Monday, July 8, 2013

Can i download HD films and watch through my tv?

blu ray player versus apple tv
 on ... -set-top-box-showdown-apple-tv-vs-google-tv-roku-and-the-rest.jpg
blu ray player versus apple tv image



dave


Can i download a hd film then watch it on my hd tv connected to my computer? (via a VGA cable)
Would i need a seperate programme to play it or could i just use media player?
Where can i download HD films from?



Answer
yes you can
vga cable needs to be labeled as hd
best and easiest way is to use apple tv - supports up to 1080i
if you have 1080p it does not support it yet - you will not notice any difference between 1080p and 1080i though
on hdtv you do not need any program - apple tv streams movie from yr computer to hdtv
where can you download hd films from ?
CinemaNow web page is
CinemaNow - Movie Downloads - Online Movies - Download DVD Movies ...An online movie site that allows filmmakers to distribute their films via stream and download.
http://www.cinemanow.com/
read also this article
Why HD movie downloads are a big lie
Posted by George Ou
Thereâs a lot of buzz lately about the delivery of HD TV and Movie content over the Internet with shows like Lost being delivered by ABC.com and other video download services with XBox360 or iTunes. I even have friends and colleagues telling me that BlueRay or HD-DVD wonât make it because HD will simply be delivered over the Internet. But thereâs one dirty little secret that people are forgetting or that they donât understand, ITâS NOT HD theyâre getting over the Internet. Heck itâs not even NTSC 480i (720Ã480 60 fields interlaced) DVD quality when you really look at the amount of video data youâre getting!

Oh sure they might call it HD because it happens to be 1280Ã720 resolution which sounds awfully high, but youâre talking about an audio/video stream thatâs 1.3 mbps (megabits per second) at best. You can call it whatever you like and you can even claim it meets the minimum definition of HD because itâs 720p (1280Ã720) resolution but it ISNâT HD for the simple reason that the bit rate isnât enough. A regular 480i DVD is either 2, 5, or 8 mbps and most modern dual-layer 8 GB DVD releases are at least 5 mbps but more likely 8 mbps. A typical DVD movie is approximately 6 GBs of data while a typical âHDâ movie you download is only about 1.5 GBs of data. Do you honestly believe youâre getting more image information in that 1.5 GB so-called HD movie you downloaded versus that 6 GB DVD movie?

[Update 3:35PM - I was a bit shocked to hear some people argue that a 1.3 mbps H.264 MPEG-4 based 720p 30-fps video stream can be better than an 8 mbps MPEG-2 480i 60-field DVD stream. Iâm going to explain something; itâs impossible. MPEG-4 can compress data in a more efficient manner such that it can have a 1.4x advantage over MPEG-2 in compression ratios while maintaining the same perceived quality. However, thereâs absolutely no way that newer compression formats can overcome a 4 or 6 fold disadvantage in bitrate. Compression - especially in the lossy world of video - is more of a subjective thing. MPEG-2 video is already compressed fairly efficiently and youâre really not going to squeeze out any more than a 2 fold improvement at best no matter how fancy the encoder is. There can be marginal improvements in the field of compression but there are never free lunches.]

The fact that a DVD is only encoded in 480i video is unfortunate but it still has more video information and raw potential than a so-called HD movie download for the simple fact that it has 4 times more data. A 480i video stream can be âup-scaledâ to a 1080i or 1080p 1920Ã1080 display with glorious results and I guarantee you that it looks better than that so-called HD 720p movie you spent at least 3 hours downloading over the Internet while your family complains the Internet connection is really slow.

But truthfully speaking, the whole Blu-ray versus HD-DVD format war is silly because a regular dual-layer DVD can easily store 93 minutes of 12 mbps 1080i or 1080p H.264 or VC-1 encoded video with bare minimum HD quality that looks much better than normal MPEG-2 480i DVDs. This format would have been extremely easy to produce and the players could have cost less than $100. The only thing that HD-DVD gets you is that you can either store 3 hours of that same quality video or 100 minutes of good quality 20 mbps H.264 or VC-1 video. Blu-ray players for some reason decided to forego the more advanced video codecs like H.264 or VC-1 and theyâre using the old MPEG-2 encoding scheme which neutralized the capacity advantage of Blu-ray media. [UPDATE 6/1/2007 - Newer Blu-ray titles have begun using H.264 so theyâve regained the capacity lead.] But instead, we have a format war where no one is really winning since Sony decided to cede their market in the next generation console wars with the PS3 to salvage the BlueRay format.

Another huge misconception is that people tend to confuse HD movie downloads over the Internet with HD IPTV. While the acronym âIPâ stands for âInternet Protocolâ, people have the meanings reversed because Internet always involves IP but IP doesnât always involve the Internet. What I mean by that is that IP could strictly be a closed-network thing on a LAN (Local Area Network).

Note: Itâs also a huge misconception that VoIP (Voice over IP) means Voice over the Internet because the vast majority of VoIP traffic happens on the LAN and gets switched over the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network).

IPTV requires 16 mbps per HD Channel and it would be IMPOSSIBLE for it to traverse the Internet in unicast traffic in the near tear or long term. IPTV works on a very localized level within a carrierâs own network where everything travels on local fiber-optic multi-gigabit networks on a multicast (or cached) level out to the DSLAM and only from there does it unicast to the user over a mile of a pair of copper cables. [Update 5:50 PM - Think of multicasting as a massive carpool where data is only transmitted once for everyone whereas unicast means the video bandwidth is multiplied by the number of users. Even a 2 mbps unicast stream turns in to a 20,000 mbps stream with 10,000 users where as a multicast or locally cached 16 mbps stream for 100,000 users is still means 16 mbps of traffic over the backbone.] Thatâs precisely why AT&T U-Verse wants to install miniature DSLAMs within a mile of their customers so they can support a 20 mbps DSL connection that can support a 16 mbps unicast HD IPTV stream over the last mile in addition to data access to the Internet. Other than U-Verse, Verizonâs FiOS (Fiber to the premises or home) is the only other way that IPTV can be delivered to the home. The Cable Internet companies donât really care about IPTV because they deliver their digital television over a different frequency over the same coax cable and itâs a broadcast technology that sends out the same analog/digital signal to everyoneâs house.

This is precisely why HD Movie downloads are a big fat lie being pitched to consumers because even the delivery of 1.3 mbps unicast traffic will bring most parts of the Internet down to its knees if enough people use the service. The carriers are in a strategic position to be close enough to the customer that they can actually deliver true HD-quality IPTV with some level of video on demand and that scares the Googles of the world to death because thereâs no way an Internet based 1.3 mbps make-believe HD video service can compete with true HD IPTV. Thatâs precisely why Google lobbied so hard to defeat the Telecom bill last year which would have deregulated the Telcos so they could implement IPTV and Net Neutrality was merely a political âpoison pillâ to kill the Telecom bill. More on this later â¦

Is anyone else stopped downloading movies from the net?




Grace


so um i jus wna kno if theres anyone else hu stopped downloading movies frm the net since the mega upload guy gt arrested by fbi.


Answer
I never did download movies from the net, but I do not think it should be illegal. If I go out to the store and buy a movie, then invite 10 of my friends over to watch it somewhere like at another person's house, isn't that technically illegal too since they did not pay for the movie?

If I put a CD on at a party I'm having, isn't that illegal since those people didn't pay for the CD too?

Are libraries breaking the law by checking out books to people for free?

I think all this crap is going on because the entertainment industry is running in fear of losing their profits.

I can compromise with them that you should not be able to redistribute a copyrighted work. However, where I get pissed is why it's illegal for me to rip a movie I bought into a format friendly for my devices. Or why I cannot burn a purchased iTunes movie to a DVD with some degree of quality. I paid for it. But apparently it makes it too easy to pirate these things and illegally distribute them, therefore I can't be trusted.

I just think this is all a load of crap and personally I think that downloading, etc, should not be illegal. The market will work itself out. You always get better quality from something that is authentic and purchased - like movies for example - versus ones that are downloaded from the internet. Same goes for music most of the time.

iTunes and all the digital movie methods would be infinitely better if they let you burn your stuff to a disc for playback on a DVD or Blu Ray player, or allowed you to copy your movie into other formats and keep the DRM so at least that way you can watch it on your Apple TV, or PS3 or computer or something, but not be able to redistribute it.



You CAN buy movies that will play on different devices, but where I get pissed is where if I buy a movie in HD on PlayStation Network, I cannot export it onto an external hard drive to be able to watch it on another device. Again, it goes back to the idea that they can't trust me not to pirate the stuff.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Title Post: Can i download HD films and watch through my tv?
Rating: 100% based on 998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Yukie

Thanks For Coming To My Blog

No comments:

Post a Comment