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#42 |
Banned
Jul 2007
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I'm rather sure that 100 out of 100 people with normal vision can tell apart without problems Patton as is and without DNR on a display/screen of suitable size. I'm equally sure that very few if any ouf of 100 can tell two versions of the same soundtrack apart in a double blind test on high end equipment in a good room: Uncompressed 24 bit and DTS 1.5 Mbit/s 16 bit.
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#43 | |
Super Moderator
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#44 | |
Power Member
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(Sorry to tread in your thread Penton.) |
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#45 | |
Expert Member
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#48 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/movies.php?id=262 |
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#49 | |
Contributor
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#50 |
Active Member
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I posted these related thoughts in another thread but thought I'd copy them here for others to read...
The worst part of this for Warner is that they are continuing to put forward the idea, whether it's true or not, that they are both the cheapest studio and the one who cares the least about their HD customers. If this is an actual business plan, with the future intent to double-dip lossless versions, then I can only hope they end this policy soon so they prevent more damage to their goodwill. At the very least they should come out an announce that they are comitted to lossless audio on all releases as of a certain date. I think it's time for their home video division to show some leadership rather than being continually embarrassed compared to the other studios, especially when one looks at their lackluster comittment to the format as a whole. Many people can have long memories about such things, regardless of the occasional spectacular release like Blade Runner. |
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#51 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#52 |
Banned
Jul 2007
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It applies to the general cry for lossless sound, whether compared to DTS or DD. DD can also go higher than 640 Kbit/s without being lossless. The difference between lossless and the less lossy versions >= 1 Mbit/s are minimal at best and you need professional quality equipment and rooms and very high quality sources to hear them. The former is very rarely installed in normal people's systems and the latter affects all older films.
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#53 | |
Banned
Jul 2007
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#54 |
Blu-ray Baron
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#55 |
Active Member
Dec 2007
Island of Jersey
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![]() i'm trying not to, having got both versions on dvd i'm dying to see how the film will look and sound on blu. To think it may only have the same soundtrack as dvd will put me off for sure. My only saving grace is that living in the UK Entertainment in Video handled the dvd distribution so they might use a different master or failing that an import that has a lossless english track from somewhere else in europe. P-Man, Wicky , Max Please pass on our concerns to the powers that be, This is a trilogy that a lot of people want but in the current economic climate might not be able to afford the double dip |
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#56 |
Hot Deals Moderator
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I didn't say to stop buying all WB products, just the ones without lossless. But if you're happy with just Dolby Digital, by all means buy it. It's your money.
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#57 |
Blu-ray Champion
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There is no possible way that LOTR will ship with lossy audio
The brass at WB have gotten the message about lossless. The problem is that that message takes time to filter down, and they're not going to go back and re-do already completed product either. It's going to take a year, and maybe longer for that to shake out down the chain of command (much less than a year) and to get those discs waiting for a date out the door. Please keep in mind that there's about a 4 month minimum lead time on most Blu-rays, so anything you do today will not show on shelves until Novemberish at best, and probably later since Christmas product is done early. IN THE MEANTIME. Do not automatically assume that titles, EVEN IF THE PRELIMINARY BOX ART SHOWS IT, have lossy audio. They have a lot of graphic designers who have been sticking "Dolby Digital" on everything for 10 years, and they do slip up occasionally (See Perfect Storm) |
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#58 | |
Senior Member
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#59 | |
Power Member
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Lack of high quality equipment and pro installations do present an obstacle, but not an insurmountable one. A cheap and easy way for anyone to get a handle on the difference between 1.5 Mbps _total_ audio data (e.g. DTS lossy multichannel or 16-bit PCM stereo) and 1.2 Mbps _per channel_ for 24/48 PCM is through headphones. A good ($75) pair, decent computer sound card or respectable headphone output in a receiver, and some hi-res music (with an ordinary CD for comparison) should do. I think the listener will usually have to be told (at first) to attend to the greater possible range in volume, bigger ambience ("more stereophonic!") and so on. But once you know what to listen for it's hard to forget. From there I'd tell the lossless trainee to imagine the experiment repeated for 5.1 or 7.1 external speakers. So some amount of education could occur even if there isn't a magnificent home theatre setup immediately to hand. EDIT: Pace Brain Sturgeon, I agree with mhafner that the improved frequency response is going to be a toughie for most people to pick up. Distinguishing the bottom especially won't be easy because people don't hear too well in that register. I might tell the trainee, though, "Listen to the kick drum", "Now pick out the bass guitar" etc. I think that many people will be able qualitatively to distinguish the 1.5 vs. 2.4 Mbps representations of instruments which occupy the low end. |
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#60 | |
Expert Member
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[ ![]() Whether or not everyone can tell the difference between lossy & lossless, I think the point that should be made regarding these movie releases is that we (home theater enthusiasts) want maxed out, as-close-to-the-director's/artist's-intended-experience-as-possible releases which, in addition to optimum video transfers (± changes in color timing, DNR, etc; all hopefully under the director's/DP's direction/supervison), should also include a lossless audio track. Even if a lossy track is excellent, and there are many that are-- particularly 1.5 Mbps DTS (Master and Commander and Kingdom of Heaven come to mind), I don't think anyone out there would disagree that a lossless track, properly done from the same source material, would perform better than the lossy track. The technology and physical space are there-- use it and make BD what it should be: the best video and audio presentation that consumers have ever had access to. [/ ![]() |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Warner Brothers Blunders | Blu-ray Movies - North America | davidPS3 | 36 | 12-29-2007 03:29 PM |
Warner Brothers | Blu-ray Movies - North America | Josh | 0 | 12-21-2007 02:47 PM |
Warner Brothers? | Blu-ray Movies - North America | soright903 | 15 | 12-18-2007 01:25 AM |
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