what progressive-scan DVD players are supposed to do. However, most of the inexpensive models just double up the lines and create even more motion artifacts. What is "DVD rot?" DVD rot makes discs unplayable by impairing the ability of their aluminum layer to reflect light. Its most likely causes include oxidation caused by air coming into contact with the reflective layer, a galvanic reaction between a dual-layer disc's gold and aluminum coatings, and a chemical reaction triggered by impurities in either the disc's adhesive or in the aluminum itself. The vast majority of reported cases of DVD rot have been shown to be due to poor quality control during the manufacturing process or user mishandling. DVDs are a delicate audio/video/data storage device that is held together by a laminated outer surface containing layers of plastic and reflective metal coatings, and held together by special glues. If manufactured with proper quality control at the production line end, placed and removed properly from its storage case when used, and stored properly by the consumer, DVDs will definitely outlive their video tape counterparts. How can I convert some of my old home movies on VHS and 8mm to DVD? The "Guides" section of http://www.doom9.org/ has all the information you need on this and many other DVD topics. Where can I learn how to burn my own DVDs? http://www.videohelp.com/ I just got a DVD player and it pauses, skips and pixilates a lot when I'm trying to watch a movie. What causes that? If you are having these problems on more than one disc it's probably the DVD player. Inexpensive or "throw-away" players are much less reliable than higher-priced (>$100) models. Where can I find the best prices for movies on DVD? http://dvdpricesearch.com Which is the best video connection to use; RF, composite, S-video or component? Assuming you use decent quality cables, component video is the best. Ranked by quality from worst to best; - RF - Composite - S-video - Component Where can I download movies off the net? A reputable on-line retailer. You "upload" your CC info, and then you can "download" all the movies you want. Downloading commercial movies without paying is illegal. What is the MGM lawsuit? Warren Eallonardo and Joseph Corey filed a class action lawsuit against MGM over false claims on the packaging of some of their widescreen DVDs between Dec 1998 and Sep 2003 that indicated that the widescreen DVDs showed more image width than their "standard screen" DVDs DVDs meeting the criteria specified in the settlement can be exchanged for $7.10 or another title from a list of 325 titles. For more information, go to http://www.mgmdvdsettlement.com/index.php3 Do DVDs wear out if left on pause too long? No. DVDs are read by a laser that doesn't harm the disc in any way. Most players will shut down if left in pause too long, but that's to protect the motor. What is the difference between "DVD-R" and "DVD+R"? There are a lot of technical differences that aren't important to most people. Buy multi- or dual format players and recorders and you won't have to worry about it. Ever since I started using labels on my burned DVDs they won't play reliably. Why is that? They can throw the balance of the disc off. DVD players are much more sensitive than CD players. Also, the adhesive on the back of a label can seep through the outer layer over time and damage the data layer. Has anyone noticed a slowdown in service from NetFlix? I used to be able to check out "X" number of movies every month, but now the turnaround is much slower. This question is asked at least once a month. Some folks say that NetFlix will "throttle" high-volume accounts to limit the number of movies that can be checked out in a month, while others insist that they don't. NetFlix is experiencing rapid growth and that can cause shortages and delays. Also NetFlix is closed on the weekends, so Mondays are quite busy. For faster turnaround, it's better to time your returns so that they arrive midweek. -- avdfaq altvideodvd FAQ |
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