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View Poll Results: Should SPE Drop Dolby TrueHD and use DTS-HD Master Audio? | |||
Yes, Drop TrueHD for DTS-HD MA |
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899 | 58.76% |
No, I like things the way they are |
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152 | 9.93% |
Wouldn't matter to me either way |
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450 | 29.41% |
Other |
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29 | 1.90% |
Voters: 1530. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#1041 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Have you ever heard of spiffs, concessions, payola and other means to get someone to use your product. dts is giving these studios concessions to get their codec to be used. It is not because it is necessarily better. Sure the wind is blowing in dts' favor at the moment, but will it be when those current agreements expire? dts is living on borrowed time. If it weren't for the current use of a newer product on a physical HD media, then dts would not have a significant product market share in any of their consumer areas. dts DVD is dead and dts will never be used on digital TV broadcasts. Their only hope to stay relevant in the consumer market is to be #1 audio codec on BD. Otherwise there is not much of reason anymore to include dts decoders in AV products. As far as 7.1, Dolby can do it as well without issues. There is nothing inherently difficult about encoding it. But as another user pointed out to me, many of these '7.1' tracks were created by just applying a matrix algorithm then hardcoding the result to a 7.1 encode. So I am not that excited by '7.1' tracks unless they were specifically created by the original mixer. Last edited by Tok; 06-11-2009 at 11:43 PM. |
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#1042 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Sep 2008
Bainbridge Island, WA
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So, we are left with a new function that has no current value, questionable future value, and causes problems with current equipment (7.1 downmixes and forced channel duplication that prevents better matrix techniques). All in all, DTS speaker remapping seems to offer reasons to stay with TrueHD rather than switch. |
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#1043 |
Power Member
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I have to admit I scratch my head when we talk space and bandwidth savings between the codecs. While in theory, the combination of TRUEHD and DD in some cases could prove to be less in bandwidth cause the DTS core is running at 1.5mbs whereas the DD legacy track runs at 640kbs, in the typical Hollywood film, that's a few exceptions when the lossless rate would drop below 1.5, and those would be the only cases where the TRUEHD/DD combo would be efficent. For the majority of most films i'd doubt you'd see the lossless rate drop below 1.5mbs.
Now here's where it gets tricky. Most films will have an active soundtrack in all channels, therefore all the DTSMA has to do is reach the peak necessary for lossless, whereas TRUEHD has to reach the lossless peak and still carry the 640kbs legacy track. Think about it? Do you think the reason why Sony has used 448kbs on some of the legacy DD tracks isn't about space savings? I think TRUEHD's best argument for space savings is for everything to come out 16bit resolution with a 5.1 channel max, that's the closest argument you could make for TRUEHD efficiency. Now if you want to up the bitrate to the industry standard of 24bits, well I think even the TRUEHD supports have to take a seriously long look that the combo TRUEHD/DD is more efficient. That's why I believe there are more 24bit and 7.1 mixes in DTSMA, given it's efficiency over the TRUEHD/DD combo. Right now the only TRUEHD major supporting studio that consistently does 24bit is Paramount. Warner and Sony have been down-rezzing some of the titles. Think about it, has to be a reason for it? I do think if you see Sony go DTSMA, you'll see more 24bit and 7.1 channel mixes from those studios. |
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#1045 | ||||||
Banned
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Look at Close Encounters, the DTS track is consistently a megabit or more than the TrueHD track, and that's still over half a megabit more when you add it's 448kbps companion DD track. Quote:
Just how many FOX 7.1 DTS-MA tracks are there? Is there even one? And they were DTS-MA from the beginning. Quote:
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Last edited by PeterTHX; 06-12-2009 at 07:21 AM. |
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#1046 |
Power Member
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#1047 | |
The Digital Bits
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Until the majority of theaters go 7.1 (not anytime in the forseeable future), that's where the mixes are going to lie. |
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#1048 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Im pretty sure the track is going to be 16bit like all other warner movies. |
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#1049 | |
Active Member
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#1050 | |
Active Member
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In another post the idea of the VBR bitrate dropping to zero was mentioned. However, in any real world situation, that will not happen, even in dead silence, since there is always a noise floor present. Wideband noise does not compress well. For example, when the source wordlength changes from 16 to 24 bits, the PCM data rate changes by 2 Mbps, while the average lossless bitrate changes by about 1.8 Mbps, and the peak bitrate changes by about 2 Mbps. There's virtually no difference, and that means the noise floor in these 24-bit sources is less than 16 bits. That means the bitrates can never drop below roughly 1 Mbps for 16-bit sources, and add 1 Mbps for each 4 bits after that. Last edited by srrndhound; 06-13-2009 at 02:19 AM. |
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#1051 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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There's no DTS on the DVD. If it was what the director really wanted, the DVD would also feature DTS. |
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#1053 | |
Active Member
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![]() Personally, I am happy it's DTS-HDMA. But it's not like I wouldn't buy it if it came in TrueHD. |
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#1054 | |
Power Member
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Thanks so much for sharing your insights. |
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#1055 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Again their only hope is to have dts used primarily on Blu-ray because major content providers are not encoding DVDs with dts any longer. |
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#1056 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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At this time, the THX standard states that rear channels on 7.1 mapping should place the speakers next to each other, in a glorified 6.1 setup. I have two 7.1 HT's, one in with the rears close to each other, one with them widely separated. It doesn't matter much for THX playback - I'm struggling to think of any Dolby 7.1 releases, but vaguely remember that two or three have been done. Robot mode 7.1 extensions such as PLIIx, a Dolby mode, are just as questionable as anything DTS is doing; it seems to be a pretty marginal excuse to stay with Dolby. |
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#1057 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
Sep 2008
Bainbridge Island, WA
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Blu-Dog - I'm going to take one shot at this in hopes that you have developed an interest in discussing rather than arguing about these issues since your last set of posts in this thread.
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PLIIx is a Dolby matrixing DSP just like Neo:6 is a DTS mode. There are others from other companies as well. All of them are applied by the user post-decoding. All are optional and not part of the encoding process. You can apply each of these DSPs to any sort of multichannel soundtrack - PLIIx can be applied to a dts-MA 5.1 source while Neo:6 can be applied to TrueHD. You can use them with PCM sources. This is not a dts-MA vs. TrueHD kind of issue. Remapping is supposed to offer the home user the opportunity to reprocess the 7.1 mix for his/her room layout, provided it matches one of the seven DTS layouts. As previously explained, that only works if the user can tell the decoder where his speakers are placed, which is not possible in any current receiver or player. However, Panasonic, Pioneer, and Oppo have all said that remapping is the reason they've been ordered by DTS to remix 5.1 lossless by duplicating surround channels to the rears as part of decoding. That DTS requirement means you cannot listen to a 5.1 dts-MA track the way it was recorded if you have a 7.1 system and one of those players doing the decoding. You must listen to a re-processed version that most agree is inferior to what you call questionable "robot 7.1 extensions". Channel duplication is considerably less sophisticated than PLIIx or Logic7. Remapping is also responsible for the 5.1 downmixing of some 7.1 discs with some decoders that you confirmed yourself with Hell Boy 2. Finally, please remember the context of my post. Sporxpion posted DTS marketing literature about Speaker Remapping as a reason that Sony should switch to dts-MA now. My post was designed to get beyond the marketing claims and examine that particular feature in more detail. I think the evidence shows that in its current state of development, remapping is more of a liability than an asset. Last edited by BIslander; 06-13-2009 at 04:55 PM. |
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#1058 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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http://www.thx.com/home/setup/speakers/71.html Now, if you look at what THX recommends for TRUE 7.1 sources from Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD MA, you'll see the EXACT same set up as what Dolby recomments. http://www.thx.com/home/setup/speakers/dolby.html |
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#1059 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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For the same reason Sony is possibly thinking of changing. For the same reason Disney changed. For the same reason Universal and Fox have always been DTS-HD MA.
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#1060 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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DTS on DVD is pretty much dead. However, if a director chose to use DTS thinking it's superior (or had a case like Speilberg) I am sure a studio would be happy to work things out. But it's true, there's not much demand for DTS on DVD. I can't even remember the last time DTS was on a DVD (of course I haven't purchased a DVD of a movie since 2006 so there might've been some that slipped by me).
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Dolby TrueHD v. dts-HD Master Audio, Hulk comparison | Audio Theory and Discussion | Tok | 120 | 10-29-2010 07:20 AM |
Sony Switches Dolby TrueHD for DTS-HD Master Audio | Blu-ray Movies - North America | igloo1212 | 92 | 08-19-2009 08:57 AM |
Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio decoding | Home Theater General Discussion | Preeminent | 7 | 07-05-2009 11:06 PM |
DTS-HD Master Audio vs Dolby TrueHD | Audio Theory and Discussion | alphadec | 26 | 05-18-2009 12:51 AM |
Dolby TrueHD vs. DTS-HD Master Audio | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | Zinn | 11 | 10-10-2007 04:29 PM |
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