Saturday, April 12, 2014

Blu Ray Players, Can i use HDMI for video only and RCA for audio?




levi123112


My tv has a bad hdmi port that has poor quality so i have to use a hdmi to DVI cable for it to connect to my computer, Now my computer has a 3.5mm audio jack so i can get audio fine but im looking to buy a blu ray player and i don't see any Blu Ray Players that are cheap with 3.5mm audio jacks. So does that mean i cannot get audio? or do Blu Ray Players have an option to have Video only though hdmi and Audio though something like RCA? it seems like they should have a feature like that but i have never owned one and cant find anything online about it, Thanks in advance for any info you can share.


Answer
Most DVD and blu ray players have RCA audio/video outputs that are always active. There is no such thing as HDMI with video only, but that's not an issue. Just connect with HDMI to DVI the way you are now. Then connect to the RCA stereo outputs with a cable that has RCA one one end and the 3.5mm jack on the other end.

There's only one problem, are you going to run this into a PC monitor? People post about this problem just about every day and it has to do with HDCP. Not all computer devices are HDCP compliant, so this means that you might not get a picture. So this will work, but since you didn't give too much detail, I'm not sure if you'll run into a HDCP issue.

blu ray player help!?!?!?!?




Josh


i set up my blu ray and everything but when i turn it on and go to the right channel theirs just a bunch up static you can see some words and colors but its pretty much just the normal thing you see when you start it up but a bunch of static over it any help??


Answer
What do you mean "right channel"?

While an RF modulator can be used to convert video signals from a DVD or Blu-ray player into a coaxial cable signal that is then tuned by the TV tuner this a) gives poor results (and won't work with digital tuners), and b) is unnecessary with an HDTV. It's much better to connected the video outputs of a Blu-ray player direct to one of the HDTV video input jacks ... preferably using an HDMI cable, but alternatively component (triple RCA cable coded red.green.blue), or as a last resort, composite (yellow RCA)). You then don't have to select a channel (you aren't using the tuner) since you are feeding the signal direct to the display from the Blu-ray player. All you have to do is select the right input port on the TV.

If you DON'T have a HDTV you won't get ANY benefit from Blu-ray ... take the player back and get your money back.




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is there a blu ray player that can stream media from my mac to the blu ray player?




jimmybob 2


i want a blu ray player with netflix, and the ability to stream from my computer (mac) to my tv. anyone know how to do this?
and no, i don't want to move my DESKTOP mac all the way downstairs to hook it up to my tv



Answer
The Mac is hooked directly up to the HDTV, not the Blu ray, you can use DVI, VGA or HDMI to connect the computer to the HDTV HDMI is the best but your computer has to have it...

How to format Usb to work on Blu-ray player, Mac?

Q. I have a LG Twin HD recorder/Blu-ray Combo and a 16GB SanDisk U3 Cruzer Micro Media USB.

The blu-ray player is capable of reading movies on a USB but when i plug in the USB it doesn't even show up.
I've tried formating it to FAT32, didn't work, i tried FAT16, worked but only up to 2GB and the movie is 7GB (blu-ray quality: Transformers :))
If anyone has any idea on how to make it work it would be really appreciated. :)

Thankyou so much in advance. :)
I have a LG Twin HD recorder/Blu-ray Combo and a 16GB SanDisk U3 Cruzer Micro Media USB.

The blu-ray player is capable of reading movies on a USB but when i plug in the USB it doesn't even show up.
I've tried formating it to FAT32, didn't work, i tried FAT16, worked but only up to 2GB and the movie is 7GB (blu-ray quality: Transformers :))
If anyone has any idea on how to make it work it would be really appreciated. :)

Thankyou so much in advance. :)


@cabrioleur
i did everything you said, but when it comes to the password part, it won't let me type anything. :(


Answer
LG Combo supports NTFS file system. You have 2 choices. One is to do it from windows (must be NT, 2000, or higher), or install ntfs-3g ( http://www.tuxera.com/mac/ntfs-3g-2010.5.22-macosx.dmg ) which is a free, open source addition to your kernel that will let you write to ntfs partition, and additionally, gives you a handy terminal command to format drives.

The command is newfs_ntfs-3g. First go to disk utility, and select your usb drive. click on info in the left upper corner. The line you have to remember, or write down, is disk identifier. It will be probably something like disk2s1. Close disk utility. Make sure your usb drive is unmounted. Now, open the terminal, and type in
sudo newfs_ntfs-3g -f /dev/<diskidentificator>
Replace <diskidentificator> with the disk identifier from disk utility. The command sudo tels it to do it as an administrator, so it will ask for a password. option -f will tell it to format it.

Viola, your ntfs usb stick is ready. Plus, your mac can read and write ntfs filesystem.




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what files will a PS3 play?




someone


i have a bunch of movies/tv shows on my pc in avi, mkv, wmv, mp4, etc... can i play those files via wifi or usb with the ps3?

im still debating if i should get a xbox or ps3, but the ps3 plays bluray disks...

thanks in advance



Answer
I watch torrent files via usb, it plays different formats avi, mkv, etc. I use the DivX plus player and it pretty good, I just click on transfer to Ps3 and it asks to insert usb drive. Some files, I don't know why, try to convert and it will take the actual time of the file to transfer (so when it says 42 minutes for a tv show instead of 32 seconds I just watch on my pc... lol) I tried to convert the file once and it didn't look good. The DivX plus player also transfers to Dvd player, blu ray player and tv... and I think it is free to download.

But back to your question: Movie and video file formats supported by the PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system:

MPEG-1 (MPEG Audio Layer 2)


MPEG-2 PS (MPEG2 Audio Layer 2, AAC LC, AC3 (Dolby Digital), LPCM)


MPEG-2 TS (MPEG2 Audio Layer 2) AVCHD (.m2ts / .mts)


Memory Stick⢠Video Formats
MPEG-4 SP (AAC LC)
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC Main Profile (AAC LC)


AVI
Motion JPEG (Linear PCM)
Motion JPEG (u-Law)


MP4 File Format
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC High Profile (AAC LC)


DivX and VC-1 (WMV)6
Requires PlayStation 3 system software version 2.10 or higher.



Things to note about movie/video formats and playback :

Depending on the data type, some files may not be playable or some control panel options may not function during playback.
Some video files distributed over the Internet have playback restrictions. For details, contact the content provider.
When using a USB adaptor to play video files, you may need to use a USB adaptor (not included) that supports copyright-protection features (to play copyright-protected files). When using a USB adaptor to play AVCHD-format video files saved on Memory Stick media, use a device that supports Hi-Speed USB (USB 2.0).
If your video files are copy protected, they may not play on the PlayStation 3 system.


1 When outputting DVD content or PlayStation®3 format software in SD resolution, only discs recorded in the NTSC standard can be played.

2 Multi-channel Super Audio CD playback requires a multi-channel audio receiver with HDMI input.

3 Playback only.

4 Playback of BD-RE ver 1.0 discs is not supported.

5 Copyright-protected Blu-ray video discs can only be output at 1080p using an HDMI cable connected to a device that is compatible with the HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection) standard.

6 To play VC-1 (WMV) format files, you must go to (Settings) > (System Settings) and set [Enable WMA Playback]. Copyright-protected files or files that were encoded by using DivX 3.11 cannot be played.

7 With system update version 2.10 or greater, Blu-ray Disc Profile 1.1 is now supported. This allows the "Picture in Picture" feature to be used with some Profile 1.1-compatible Blu-ray Discs. Features available vary depending on the disc.

8 Blu-ray Discs programmed in 1080p 24Hz are supported via the HDMI port only. To enable this setting go to [Settings] > [BD/DVD Settings] > [BD 1080p 24 Hz Output (HDMI)] and change this setting to "Automatic." Note that both the display/AV amplifier (receiver) and the Blu-ray Disc in use must support 1080p 24Hz for this output to be supported.

9 BD-R version 1.2 (LTH* BD-R) discs can now be played.
* LTH, or low to high, is a recording method that supports organic dye, write once BD-R media.

10 With system software version 2.20 or greater, Blu-ray Profile 2.0 (BD-Live) is now supported. You can connect to the Internet while playing discs that support this format so that you can obtain additional features. Features that are available vary depending on the software in use.

What upscales standard DVD's better, Xbox 360 with HD-DVD add-on or a PS3.?




deathinnov


Okay, here's my scenario. I have a Xbox 360 Elite with a HD-DVD add on running to a Panasonic Vera top of the line 58" Plasma through HDMI. I have a 80gb (best I could buy at the time), Running to the same television through HDMI.

What upscales standard DVD's better? Is there a noticeable difference, if so what.

Appreciate your time in advance!
Okay, here's my scenario. I have a Xbox 360 Elite with a HD-DVD add on running to a Panasonic Vera top of the line 58" Plasma through HDMI. I have a 80gb PS3 (best I could buy at the time), Running to the same television through HDMI. So that is the current setup I have right now.

What upscales standard DVD's better? Is there a noticeable difference, if so what.

Appreciate your time in advance!
By the way, this is my current setup, and the 80gb part is my PS3. Sorry about that, I typed it really quickly.
By the way, this is my current setup, and the 80gb part is my PS3. Sorry about that, I typed it really quickly.



Answer
the ps3 will not upscale DVD's straight out of the box-you have to download the firmware.

contrary to popular beleif the ps3 is not a native upscaler-because the machine can output 1080p DVD video as standard people assume it automatically upscales-it does not.

if you have not downloaded the required firmware the ps3 cannot upscale DVD's.

having said this standard playback on a ps3 can rival even the best players out there so not to worry.

and for all the hype the 360 fanboys love to come out with-the 360 is not a native high definition DVD player-the ps3 is.

nb:-what the poster below fails to mention is that HD-DVD is dead in the water-blu-ray won the high-def DVD scrap months ago and it won't be long before HD-DVD titles will be harder to get hold of than rocking horse poo because the film companies are not producing their new titles on this media anymore.

you find it is all blu-ray now-and only the ps3 plays blu-ray out of the games machines.

you can have as much DVD graphics muscle as you like-but it will not do you any good if you cannot get anything to play on it is there! and in any case with the 360 you have to buy the add-on to upscale-you can download it for free off the sony website.


you can buy a 360 if you want (don't forget the extended warranty-you will need it!) but only if you do not want to watch movies in high def.

so there really is no case to answer on the part of the ps3.

1-0 to the ps3 in the high-def movie stakes methinks!.




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Does an optical cable between a receiver and a BDT210 blu-ray player pass 7.1 sound?




Daniel


I currently have: Yamaha RX-V663 receiver and a Panasonic BD35 Blu-Ray player connected via HDMI cables with 7.1 surround sound. I purchased a BDT210 Panasonic, 3D capable Blu-ray player. The manual seems to indicate, that unless the receiver is also 3D capable, it will only send 5.1 through the HDMI cable. Is this true? If I use an Optical Cable connection instead to the receiver for the sound, will that pass 7.1? Or do I have to buy a new receiver?


Answer
Your receiver has DTS-HD MA and Dolby True HD decoders on board. You just connect HDMI from Blu-ray player to receiver for 7.1 HD sound if the disc encoded with this audio format. Optical cable is not compatible with 7.1 or 5.1 HD uncompressed sound and you don't have to buy a new receiver.

Blu-Ray Player?




anthpack


Is there any development of in-car video/audio systems that can play blu-ray discs? I could put all of my music on 1 25GB disc and if it had a touch-screen interface like those of ipod interfaces it would be really cool. Just wondering. Also, you could watch HD movies in the car! They just have to develop a HD screen 7". Then it could have a HD tuner, to watch tv in HD. There are systems like these that can tune 4, 6, 8, 10,etc. A system like this would be very expensive, but I would buy one.
But the price of players will decrease, because the PS3 will play BD's and they're going to be $500-$600. It would be expensive, but it would be cool. Maybe you could install a tailgating machine in the back of an SUV with a big screen HDTV.



Answer
Overview

The name Blu-ray is derived from the blue-green laser it uses to read and write to the chalcogenide disc. A Blu-ray Disc can store substantially more data than a DVD, because of the shorter wavelength (405 nm) of the blue-violet laser (DVDs use a 650-nm-wavelength red laser and CDs an infrared 780 nm laser), which allows more information to be stored digitally in the same amount of space. In comparison to HD DVD, which also uses a blue laser, Blu-ray has more information capacity per layer (starting from 25GB with test media currently at 100 gigabytes instead of 15). Sony has released 50 gigabyte recordable BD's and will soon be releasing 50 gigabyte BD media discs[1]. In August 2006, TDK developed a Blu-ray disk with a 200 gigabytes capacity. [2]
[edit]

History

The Blue-ray standard was jointly developed by the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA), spearheaded by Sony. It is currently competing with the HD DVD format for wide adoption as the preferred next generation optical standard, similar to the videotape format war between VHS and Sony's Betamax. As of 2006, neither format has succeeded in supplanting the present home video standard, the DVD.

The Blu-ray Disc Association unveiled their plans for a May 23, 2006 release date at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in January 2006. Since then, Blu-ray was delayed, but eventually shipped in the U.S. on June 20, 2006.[1]

Currently, a Blu-ray disc can hold a maximum of 50 gigabytes.
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Specifications

* About 9 hours of high-definition (HD) video can be stored on a 50 GB disc.
* About 23 hours of standard-definition (SD) video can be stored on a 50 GB disc.

TDK recently announced that they have created a working experimental Blu-ray disc capable of holding 200 GB of data on a single side (six 33 GB data layers).[2]
Physical size Single layer capacity Dual layer capacity Sextuple layer capacity
12 cm, single sided 25 GB (23.3 GiB) 50 GB (46.6 GiB) 200 GB (33.3 GB/layer) TDK
12 cm, double sided 50 GB (46.6 GiB) 100 GB (93.2 GiB)
8 cm, single sided 7.8 GB (7.3 GiB) 15.6 GB (14.5 GiB)
8 cm, double sided 15.6 GB (14.5 GiB) 31.2 GB (29 GiB)
[edit]

Laser and optics

Blu-ray systems use a blue-green laser operating at a wavelength of 405 nm, similar to the one used for HD DVD, to read and write data. Conventional DVDs and CDs use red and infrared lasers at 650 nm and 780 nm respectively.
[edit]

Hard-coating technology
TDK 100-gigabyte four-layer Blu-ray Disc.
Enlarge
TDK 100-gigabyte four-layer Blu-ray Disc.

Because the Blu-ray standard places the data recording layer so close to the surface of the disc, early discs were susceptible to contamination and scratches and had to be enclosed in plastic caddies for protection. The consortium worried that such an inconvenience would hurt Blu-ray's market adoption in the face of the rival HD DVD standard, as HD DVDs place the data layer farther away from the surface, rather like DVDs. Blu-ray discs now use a purpose developed layer of protective material over the reflective data backing (ie, on the label side).

Both Sony and Panasonic replication methods include proprietary hard-coat technologies. Sony's rewriteable media are sprayed with a scratch-resistant and antistatic coating. [3]

TDK also announced a way to remedy the problem in January 2004 with the introduction of a clear polymer coating that gives Blu-ray Discs substantial scratch resistance. The coating was developed by TDK Corporation and is called "Durabis". It allows BDs to be cleaned safely with only a tissue. The coating is said to successfully resist "wire-wool scrubbing" according to Samsung Optical technical manager Chas Kalsi. It is not clear, however, whether discs will use the Durabis coating or if the use of the coating will prove too expensive.

Verbatim announced in July 2006 that their Blu-ray Recordable and Rewriteable discs would incorporate their hard-coat ScratchGuard technology which protects against scratches, abrasion, fingerprints and traces of grease. [4][5]
[edit]

Software standards
[edit]

Codecs

Codecs are compression schemes that can be used to store audio and video information on a disc. For video, all standalone BD-ROM players must be able to decode three codec formats: MPEG-2 (the video codec also used for DVDs), H.264/AVC (a newer codec developed jointly by ISO/IEC's MPEG and ITU-T's VCEG), and VC-1 (a codec based on Microsoft's Windows Media 9 and standardized by SMPTE).

Initial versions of Sony's Blu-ray authoring software only included support for MPEG-2 video, so the initial Blu-ray discs were forced to use MPEG-2 rather than the newer codecs, VC-1 and H.264. An upgrade was subsequently released supporting the newer compression methods so the second wave of Blu-ray titles were able to make use of this. The choice of codecs affects disc cost (due to related licensing/royalty payments) as well as program capacity. The two more advanced video codecs can typically achieve twice the video runtime of MPEG-2. When using MPEG-2, quality considerations would limit the publisher to around two hours of high-definition content on a single-layer (25 GB) BD-ROM.

For audio, BD-ROM players are required to support Dolby Digital and DTS, and linear PCM (up to 7.1 channels.) The standard has optional support for Dolby Digital Plus and the lossless formats Dolby TrueHD and DTS HD. The linear PCM 5.1, Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 formats are mandatory, meaning that one of them may be used as the sole soundtrack on a disc, because every player will have a decoder that can process any of these three bitstreams.[6] For lossless audio in movies in the PCM, Dolby TrueHD or DTS-HD formats, Blu-ray discs support encoding in up to 24-bit/192 kHz for up to six channels, or up to eight channels of up to 24-bit/96 kHz encoding.[7] For reference, even new big-budget Hollywood films are mastered in only 24-bit/48 kHz, with 16-bit/48 kHz being common for ordinary films.

For users recording digital television broadcasts, the Blu-ray's baseline datarate of 36 Mbit/s is more than adequate to record high-definition broadcasts. Support for new codecs will evolve as they are encapsulated by broadcasters into their MPEG-2 transport streams, and consumer set-top boxes capable of decoding them are rolled out.
[edit]

Java software support

At the 2005 JavaOne trade show, it was announced that Sun Microsystems' Java cross-platform software environment would be included in all Blu-ray players as a mandatory part of the standard. Java will be used to implement interactive menus on Blu-ray discs, as opposed to the method used on DVD video discs, which uses pre-rendered MPEG segments and selectable subtitle pictures, which is considerably more primitive and less seamless. Java creator James Gosling, at the conference, suggested that the inclusion of a Java virtual machine as well as network connectivity in BD devices will allow updates to Blu-ray discs via the Internet, adding content such as additional subtitle languages and promotional features that are not included on the disc at pressing time. This Java Version will be called BD-J and will be a subset of the Globally Executable MHP (GEM) standard. GEM is the world-wide version of the Multimedia Home Platform standard.

There is some concern about the cost of implementing and licensing the Multimedia Home Platform standard. The first generation Blu-ray players are only required to implement a subset of the Java layer, and are not required to support certain features such as Picture-in-Picture, persistent storage, or network connections.
[edit]

Region codes

The Blu-ray movie region codes are different from the DVD region codes.[8] The following are the region codes for Blu-ray discs:[9]
Region code Area
A/1 North America, South America, East Asia except for China
B/2 Europe, Africa and Oceania
C/3 China, Middle East, Russia, and South Asia.
[edit]

Digital rights management

Blu-ray has an experimental digital rights management (DRM) feature called BD+ which allows for dynamically-changing keys for the cryptographic protections involved. Should the keys currently in use be 'cracked' or leaked, manufacturers can update them and build them into all subsequent disks, preventing a single key discovery from permanently breaking the entire scheme. Blu-ray also mandates the Mandatory Managed Copy system, which allows users to copy content a limited number of times, but requiring registration with the content provider to acquire the keys needed; this feature was originally requested by HP [10] . The lack of a dynamic encryption model is what has made DeCSS a disaster from the industry's perspective: once CSS was cracked, all DVDs from then on were open to unauthorized decryption (commonly known as "ripping"). However this new technology, together with Self-Protecting Digital Content (SPDC), can allow players judged 'bad' to be effectively disabled [11], preventing their use by their purchaser or subsequent owners.[12] See Advanced Access Content System (AACS).

The Blu-ray Disc Association also agreed to add a form of digital watermarking technology to the discs. Under the name "ROM-Mark", this technology will be built into all ROM-producing devices, and requires a specially licensed piece of hardware to insert the ROM-mark into the media during replication. All Blu-ray playback devices must check for the mark. Through licensing of the special hardware element, the BDA believes that it can eliminate the possibility of mass producing BD-ROMs without authorization.

In addition, Blu-ray players must follow AACS guidelines pertaining to outputs over non-encrypted interfaces. This is set by a flag called the Image Constraint Token (ICT), which restricts the output-resolution without HDCP to 960Ã540. The decision to set the flag to restrict output ("down-convert") is left up to the content provider. According to CED Magazine, Sony/MGM and Disney currently have no plans to down-convert, and Fox is opposed to it as well. Warner Pictures is a proponent of the ICT, and it is expected that Paramount will also implement it [13]. Other studios releasing Blu-ray content have not yet commented on whether or not they will use down-conversion. AACS guidelines require that any title that implements the ICT must clearly state so on the packaging.
[edit]

Applications
[edit]

Compatibility

While it is not compulsory for manufacturers, the Blu-ray Disc Association recommends that Blu-ray drives should be capable of reading DVDs for backward compatibility. For instance, Samsung's first Blu-ray drive (now available) can read and write CD, DVD, and Blu-ray discs.

JVC has developed a three layer technology that allows putting both standard-definition DVD data and HD data on a BD/DVD combo disc. If successfully commercialized, this would enable the consumer to purchase a disc which could be played on current DVD players, and reveal its HD version when played on a new BD player.[14] This form of hybrid disc does not appear to be ready for production, however, and no titles have been announced that utilize this disc structure.
[edit]

Stand-alone recorders and game consoles

The first Blu-ray recorder was unveiled by Sony on March 3, 2003, and was introduced to the Japanese market in April that year. On September 1, 2003, JVC and Samsung Electronics announced Blu-ray based products at IFA in Berlin, Germany. Both indicated that their products would be on the market in 2005.

In June 2004 Panasonic became the second manufacturer to launch a Blu-ray recorder to the Japanese market. Launching in July the DMR-E700BD was one of the first few units to support writing to existing DVD formats, and to single-side dual-layer Blu-ray Discs with a maximum capacity of 50 gigabytes. The launch price of the recorder was $2780 USD, with 50 GB disc costing around $69 USD and the 25 GB disc costing around $32 USD. [15][16]

Sony has announced that the PlayStation 3 will be shipped with a 2x Blu-ray drive, likely read-only as is the case with most game console optical drives. According to Sony's press releases, it will support DVD(8x), CD(24x) and SACD (2x) formats in addition to BD-ROM, BD-R, and BD-RE. The Japanese release date for PS3 is on November 11, 2006. The release date of the PS3 in North America has been announced for November 17, 2006, and everywhere else in March, 2007. Sony also announced in March 2006 their first consumer Blu-ray disc player the BDP-S1, would be available in stores by July 2006. [17]

On January 4, 2006, at the Consumer Electronics Show Samsung and Philips announced their first Blu-ray consumer products to the US market. Samsung launched the first Blu-ray player for the US market, the BD-P1000, retailing for $1000 USD and sporting HDMI output with backwards support for most of today's standard DVD formats (DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, DVD-R, DVD RW, and DVD R), while Philips launched the BDP-9000 player. Both players were expected to arrive in stores sometime in 2nd and 3rd quarters of 2006. [18][19] [20]

On April 13 2006, Panasonic announced their first Blu-ray player for the US market, the DMP-BD10 would be shipping together in late 2006 along with their first commercially available plasma 1080p HDTVs. [21]
[edit]

PC data storage
To meet Wikipedia's quality standards, this section may require cleanup.
Please discuss this issue on the talk page, and/or replace this tag with a more specific message. Editing help is available.
This section has been tagged since August 2006.

Main article: Blu-ray Disc recordable

Originally, blu-ray drives in production could only transfer approximately 36 Mbit/s (54 Mbit/s required for BD-ROM), but 2x speed drives with a 72 Mbit/s transfer rate are now available. Rates of 8x (288 Mbit/s) or more are planned for the future.
North American Pioneer BDR-101A drive
Enlarge
North American Pioneer BDR-101A drive

Hewlett Packard has announced plans to sell Blu-ray-equipped desktop PCs and laptops. In December 2005, HP announced that they would also be supporting the rival HD DVD technology. [22] Philips was scheduled to debut a Blu-ray computer drive in the second half of 2005, but it was also delayed. [23] [24] On March 10, 2005 Apple Computer joined the Blu-ray Disc Association.

In July 2005, information was leaked about an upcoming Pioneer Blu-ray drive; the OEM BDR 101A. [25] On December 27, 2005, Pioneer formally announced the drive which was released in the late second quarter of 2006. The drive writes at 2x on BD-R and BD-RE, 8x on DVD+R and DVD-R, and 4x on DVD-RW and DVD+RW. [26] [27]

Optical heads allowing the reading of CD/DVD/Blu-ray discs have already been developed and are expected to be included after first release of DVD/Blu-ray only drives. [28]

The Panasonic Blu-ray SW-5582 is the first drive to support all 3 formats. [29]

On January 4, 2006, at the Consumer Electronics Show Philips announced its SPD7000 Triplewriter Blu-ray internal drive for the PC and Blu-ray BD-R/B-RE/BD-RE media discs would be available in 2nd quarter of 2006. [30]

In March 2006 Sony announced a Blu-ray disc player, a VAIO desktop PC with a Blu-Ray recorder, and a Blu-ray internal PC drive would be released in the summer of 2006. [31]

In April 2006 Panasonic said it would be releasing a Blu-ray internal PC drive in the summer, the LF-MB121JD, priced at $850 USD. The new drive would be able to comprehensively read and/or write 13 BD / DVD / CD formats, which includes both BD-R/RE formats. It will read both 25 GB and 50 GB dual layer discs and write to them at 2x speeds. [32]

As of June 2006 Sony sold the first commercially available VAIO AR laptop and RC desktop PCs with a built in Blu-Ray recorder. [33][34]

In June 2006 LiteOn announced their first internal Blu-ray drive LH-2B1S would be released August 2006 for the UK market. [35] Also in June Plextor announced their first internal 2x Blu-ray drive PX-B900A would be released in 3rd quarter of 2006. [36]

In July 2006 BenQ announced they will be selling a Blu-ray device for the Europe, China and Taiwan markets. [37]

Sony's first after-market Blu-ray drive is announced in July 2006 with shipment due in August. [38]

In August 2006 LiteOn announced their first triple laser internal Blu-ray drive for the US market would be available in 3rd quarter of 2006. [39]
[edit]

Corporate support

* On June 30, 2004 Panasonic, part of Matsushita Electric, a founder member of the Blu-ray Disc Association, became the second manufacturer after Sony to launch a Blu-ray consumer product into the Japanese market. The DMR-E700BD recorder supported writing to existing DVD formats, and became one of the first units to read and write to dual-layer Blu-ray Discs with a maximum capacity of 50 gigabytes. The launch price of the recorder was $2780 USD. [40][41]
* On October 3, 2004 20th Century Fox announced that it was joining the BDA, and on July 29, 2005 the studio officially announced its support for Blu-ray.
* On December 8, 2004 The Walt Disney Company (and its home video division, Buena Vista Home Entertainment) announced its non-exclusive support for Blu-ray.
* On January 7, 2005 Vivendi Universal Games (VU Games) and Electronic Arts (EA Games) announced their support for the Blu-ray Disc format.
* On March 10, 2005 Apple Computer announced its support for Blu-ray and joined the BDA.
* On July 28, 2005 Verbatim Corporation, part of Mitsubishi Chemical Media, announced its support for Blu-ray and HD DVD storage format development. [42]
* On August 17, 2005 Lions Gate Home Entertainment announced it would release its content using the Blu-ray disc format.
* On September 7, 2005 Samsung confirmed their next-generation of optical drives will support Blu-Ray and HD DVD discs.
* On October 2, 2005 Paramount announced they would endorse Blu-ray, while still supplying content on the rival HD DVD -- in order to give consumers a choice.
* On October 20, 2005 Warner Bros. announced they would release titles on the Blu-ray format, in addition to HD DVD Video. [43] [44] Of the six largest Hollywood studios, this leaves only Universal Studios supporting HD DVD exclusively.
* On November 9, 2005 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer announced it would support Blu-ray Disc, and plans to have titles available when Blu-ray Disc is launched. [45]
* On November 19, 2005, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment announced that they finished editing the first Blu-ray Disc, a full-length movie, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle. The disc uses MPEG-2 compression at a resolution of 1920x1080 (it was not announced whether it will be 1080p or 1080i) and claims to use a menu interface that would succeed current DVD-Video interfaces. [46]
* On January 4, 2006, at the Consumer Electronics Show Samsung and Philips announced their first Blu-ray players for the US market. Samsung announced the BD-P1000, retailing for $1000 USD and sporting HDMI output with backwards support for DVD formats (DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, DVD-R, DVD RW, and DVD R), while Philips announced the BDP-9000. Philips also announced their all-in-one PC TripleWriter Blu-ray drive and range of Blu-ray medias would arrive in 2nd quarter of 2006. [47][48]
* On January 5, 2006, the Consumer Electronics Show displayed Blu-ray movie titles with the 1080p logo on the case.[49]
* On January 12, 2006 Digital Playground, a prominent pornographic movie studio, announced it would release its content using the Blu-ray disc format. [50]
* On March 7, 2006 Sony announced it would be shipping rewriteable single-layer 25 GB 2x speed Blu-ray discs to Europe, with dual-layer discs arriving later in the year. [51]
* On March 16, 2006 Sony announced a Blu-ray disc player, the first VAIO desktop PC with a Blu-Ray recorder, and a Blu-ray internal PC drive would be released in the summer of 2006. The VAIO PC would be shipped with a free 25 GB Blank BD-RE (rewritable) Blu-ray disc worth $25 USD. [52]
* On April 3, 2006 Blueray, an Italian videoproduction company, announced it would release its content using the Blu-ray disc format. [53]
* On April 10, 2006 TDK announced in a press release that it began shipping 25 GB BD-R and BD-RE media (at prices of $19.99 USD and $24.99 USD respectively). TDK also announced that it would be releasing 50 GB BD-R and BD-RE media later this year (at prices of $47.99 USD and $59.99 respectively). [54]
* On May 16, 2006 Sony announced its first VAIO notebook computer that will include a built-in Blu-ray burner with a 17" WUXGA display capable of displaying 1080p (at a price of $3499.99 USD). The VAIO shipped in June including software to play Blu-ray movies and an HDMI-A input for other HD devices. [55]
* On May 17, 2006 Pioneer shipped BDR-101A, a PC-based Blu-ray burner drive.[56]
* On June 15, 2006, Samsung announced the industry's first BD-P1000 player had begun shipping to US retail stores for availability on June 25 2006. [57]
* On June 29, 2006, Plextor announced their first internal Blu-ray drive PX-B900A would be released in 3rd quarter of 2006. [58]
* On July 11, 2006 Human Computing announced that it is shipping the first Blu-ray PC software.[59]
* On July 18, 2006 Verbatim Corporation announced that it was shipping its ScratchGuard coated BD-R and BD-RE Blu-ray recordable and rewriteable discs to stores in Europe, with discs priced between £20 and £24 (GBP). [60]
* On August 16, 2006 Sony announced shipment of 50 GB dual-layer Blu-ray recordable disks with a suggested retail price of $48.[61]
* On August 31, 2006 Sun Microsystems joined the BDA

The BDA has over 170 members. Its Board of Directors consists of representatives from Apple Computer Corp.; Dell, Inc.; Hewlett Packard Company; Hitachi, Ltd.; LG Electronics Inc.; Mitsubishi Electric Corporation; Panasonic (Matsushita Electric); Pioneer Corporation; Royal Philips Electronics; Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.; Sharp Corporation; Sony Corporation; Sun Microsystems; TDK Corporation; Thomson; Twentieth Century Fox; Walt Disney Pictures and Television; Warner Bros. Entertainment.
[edit]

Alternatives

The primary rival to Blu-ray is HD DVD, championed by Toshiba, NEC Corporation, Microsoft, and Intel. HD DVD has lower disc capacity (30 GB vs 50 GB), but currently (as of 2006) benefits from correspondingly lower manufacturing costs for both pre-recorded (ROM) and recordable media. In addition, since no Blu-ray movie titles have shipped on 50 GB dual-layer discs, HD DVD currently features more real-world capacity (30 GB vs. 25 GB). Blu-ray detractors believe that the 50 GB disc is unlikely to ever be cost effective, while Blu-Ray proponents expect BD media manufacturing costs to approach those of HD DVD, once production volume has ramped. All Blu-ray movies currently released (as of 2006) have been on single-layer 25 GB discs. Sony's goal is to reach the standard of 50 GB dual-layer discs capable of storing four hours of high-definition MPEG-2 video content, but up to this point in time the cost of mass producing dual-layer Blu-ray discs has been too high. Alternatively, studios releasing movies on Blu-ray may choose to switch to VC-1 or H.264/AVC in the future, allowing four hours of high-definition content to fit on a single layer BD disc.

In terms of audio/video compression, Blu-ray and HD DVD are similar on the surface: both support MPEG-2, VC-1, and H.264 for video compression, and Dolby Digital (AC-3), PCM, and DTS for audio compression. The first generation of Blu-ray movies released used MPEG-2 (the standard currently used in DVDs), while initial HD DVDs releases used the more efficient VC-1 codec. Blu-ray proponents point out that Blu-ray permits a higher maximum video-bitrate, as well as potentially higher average bitrates (due to greater total disc-capacity.) In terms of audio, there are greater differences. Blu-ray allows conventional AC-3 audiotracks at 640 kbit/s, which is higher than DVD/HD DVD's maximum, 448 kbit/s. On the other hand, Dolby Digital Plus support is mandatory for standalone HD DVD players at a maximum of 3 Mbit/s, while only optional for BD players and capped at 1.7 Mbit/s.

On November 29, 2004 four Hollywood studios (New Line Cinema, Paramount Pictures, Universal Studios and Warner Bros.) announced non-exclusive agreements to support HD DVD. Since that time, Paramount and Warner have chosen to release titles in both Blu-ray and HD DVD.

Blu-ray is a very similar format to PDD, another optical disc format developed by Sony (and has been available since 2004) but offering higher data transfer speeds. PDD is not intended for home video use and is aimed at business data archiving and backup. The UDO format is also aimed for similar purposes.

Other competitors:

* Digital Multilayer Disk â the successor technology to Fluorescent Multilayer Disc
* Forward Versatile Disc â Taiwanese backed red laser format
* Holographic Versatile Disc - standards with 200 and 300 GB storage are under development and prototypes expected in 2008
* Versatile Multilayer Disc

[edit]

Released titles

Main article: List of Blu-ray releases

Some Blu-ray Disc movie cases
Enlarge
Some Blu-ray Disc movie cases

The first Blu-ray titles released on June 20, 2006 were Hitch, The Fifth Element, House of Flying Daggers, Underworld: Evolution, 50 First Dates, XXX by Sony; and The Terminator by MGM.

To date, 44 titles have been released and a further 63 have been given release dates for 2006. All titles currently released are on 25 GB single-layer Blu-ray discs. Apart from 3 VC-1 and 2 AVC encoded titles all current releases use MPEG-2 video compression.

On September 5, 2006 Warner released the first 3 titles using VC-1 encoding, Blazing Saddles, Firewall and Lethal Weapon.A further 6 VC-1 encoded titles , Tim Burton's Corpse Bride, Swordfish, Space Cowboys, The Fugitive, Lethal Weapon 2 and House of Wax, will be released on September 26.[3] On November 28, 2006 Warner will release their first 50 GB title, Superman Returns

On September 19, 2006 Disney released the first two titles to be encoded using AVC, namely Eight Below and

On November 14, 2006 Fox will be releasing the first 50 GB dual-layer Blu-ray title, Kingdom of Heaven. Other titles, Ice Age: The Meltdown, Fantastic Four and the recent remake of The Omen will be released on the same day and will be using AVC encoding and DTS HD Lossless Master Audio.[4]
[edit]

See also

* List of Blu-ray releases
* HD DVD
* Professional Disc for DATA (PDD or ProDATA)
* Format war
* Holographic Versatile Disc

[edit]

References

1. ^ Blu-ray disc coming June 20. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-06-23.
2. ^ TDK develops 200 GB recordable Blu-Ray disc with six layers (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-15.
3. ^ Sony to ship blank Blue-ray Discs this month (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
4. ^ Verbatim introduces Blu ray in Q3 (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
5. ^ Verbatim to release BD-R, BD-RE media (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
6. ^ Dolby Audio Coding for Future Entertainment Formats (PDF)
7. ^ (March 2005). "White Paper Blu-ray Disc Format". Retrieved on 2006-06-27.
8. ^ æ¥æ¬ã§ã¯HDã¢ãã­ã°åºåå¶éãç¡å¹ã«ââAACSã®ã³ã³ãã³ãéç¨è¦å®ãæ±ºå® (in Japanese) (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
9. ^ The Authoritative Blu-ray Disc (BD) FAQ: What is Regional Playback Control? (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-29.
10. ^ The High Definition DVD FAQ (2006-02-05). Retrieved on 2006-05-30.
11. ^ HP to Support HD-DVD High-definition DVD Format and Join HD-DVD Promotions Group (2005-12-16). Retrieved on 2006-05-28.
12. ^ The DVD War Against Consumers (2006-05-30). Retrieved on 2006-05-31.
13. ^ Sweeting, Paul (2006). High-def âdown-convertingâ forced. Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
14. ^ Blu-ray/ DVD Combo ROM Disc Technology (2006). Retrieved on 2006-05-30.
15. ^ Matsushita unveils DVD recorder adopting Blu-ray Disc format+ (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
16. ^ Panasonic Unveils Blu-ray Recorder (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
17. ^ Sony unveils Blu-ray player, Vaio PC (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
18. ^ Samsung's BD-P1000: first U.S. Blu-Ray player (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
19. ^ SAMSUNG Launches Industry's First Blu-ray Disc Player To The U.S. Market (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
20. ^ Philips introduces new Blu-ray Disc⢠products and media â the ultimate consumer storage platform for high definition entertainment (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
21. ^ Panasonic DMP-BD10 Blu-ray Disc Player (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
22. ^ HP to Support HD-DVD High-definition DVD Format and Join HD-DVD Promotions Group (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
23. ^ Philips Demonstrates its Blu-ray Disc PC drive capable of reading and writing on CD, DVD and Blu-ray Discs (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
24. ^ Philips All-in-One OPU81 Blu-ray Disc Drive (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
25. ^ BluRay DVD burner for PC? (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
26. ^ Pioneer Launches One of Industry's First PC-Based Blu-ray Disc Drives (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
27. ^ Pioneer Launches Its First Internal Blu-Ray Disc Writer (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
28. ^ Development of Blu-ray Disc, DVD and CD compatible, 3 wavelength recording/playback Optical Head (2004). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
29. ^ Panasonic Blu-ray SW-5582 (2006). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
30. ^ Philips introduces new Blu-ray Disc⢠products and media â the ultimate consumer storage platform for high definition entertainment (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
31. ^ Sony unveils Blu-ray player, Vaio PC (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
32. ^ Panasonic LF-MB121JD Blu-ray drive ships June 10th for $850 (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
33. ^ Sony VAIO VGC-RC204 (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
34. ^ Sony's Blu-ray notebook arriving next week (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
35. ^ Lite-On promises UK Blu-ray burner in August (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
36. ^ Plextor's Blu-ray burner, the PX-B900A (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
37. ^ BenQ to launch Blu-ray Disc writer in August (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
38. ^ Sony unveils its first after-market Blu-ray Disc burner. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
39. ^ LiteOn Introduces New Blu-Ray Disc Triple Writer (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
40. ^ Matsushita unveils DVD recorder adopting Blu-ray Disc format+ (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
41. ^ Panasonic Unveils Blu-ray Recorder (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
42. ^ Verbatim Announces Development Plans for both BluRay and HD-DVD (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
43. ^ Arnold, Thomas K. (2005). Another Victory for Blu-ray Camp. Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
44. ^ Warner joins Blu-ray cabal, Toshiba reacts (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
45. ^ MGM to Support Blu-ray Disc Format (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
46. ^ Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Completes First Full-Length Blu-ray Disc (2005). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
47. ^ Samsung's BD-P1000: first U.S. Blu-Ray player (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
48. ^ Philips introduces new Blu-ray Disc⢠products and media â the ultimate consumer storage platform for high definition entertainment (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-25.
49. ^ Shimpi, Anand Lal; Wasson, Manveer (2006). CES 2006 - Day 2: Blu-ray/HD-DVD, PureVideo H.264, Viiv, Centrino Duo and a lot more. Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
50. ^ Kahn, Kat (2006). Digital Playground Chooses Blu-ray Format. Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
51. ^ Sony to ship blank Blu-ray Discs this month (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
52. ^ Sony unveils Blu-ray player, Vaio PC (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
53. ^ Blueray (2006). Retrieved on 2006-04-03.
54. ^ TDK Begins Shipping Its Highly Anticipated Blu-ray Disc 25 GB Recordable And Rewritable Media; Exclusive Material Formulations and Manufacturing Processes Deliver Bit-Perfect Recording and Playback (2006). Retrieved on 2006-04-10.
55. ^ Sony announces first VAIO notebook computer to include built-in blu-ray burner. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-05-17.
56. ^ Pioneer Ships PC-Based Blu-ray Disc Drives (2006). Retrieved on 2006-05-25.
57. ^ SAMSUNG Launches Industry's First Blu-ray Disc Player To The U.S. Market (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
58. ^ Plextor's Blu-ray burner, the PX-B900A (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
59. ^ Blu-ray ships on PC. (2006). Retrieved on 2006-07-11.
60. ^ Verbatim to release BD-R, BD-RE media (2006). Retrieved on 2006-08-24.
61. ^ SONY NOW SHIPPING 50 GB DUAL LAYER BLU-RAY DISC MEDIA IN THE U.S.. Sony. Retrieved on 2006-08-17.

[edit]

External links
Commons logo
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Blu-ray Disc

* The Authoritative Blu-ray Disc (BD) FAQ by Hugh Bennett
* Blu-ray Disc Association - BDA web site
* BBC: Next-generation DVD battle begins
* How Stuff Works on Blu-ray - Includes pictures and a comparison of HD-DVD and Blu-ray.
* CDfreaks Article On HD DVD vs Blu-ray - Comparison of HD DVD and Blu-ray
* TDK Blu-ray Disc Protypes - 200 GB BD-RE with 6 Layers
* JVC Announcement of BD/DVD combo disks - JVC Develops World's First Blu-ray/ DVD Combo ROM Disc Technology
* The High Definition DVD FAQ - FAQ for Blu-ray, HD DVD, EVD, FVD...
* High Def Digest's Release Dates for Blu-ray Discs - An up-to-date list containing all movies announced for Blu-ray with release dates




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Friday, April 11, 2014

blu ray or HD DVD?




Kurt


On August 20, 2007, Paramount Pictures, DreamWorks Pictures and DreamWorks Animation, announced they would no longer be supporting the Blu-ray Disc format. Citing HD DVD's lower consumer equipment and disc replication costs (due to its similarities to the standard DVD format), all future Paramount/Dreamworks titles will be released exclusively on HD DVD. Together, Paramount and DreamWorks are currently the 2007 box office leaders, and their first two HD DVD-exclusive titles Shrek 3 and Transformers are both poised to be top sellers during the 2007 holiday season. In an interview with PC World, Alan Bell, the Executive Vice President and Chief Technology Officer for Paramount Pictures, stated the exclusive support for HD DVD is currently indefinite. Blu Ray exclusives are found on HD DVD in defferent regions under different studios, and vice versa for HD DVD exclusives but HD DVD players are not restricted on playing them as Blu ray can't.


Answer
I don't think it matters.

The "format war" has now gone on so long that -- considering the reasons for this, and the implications -- there is a high probability that:

- neither HD DVD nor Blu-ray disks (HDM) will ever be more than a niche format ... reserved for the minority that want and can benefit from 1080p HD (similar to Criterion Disks in the DVD world, or SACD and DVD-A in the audio realm). Neither disk format is likely to "win" -- rather dual format players will appear that satisfy both sides and since this will be a niche market the higher price ($500-$700 and up) won't be a deterent for those who choose to support HDM.

- HDM disks will remain higher priced than DVDs (or even increase in price) to reflect their premium status (and much lower sales volume).

- the majority of consumers (and even videophiles since it is unlikely the 80,000 title DVD catalog will ever be available on HD disk) will continue to watch DVDs (probably via upscaling DVD players, including HD DVD and Blu-ray players) and, for an increasing proportion, some form of lower HD quality (i.e. less than 1080p) video on demand or download service (this will be partially enabled by ever more efficient video codecs and, analogous to MP3 in the audio realm, reflect the higher priority most consumers put on convenience than on quality).

- in the longer term -- once digital TV has been implemented so that backward compatibility is no longer a constraint -- there will be a gradual move to replace Blu-ray and HD DVD for high end home video with a higher HD resolution format (e.g 1440 or, possible but less likely, 2K (D-Cinema)), but certainly based on a broader colour space than BT.709, say xvYCC with 4:2:2 or even 4:4:4 sampling and 10 or 12 bit pixel depth . This would solve the problems with HD DVD and Blu-ray re. banding and limited colour range. The HDMI 1.3 specification already includes support (e.g. Deep Color), and 2K display devices already exist. The disc format is difficult to predict, but based on storage and bitrate demands possibly some form of DHD (digital holographic disk).

So ... it doesn't matter which format you buy. Either HD player is currently backward compatible so you can play DVDs on your HDTV in "good enough" video quality. A greater choice of dual format players -- including some form of universal player to handle HD DVD, Blu-ray, DVD-ROM, DVD-R (etc), SACD, DVD-A and CD -- will appear that will allow consumers to buy/rent and play the media of their choice according to the capability of their audio and video system.

Gradually, people will replace DVD players with universal players, but neither HD format will "win" ... they will simply coexist.

Can anyone recommend a Blu Ray player which can also be a receiver?




Jordan X


I currently have a 5-year-old Samsung DVD player/receiver with five-speaker surround sound. The DVD player isn't working, so I want to but a cheap replacement (under $350). I figure it'd be a good idea to get a receiver that can also play Blu Ray discs. I also want something that will allow me to adjust the levels on the various speakers individually. With the old Samsung DVD/receiver, the center channel was too low, but it was a cheap model, so there was no way to specifically increase just the center speaker's volume.

Any recommendations?

Also, do I need to buy new speakers, or can I use my old speakers and just buy a new Blu Ray receiver?



Answer
Basically you are describing a HTIB (Home Theater in a Box). That is what you have now, and more recent versions incorporate a Blu-ray player rather than a DVD player.

You have a bit of a dilemma since any improvement on your current receiver that has a Blu-ray player is going to cost more than you want to spend (and would come with new speakers you don't need). On the other hand your current receiver and speakers probably don't perform that well and it's questionable whether keeping them is the best choice.

In reality, the most cost effective thing to do is simply buy a Blu-ray player and plug it into your existing setup. Alternatively try selling your current system (or give it to someone who needs it) and
aim to buy a new HTIB or (better, but more expensive choice) a separate Blu-ray player and A/V receiver (and, at least for now, keep your existing speakers).

That all said, do you have an HDTV? If so, is it at least 32"? If not, there is no point in a Blu-ray player ... simply buy a cheap DVD player.

See the links for some HTIB recommendations and A/V receivers.




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with a 7.1 dolby digital processor process in 7.1 when playing blu-ray disc on a blu-ray player?







with a 7.1 dolby digital processor process in 7.1 when playing blu-ray disc on a blu-ray player
when playing a blue-ray disc on a blue-ray player will it broadcast in 7.1 with a 7.1 dolby digital receiver.



Answer
Only HD sound formats give you true 7.1 channel via HDMI or 7.1 analog channel connected from Blu-ray player to receiver with HD decoder on board or old receiver with 7.1 analog channel input. If you have an old receiver with 7.1 analog channel input, you need a Blu-ray player has 7.1 analog channel output to get HD sound.

blu ray question?




wood


i have a blu ray disk player and a 7.1 HT-R540 onkyo surround system , i was just wondering how can i get DTS MA or Dolby TRUE or uncompressed PCM to play through my 7.1 receiver , please please help


Answer
you need to find a receiver that can output LPCM and a blu-ray player that can decode DTS-MA. this is probably the best option because there is not a lot of receiver that can decode DTS-MA but there are many blu-ray players and since many receiver can output LPCM you are better this way. i heard and read somewhere that the PS3 can decode DTS-MA but not sure.

http://crave.cnet.com/8301-1_105-9712132-1.html
http://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread.php?t=17174
http://www.avrevforum.com/showthread.php?t=1302&page=2

i cant find your model on the onkyo page to see if support LPCM.
http://www.onkyousa.com/prod_class.cfm?class=Receiver




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lg blu ray player says no disc not reading disc?

Q. when i put a dvd in blu ray player i get a message saying no disc and it connects to net flix


Answer
Hi Charles....Your lg blu ray is not picking up the unformatted dvd because the dvd disc itself is not compatible with the dvd formats that your blu ray player can play....Could also be that the dvd disc is not from the same "region" code...please check your blu ray players manual and if you have checked out all of these things i have suggested and they are not the problem....Then your blu ray player may require a "firmware update"....You can get on to "www.lg.com" .For information about firmware and firmware downloads....Hopefully this has helped you in some way.

Cheap place to buy LG BD 390 Network Blu-ray Disc Player?







Where can I find a great deal online for LG BD 390 Network Blu-ray Disc Player


Answer
LG BD 390 Network Blu-ray Disc Player for $349.00 + $14.95 shipping at amazon.com:
http://www.amazon.com/LG-Network-Blu-ray-Disc-Player/dp/B001UQ6F5M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=electronics&qid=1244517263&sr=1-1

Technical Details

* Blu-Ray Player with 1GB memory 802.11N for Wireless networking NetCast for YouTube & CinemaNow
* BD-P NetFlix HD BD live
* Full HD 1080p output via HDMI with Cinema mode at 24 or 60 frames per second
* Superior audio performance with Dolby Digital 7.1 analog output TrueHD & dts-HD
* Quick boot with instant tray opening

Product Description
Blu-ray Disc Player w/1GB Memory, 7.1 discrete analog output, BD-P, Netflix HD, YouTube, CinemaNow Full HD 1080P Output via HDMI, DVD 1080p Up-conversion.




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Thursday, April 10, 2014

How Do I update the firmware on my Sony Blu Ray player BDP S300 for Mac OS X Leopard?




jthunt_sk8


I have Mac OS X 10.5.6 and i cant get an update for the firmware of my blu ray player unless i have windows please give me a link or some help on what i can do!


Answer
Go to the Apple web site, under support. They may have an update for you.

Mac can Play HD DVD or Blu-ray discs?




HarryFRR


Who can tell me if Mac can play HD DVD or Blu-Ray disks?


Answer
Apple does not support Blu-Ray yet.If you want to play BD on your Mac, you need a Blu-ray player or a Blu-ray Drive to play BD discs.

As far as I know,the Mac Blu-ray Player from Macgo will read a Blu-ray disc from an attached drive and play it in Mac OS X.

Here's a link to their FAQ if you have questions about it:
http://www.macblurayplayer.com/faq.htm




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Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Best Blu-ray dvd Ripper software?




Perla M


How To get a Free Blu-ray Ripper?


Answer
You may try this software, BestHD blu-ray ripper can backup your favorite Blu-ray DVD movie to your computer by converting Blu-ray DVD to AVI, DivX, XviD, VCD, WMV, MPEG4 format for ipod, Microsoft Zune, Pocket PC, 3GP Mobile Phone or any other MP4 player.
http://www.besthdsoft.net/best-hd-blu-ray-ripper.html
Also, you can google some other software:
http://www.google.com

How do I download movies to a blu ray player?




Jester


Is it possible to download (legal :P) blu ray movies to a blu ray player?
BTW Its opposite day :P.



Answer
It is possible, but if you want to burn the movies to blu-ray disc or dvd disc you should use a video converter. I recommend you E.M. HD Video Converter. i have been using it for a long time and it works really well for me. it is a wonderful video converter that lets you not only convert your favorite videos to various HD (high definition) video formats like HD WMV Video, HD DivX Video, HD Xvid Video, HD H.264 Video, HD Quick Time Video, HD MPEG4 Video, HD FLV Video, HD TS Video, etc. but also create Blu-ray folder for PS3 and Blu-ray player. besides, E.M. HD Video Converter can easily burn all videos and AVCHD (mts, m2ts) to DVD, DivX DVD and AVCHD DVD. free download link: http://effectmatrix.com/hd-video-converter/index.htm




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Ps3 slim cant play blu ray games. Help.?




Daffy


My a ps3 320gb slim has a problem playing blu ray games. When i put in a ps3 disc game it works for like 5-10 minutes then begins to make a clicking noise and freezes. Then once it freezes i turn it off and turn it back on and for about an hour or the rest of the day it doesnt even display any blu ray disc game on the xmb screen. Everything else works fine. Such as: music, videos, dvds, downloaded games, internet browerser, and etc.. Does someone know whats going on.


Answer
If your warranty is not void then return it to get it fixed but if it is void then keep reading.

It sounds like your blu ray player is damaged or the lens is dirty. If the lens is dirty all you have to do is clean it and it should be working a whole lot better. Once you do that and its still working bad then you have bopbd(burned out ps3 bluray drive). BOPBD is more common with ps3 slims and is becoming a nuisance to more and more ps3 users. It makes a clicking noise of death before you wont be able to play any ps3 blu ray games but everything else should work fine. It requires to replace something in the blu ray drive maybe the laser or something. Im not to sure

FYI somtimes people mistake this noise with others that the ps3 does normally so here are examples of BOPBD to help confirm you have it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5CcvXuldDk&feature=related. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAMaNilvxlQ. Once it starts to make that sound you may have a good 2-3 weeks to play some blu ray disc games until it seriously begins freezing.

philips blu-ray keeps freezing?




lalaland


I bought this phillips blu-ray player and it worked well the first couple of months but then it started freezing up, it would begin with the philips logo appearing with a green pixelated bar underneath it and then in the menu screen it would show reading disk for 3 seconds and then it would freeze up


Answer
i would take a qtip with a strong isotropy alcohol to the laser lens eye, then use the other end of the qtip to dry it up. ofcourse unplug the player first and be prepared to take it apart, don't don't any of the leads that connect the + and - of any large capacitors, and don't touch any of the ic chips. remember which way the magnet at the top of the cdplayer was before taking it off, it will just fall right off if u turn the player upside down. also don't mess with any of the loading mechinizims as they will just fall apart with little effort but the gears are usually kinda easy to figure out where they went as they have lil pegs where they fit into the centers. don't forget to eject the cd before doing all this, that will save u a lot of butt ache. don't zap urself! unplug, and please be kind, rewind.

keep youself grounded, touch the metal casing often, or run a wire from ur wrist to the case if u think u'll be touching the actual circuitry often




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What is a blue ray disk?




volley lov


I watch disney channel, and they are talking about "blue ray" disk. What are they?


Answer
Blu-Ray is a high definition format for movies and videos from SONY. Its competitor used to be Toshiba's HD-DVD in what was known as the "high-def" wars. Toshiba gave up, and Sony's blu-ray is the standard format for high def movies. The resolution and sound quality is the best format currently, and has a ton of memory. There are Blu-Ray players that can play it, but Sony also included blu-ray compatibility in their PS3s. Blu-Ray players typically cost in the 400 dollar range.

Blu-ray 5 disc changers?




Jeff P


Are there any 5 disc Blu-ray changers on the market? Aside from the 400 disc mega-changer that Sony makes, it looks like they are all single disc units.

I love my 5 disc dvd changer, and I'm holding out for a similar unit before taking the plunge into Blu-ray.



Answer
Given the increase in streaming services such as NetFlix, Vudu, and Blockbuster. I doubt you will see a blu-ray changer ever hit the market. For better or for worse the industry is moving away from physical media and towards cloud based storage. Hollywood has more control of how you watch the content and in turn can make more money in the long run. Personally, I prefer a physical disc so I can watch it on my terms and share it with family or friends but I think that is a trend that is dying much like CD purchases gave way to digital downloads/iTunes.

So if you want to experience killer blu-ray performance I'd opt for getting a changer now and just enjoying it.

PS - Get an internet enabled player with the Vudu movie download service. Vudu offers thousands of blu-ray like quality downloads that you only pay for if you use (not subscription based like NetFlix).

Good luck.




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What is the best software play Blu-ray on Mac currently?




Amanda


I have no idea about what people are using for now to play Blu-ray on Mac since this is my first Mac experience.


Answer
Blu-ray drive is necessary as Mac has only DVD drive as for now. If you are using the Macbook pro you can try the new internal BD drive from MCE.

For the software, you may choose Aurora Blu-ray Player Software, etc.

can you play blu ray discs on a macbook?







i bought a white macbook last november and im just wondering if i could play bluray discs on my mac? would they work? thanks :)


Answer
I own a 2011 MacBook Pro and it does not play Blu the only workaround out there is buying an eternal Blue Player
http://m.cnet.com/Article.rbml?nid=20077240&cid=latest&bid=263&webref=reviews.cnet.com/blu-ray-playback-comes-to-os-x/8301-13727_7-20077240-263.html%3f

From an Apple Forum
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3144581?start=0&tstart=0

Most have been using FastMac now there are others
http://fastmac.com/slim_bluray.php




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Tuesday, April 8, 2014

About Blu-Ray DVD Players?




~Ms. Q~


What makes them different from normal DVD players? Are they better?
Please help me, I am clueless :)



Answer
Blu-Ray is the evolution forwards of the DVD from a device that uses a RED laser and stores 4 or 8GB to one that uses a blue laser (the light is smaller wavelength than red light is so you can fit more information on a disc) and stores around 50 to 400GB.

the ordinary DVD can hold a 2 to 3 hour movie at 480 or 575 lines resolution with 5.1 sound using MPEG4 compression.

a blu-ray can hold a 3 hour movie at 1080 lines resolution with 7.1 or 9.2 sounds so both video and sound have MUCH M4UCH better quality using MPEG4 or newer compression plus can have interactive Java and web links embedded.

some 'upscaling DVD's can take the 480 lines and interpolate it to 1080 lines all this does is smooth edges and not add any detail. the difference between upscaled DVD and blu-ray is very noticeable (like reading with or without glasses you see so much more detail).


A DVD can play normal DVD's and CD's but NOT blu-ray disks

a Blu-Ray can play DVD's Cd's and blu-ray's

despite some people saying the blu-ray will be replaced this year by broadband its not happening as blu ray prices are coming down and sales shooting up. a HD movie on broadband can take 12 hours to download and take 2 months usage allowance and still not match the blu-ray quality.

Blu-Ray player price?




Ryan


im looking for a blu-ray player around $150 or less. anybody know of any. and i would prefer if it is not a black friday only sale.

thanks in advance



Answer
I am assuming you live in the United States. If so, there are good sales on Samsung and Sony Blu-ray players for 199.99 at bestbuy.

Samsung BD-P1500
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=8735327&type=product&id=1201913483931

If you can stretch out an extra $50, this is a superb blu-ray player. It is profile 1.1 out of the box but samsung includes a USB 2.0 drive in the back of the unit so you can update it through USB or even CD to be the new 2.0 profile standard. I know a few families that own this exact player and none of them have had any problems. The player has relatively slow loading times when loading blu-rays but that is to be expected with all blu-ray players. Samsung includes a loading icon to remedy this which can allow you to at least know when it is loading and when it is not. The sony player is very good as well since Sony are the main innovators of blu-ray.

If the extra $50 is too big of a stretch, there is an insignia blu-ray player going for $149.99 at best buy.

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=8777344&type=product&id=1204332499513

Unfortunately with this unit, there is no ethernet port in the back or a USB port in order to upgrade to profile 2.0 so it is not exactly future proof in terms of extra content if that is what you enjoy in blu-rays. I personally do not care about the extra features they bundle and always just watch the movie. If you share the same views then this player would be fine as it plays blu-rays fine. The main downside with this player is that the display isn't exactly the brightest and it does not bear the mark of the popular companies such as Samsung, Sony, LG, Pioneer, etc. that make quality products day in and day out.

Hope I helped.




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Should i get a blu ray player?




Tyler D


I don't have the money right now, but I'm highly considering getting one. I have a 1080i 61 inch Samsung DLP TV, oh and i also have surround sound. This is what it looks like http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-HLP6163W-61-Inch-Monitor-Technology/dp/B0002TMHE6. Right now i have a standard dvd player. So is it worth the money? I'm not to wild about re-buying the DVDs i own, but if its worth it; I would sell them and then re-buy them.
sorry i added a period at the end of the link

http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-HLP6163W-61-Inch-Monitor-Technology/dp/B0002TMHE6



Answer
Well one of the best and cheapes blu-ray players out on the market today is actually the PS3. This is confirmed by CNET.COM and other sites.......with the $399 price tag you get a blu-ray player which plays your old DVD's and CD's and upscales the DVD's to HD!

however since your TV is only 1080i you will only get around 60-75or 80% of the blu-ray experience since you already have a surround system. the other remaining 20% is if your watch blu-ray on a full HD tV 1080P and if the LCD has 120hz processing. with this and surround sound is when you will get 100% of the blu-ray experience.

So yes I suggest you purchase a blu-ray player......or wait till one comes out that can update its firmware and that is cheaper than $399. remember buy a player THAT CAN UPDATE ITS FIRMWARE TO PLAY FUTRE BLU_RAY PROFILES OR ELSE YOU CAN' T PLAY NEW BLU_RAY MOVIES!!!!!!

anyway. if you can't wait to get a blu-ray player get a PS3. if you can wait maybe a year until blu-ray prices go down and they get cheaper then i suggest you wait...

good luck on your choice!

best blu ray player for picture quality?




Max Jane


do all blu ray players give off the same 1080p hd picture? i no the higher the hz the smoother the picture, but i cant afforded a resolution over 60hz. ive seen alot of bluray players but there all about wifi and app connections. i dont care about that. i just want to watch movies


Answer
To answer your question the hz thing is on the HDTVs NOT Blu-ray players. Plasma HDTVs automatically are 600Hz nothing lower and so far nothing higher yet. LED and LCDs started out with 60HZ, then 120Hz on some and it cost more to get it. Now 120Hz is at the price of what a 60Hz LED and LCD TVs use to be, and 240Hz is at the price of what a 120Hz use to be after it came out for a year and half.

As for Blu-Ray players, good ones to look at and pick from:

Pioneer BDP-430

Pioneer BDP-330

Oppo BDP80

Oppo BDP93

Panasonic DMPBD75

Samsung BD-D5700ZA

Sony BDPS580




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Can you play mp4 files (HD/Blu-Ray) on Sony BDP-S560 Blu-Ray Player?




Bharti Mav


I have a Sony BDP-S560 Blu-Ray Player and am wanting to play some mp4 files. I know that there is a usb port in the front, but it only seems to be for photo sharing.
What if I burn the mp4 fils on a DVD? Would the Sony BDP-S560 recognize the file and play it?
I know that the PS3 can play mp4 files, but dont know if this device can. Could anyone please help?



Answer
Hello
Yes you can play mp4 on your player!

http://www.pcuser.com.au/pcuser/hs2.nsf/lookup+1/2D36E6F872B91525CA25706D001BA858

Why do my projector and blu-ray player not read USB?

Q. They acknowledge my USB, but do not see the movie file on it.

I assumed it was the file format/encoding. So, I converted the already-undreadable by the projector (.avi) file of the movie into MPEG2, (.mpg), and neither of the two still wouldn't read it.

Can someone tell me the specific file format the movie should be in? The blu-ray player reads blu-ray discs no problem.

Thanks in advance.


Answer
Most electronic read mp4 files pretty well. I've never been able to get usb files to play on my Samsung LED TV either. I'm guessing that the file system/format type on the USB isn't compatible with the devices, you could try backing up the files and reformatting the USB drive to a few different types of File systems (ex. NTFS, FAT32) to find the best answer, call the manufacturer of the devices.




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Monday, April 7, 2014

Need help connecting a video game console to blu ray player?




Blehh ! xD


So we had an old DVD player which has the yellow, white, & red cables for video games & stuff in the front. Well my parents bought a blu ray player I don't know what model or whatever it is I just know it's panosonic. So I was in the mood for playing video games so I looked in the back of the blu ray player & it had the three cable input things so I connected the A / V cables to it then I turned on the blu ray player & it just had the home screen like of nothing was connected does anyone know how to fix this? Thanks
*panasonic
I found out what model it is:
Panasonic DMP-BDT220



Answer
No, you can't.

How to read ps3 original games from a external Blu-ray player?




Jean-Paul


Hi,
My Ps3 Blu-ray player don't work any more. I think it his the motor that turn the disk. When I put my ear on the Ps3, I can hear the lens trying to move, and the blue light stay on, don't blink, but nothing come to the menu. Also no erroe from the PS3.
My question is: Can I read original games, that I bot, from a external Blu-ray driver (on usb) and play from it. Or from my PC via network. I do have on my pc a Blu-ray driver.
Thank you to answer.



Answer
I don't really think this is possible. Is your PS3 still under warranty? You shall get it repaired for free;.

Also, try the same game in other consoles, from a friend, or other games in your console. It might also be the disc is scratched or dirty, or even your PS3 inside lens are dirty. Anyway send it to repair ASAP.




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Wireless Router for Blu Ray Player?




Ralph


I have a Blu Ray player that I need to connect to the internet wirelessly. My cable modem and Linksys router are in another room. What kind of router do I need to receive the wireless signal and then I can hardwire it via ethernet cable to my Blu Ray player?


Answer
If im understanding you correctly you have:

a wireless router --------------------- wall -------------------------------------- blu ray player (with an ethernet port?)

if this is the case you can buy a wireless access point (kind of looks like a baby wireless router), with this piece of hardware you would configure it to your network (by plugging it into a pc first) then plugging it into your blu ray player.

It will recieve a wireless signal and be plugged into your blu ray player by ethernet, it would be the same as plugging your player into your main router with a long cable!

hope this helps :)

Blu-ray DVD Player Help?




Dogs Best


I need help on finding a Blu-ray DVD player that's not too expensive but still has great picture.


Answer
Samsung BD-P1500
Full HD 1080p Output for Blu-Ray Discs and selectable DVD Upconversion to 1080p
1080p with 24 Hz Video Output
HDMI version 1.3, component video, S-Video outputs
Dolby® Digital, Dolby® Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD, dts-HD
Ethernet connection lets you easily check for the latest firmware upgrades online

Price: $184.98 Free Shipping

http://blu-ray-player.co.cc/cheap-493964-B0014H16V0-Samsung_BD_P1500_1080p_Blu_ray_Player.html




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Problem with tv when watching blu ray...please help!?




lostboy87


I have a 6month old LG 1080p lcd tv and when ever i watch a blu ray there is a humming/buzzing noise coming from the back of the tv.The noise is a low rising to a higher buzzing noise.This only happens when i watch a blu ray,i have a playstation 3 and a sony blu ray player and its thesame with both.I use a HDMI cable and have tried several different ones but makes no difference.So this problem only only seems to occur when using HDMI,normal tv and scarts on other things are fine.Also i havnt heard the noise while playing games on the playstation which is strange.
Please could you help me,thanks!
To tonyr...the tv is on a stand with the playstation under it on the shelf.I watch through my playstation but used a standalone blu ray player and had the same problem.Now i have a ps3 the blu ray player is in my bedroom.



Answer
Buzzing is usually something to do with electricity or humming. also lines panning up and down on the tv. Lg also has had some problems with their HD LCDs. I personally have replaced probably twenty different lg lcds due to electric problems. How far is your hdmi running? is it in the wall? How far away is the equipment from the tv? Are you watching blu ray off your ps3, or is it on another player? Make sure no power cables or romex in the wall are running along with A/V cables.

XBOX 360 vs PS3.??????????????




MASTER-A


Which is better and why in these 5 catagories:
1)Graphics
2)Games
3)Looks
4)Controls
5)Console power



Answer
PS3:

1 Graphics -
PS3 Has a potential blu-ray player which brings High Definition graphics into the system. Xbox said that they did not want blu-ray because they could not afford to pay extra but agree it is better than their current graphical system.

2 Games - There is a fantastic upcoming selection of games on PS3, PS3 may not have the award winning Halo but it has about 15 games coming out per month, Xbox has about 8 per month.

3 Looks - PS3 is a smooth and slick console. It has touch buttons and a fashionable shape. Xbox is a simple system with a plastic looking cover on the console.

4 Controls - PS3 controllers have a better wireless range and last longer without charging. They are easy to hold and have simply placed buttons unlike the Xbox where buttons look as if they have been randomly placed on the controller.

5 Console Power - PS3 has a built in cooler system, it does not start to buzz and feel hot until about 12hours of playing time. The Xbox easily gets hot and makes an unbelievably loud buzzing noise after 2hours of playing.

PS3 9.5/10
Xbox 8.9/10




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Future of Blu-Ray dvds?




mike


Is it worth investing in more blu-ray dvds when hard-drive based digital players are launching in the market? Things like Apple TV, DVR, and Roku are in early phases with a few problems, but there cited as the future of movies. Things can change obviously if their current drawbacks (rentals only and internet bandwith issues) aren't improved in the future. How many people are converting from dvds over to these devices?


Answer
It really comes down to what quality level consumers want and to what degree the physical ownership model (i.e. disks) still applies. The "MP3 generation" value convenience over quality and to some yet unknown degree this may also prove to be true for video.

HDTV programming, HD Video on Demand movies and HD download movies are all sufficiently high quality vs Blu-ray for many people (analogous to MP3 vs CD/SACD). Furthermore for many people who prefer the physical disk model the quality of DVD on a good player is all they need/want.

Blu-ray is the best video and audio quality available to consumers, but to fully benefit requires expensive equipment and the willingness to pay a premium price for disks ... something a large proportion of the population are not able or willing to do.

Combine that with an increasing range of "good enough" quality HD alternatives and the result is that Blu-ray will probably never achieve the same 'universal' penetration of the home market that DVD did. At the moment it is still only accounts for about 10-15% of DVD's market, and for many reasons may never achieve more than 30-40% of the home video market..

The bottom line is that Blu-ray is, and will remain, a premium priced alternative to DVD and for an increasing array of slightly lower quality HD alternatives. Blu-ray isn't likely to disappear, or be replaced by something better for years, so whether to buy or not is really a personal choice based on your circumstances and preferences.

Which is better to stream netflix to my old Bravia (thru my Sony home theater) - Roku or Sony Blu Ray+WiFi?




Dr Apk


Would like to use this with my Sony Home theater system for the best sound quality. The latest Sony Blu Ray DVD player has Wi-Fi streaming - any drawback to using this vs Roku ?


Answer
Sound quality should be identical, the stream is digital in either case.

I have a Sony Blu-ray that works great and I can recommend it. The Sony will stream music or video from your computer if DLNA server is enabled (see 1st link) the Roku cannot.

The Roku offers lots more streams than the Sony, but if Sony offers all you want it is not a real selling point. The Roku may be better in the long run since (I think) they are more likely to upgrade the software to add new streaming providers three years and more from now (they supported the Soundbridge for a very long time). The Roku can (soon?) be controlled from your PC (see 2nd link) the Sony cannot.

If you are planning on streaming music with the TV off, I recommend you verify that the Home Theater won't shutdown with HDMI input. My Sony AV receiver will not decode HDMI audio with the TV off so optical is necessary to stream music with TV off or you may have to use the analog outputs at lower quality. You can test your HT if you have an HDMI source. This should not be a problem with the Roku XDS since it has an optical output that will keep the HT playing with the TV off at high quality. The Sony has optical output so it is not an issue..




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