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#21 | |
Banned
Feb 2007
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Has Panasonic provided the firmware updates for the first generation player to allow the advanced audio codecs? Has Sony provided the same for the PS3? I only stated the HD DVD had earlier support for the advanced codecs, and any discussion of the fact Blu-ray would eventually have support is talking about something that isn't yet on the market. All of the discussion about the technical merits as a reason to choose one format over the other are only meaningful to the tiniest percentage of the market, maybe quite a few members here consider it an issue of importance, I know I don't. I have primarily stated the technical merits will be meaningless to the format war and the if the technical differences can actually provide anything we will eventually hear or see, that remains to be seen, since Blu-ray hasn't used the higher bandwidth or greater capacity to any significant noticeable difference to this point. Chris |
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#22 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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It's not like you know people in the video encoding industry who has produced BD and HD-DVD titles. Or do you? Quote:
A bit of format war historical perspective. A few months after BD was launched, Microsoft courtesy of a certain VP, managed to convince AVSFers that the rumor he heard about BD50 being vaporware is true. Trumpeting HD-DVD30's capacity and practically saying that with VC-1, HD-DVD did not need more than 30GB, the HD-DVD bandwagon went on its merry way. However, BD50 did NOT turn up to be vaporware. More importantly, BD50 was supported from the very first BD player out there - the Samsung. Subsequent players from Panasonic, Sony, the PS3, the Pioneer and lastly the LG has proved that BD50 was playable to the first BD Profile 1.0 spec. So now let's get back to your conclusion that there WILL be a HD-DVD45/51 discs made. It is not a matter of Toshiba engineers may or may not be able to produce the production methods to press the disc in volume for mass production. It's about HD-DVD45/51 is not part of the HD-DVD spec to begin with. The implication of HD-DVD45/51 not being in the current HD-DVD spec is HUGE. Supposing that the HD-DVD45/51 spec can be ratified in the Fall/Winter of 2007, it would take at least three more months for the first HD-DVD45/51 players to come out. But the most important thing here is CONTENT. If by 2008 there are HD-DVD30 and HD-DVD45/51 in the market, to which consumer should Warner, Paramount or Universal will author their HD-DVDs for? 90% for the HD-DVD30 and 10% of the HD-DVD45/51? Or would current HD-DVD players be able to play the first TWO layers of a HD-DVD45/51 disc, leaving the studios to author movies to occupy 30GB and the rest unaccessible to older HD-DVD players? All of this is supposing that the HD-DVD spec changes doesn't touch upon the bandwith limit of 30Mbps. What if the DVD Forum DID increase the bandwith limit to the same as BD? How would those HD-DVD45/51 discs affect older players since older players could not process that kind of bandwith? Basically, HD-DVD45/51 IS POSSIBLE, but it would be a format war suicide for the DVD Forum to even contemplate of ratifying the spec. Hence for HD-DVD45/51, its technical merits is VERY IMPORTANT. fuad |
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#23 |
Senior Member
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bd has been attacked so much more than hd-dud. i remember reading that the first bd players werent going to be able to read 50gb discs, and that the first titles released were horrible compared to hd-dud, and that the high price of bd woul cause it to fail and so on. the negatively was everywhere and yet look at bd now! bd's whoopin hd-dud, more than 2:1 ytd. hd-dud is on life support. r.i.p hd-dud, 2006-2007
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#24 | |
Banned
Feb 2007
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You believe that Blu-ray will be shown to have better picture quality because Warner is going to provide the proof with releases on both formats? Chris Last edited by Chris Gerhard; 04-07-2007 at 01:28 PM. |
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#25 | ||||||
Power Member
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HD DVD 30Mb/s total for audio and video combined Blu-ray 48Mb/s for audio and video with up to 40Mb/s allowed for video alone. Quote:
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It's also worth pointing out that, because of the 'meaningless' superior bandwidth, Blu-ray titles are able to use uncompressed PCM (all the way up to 8 channels of 192/24, if need be) soundtracks, so the advanced audio codecs have not been needed as much. There are more lossy compressed soundtracks on HD DVD than on Blu-ray. Quote:
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#26 | |
Banned
Feb 2007
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I have only seen about a dozen Blu-ray discs and fewer HD DVD discs using a 720p LCD projector with 100" screen, I also own a 1080i CRT, Sony KV-30XBR910. I will wait for the proof that the best Blu-ray will look better than the best HD DVD, but I doubt you are claiming the difference will be a factor in the format war. If you think the technical differences between these two great formats will matter in the format war, I say you are dreaming. It would be fun to get a thorough objective review of the same movie on HD DVD using the maximum bitrate allocated to video and only one lossless audio codec compared to Blu-ray doing the same. I don't buy having mulitple lossless audio tracks is important, I know it isn't to me and doubt it is to a significant market. I think Dolby TrueHD or lossless PCM should be used, DTS-HD MA is too late with too little, including nothing to distinguish DTS from other codecs. Whether or not DTS-HD is worth using for the bandwidth savings, I don't know, but I doubt it. Chris |
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#27 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Hello Again CHRIS,
A real example is IDENTITY and ROCKY Balboa and movies That Have Higher bandwith MPEG2 titles are Done by sony latley one of them is volver and Layer Cake The question you keep asking and arguing us with it ,,,yes BD its better than HD-DVD why? i will tell you why: Have a look on Identity ,Do you think IDENTITY can be done on HD_DVD with the same technical specs Including TWO PCM Surround sound which is better than DOLBYTHD and extras and different subtitles +A higher bandwith for PQ arrive sometimes to 40mbs and average range is 30 to 35 Sure it is impossible on HD-DVD and dont try to convince me other way. Yes just i would like you to visit Hometheaterspot and search for this specific titles to conclude what i mean and why BD is far better than HD-DVD After that if we have a quadruple 45 or 51 GB which still an immagination and hopefully can see light a day before HD-DVD loose this war on the other hand we have 100GB and 200 GB one done by panasonic and the other one done by TDK. SO as a result we are owning the strong format which is BD.About DTS you are guessing and dreaming too just wait till we have a receiver that can decode DTSHD master audio and we will see if its better or not.Because if DTSHD is useless i dont think so FOX keep upgrading their BD with it. Last edited by Scorxpion; 04-07-2007 at 03:21 PM. |
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#28 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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There are several there that use more than 30GB (even using VC-1 and AVC). There are several there that use an average of over 25 Mbps (which means peaks are most certainly over 30Mbps) (even using VC-1 and AVC). All anyone has to do is open their eyes and look. The evidence is plain for all to see. |
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#29 |
Banned
Feb 2007
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On second thought, the two lossless audio tracks might be nice since my girlfriend doesn't like subtitles, although I would always choose a lossless audio track with subtitles, she might prefer dubbed. The greater capacity could mean something to me, but nothing to the format war now that I think further about it. She is important to me. Maybe time will show MPEG-2 using higher bitrates and requiring greater capacity looks better than AVC-1, who knows? All I have seen so far and all of the reviews I have read make me still believe the technical differences mean nothing to the market and nothing to the format war. AVC-1 with one Dolby TrueHD soundtrack given the 30 Mbps limit and I doubt anybody anywhere can tell the difference between the two formats. I understand having multiple lossless soundtracks would be problematic now for HD DVD so I concede that difference is important. Of course I could take the position I don't want to watch the stupid dubbed version and want a format that can't have both and favor HD DVD, but I won't.
Chris |
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#30 | |
Super Moderator
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#31 | |
Banned
Feb 2007
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Chris |
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#32 | |
Super Moderator
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#33 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Through my eyes, I like going with the side that has put the most thought into creating a format for the future. In the end, Blu-ray is clearly the format with the most thought about the future.
Blu-ray is still going along according to plan. They've had to move faster than they expected, but the process was well thought out. HD DVD would have to make all these changes to their final plans to try to make it work in a futureproofing capacity. Hell, they couldn't even provide King Kong with a lossless audio track due to bandwidth issues and that was within the first couple of months of launch! Then, space is a issue with HD DVD. They can't fit LOTR:RoTK EE on a disc. To be on a side where the creators didn't even see this coming is chilling. It makes you think about what else HD DVD creators forgot about that hasn't been brought to light, yet. |
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#34 | |
Moderator
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(a) Available on BOTH formats (b) Optimized for each format So far only Paramount titles can be considered. And as far as I can tell they have reviewed at least as good on Blu-ray as HD DVD. With some examples of reviewers PREFERING the MPEG-2 encodings for Blu-ray. The differences won't be blindly obvious. It will be a scene here and scene there. And since these are foremost a videophile format that people hope will become mass adopted (which I very much doubt), these subtle differences ARE important for those adopting now. As you point out the audio issue is the major issue: - Multiple lossless tracks - Lossless on most releases - General audio issues with HD DVD players and Xbox I think it can be agreed that Blu-ray is kicking HD DVD's ass audio-wise. Gary |
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#35 |
Super Moderator
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My signature shows that HD DVD currently holds a 1% advantage in PQ and Blu-ray holds a 5% advatage in SQ.
Keep in mind that there are reviews from a number of the 5 sites (not 6 Chris) that also reviewed T5E and HOFD. Some people on HDD suggest that certain titles have been left out by me in that spreadsheet to give Blu-ray more high ratings, which is absolute bollocks. Every single scored review from those 5 sites is on there. One of the sites even has a review of Robocop, which never ended up being released. If you were to look at the titles that have come out since November you would see Blu-ray having the advantage in all categories, but that would not be fair to exclude the great start that HD DVD had. Currently it's as follows, but I really do need to do an update as it's been over a week since I went through and added the new reviews. HD DVD Code:
PQ SQ TOTAL HD DVD 3.92 3.67 3.80 HighDef 4.02 3.89 3.96 HTSpot 3.67 3.51 3.59 DVDTalk 4.02 3.86 3.94 Upcoming Discs 4.14 3.76 3.95 Home Theater Forum 3.90 3.71 3.80 Totals Code:
PQ SQ TOTAL Blu-ray 3.91 3.85 3.88 HighDef 3.95 4.25 4.10 HTSpot 3.57 3.69 3.63 DVDTalk 3.99 4.16 4.08 Upcoming Discs 4.21 4.12 4.16 Home Theater Forum 3.85 3.96 3.91 Totals PQ Code:
PQ Studio 4.15 Buena Vista 3.94 Paramount 3.93 Warner 3.89 Weinstein 3.86 Universal 3.83 Fox 3.76 Sony 3.68 Lionsgate Code:
SQ Studio 4.34 Buena Vista 4.08 Fox 4.05 Sony 3.97 Paramount 3.88 Lionsgate 3.72 Universal 3.62 Warner 3.55 Weinstein Code:
Total Studio 4.24 Buena Vista 3.95 Fox 3.95 Paramount 3.91 Sony 3.79 Universal 3.78 Lionsgate 3.78 Warner 3.72 Weinstein |
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#36 | |
Moderator
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AQ: 4.34 (BVHE) - 3.72 (UNI) = 0.62 4.34 (BVHE) - 3.62 (WB) = 0.72 That's pretty HUGE for an average. Gary |
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#37 | |
Moderator
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![]() One of the arguments BD supporters use is that the format can improve steadily over time, and that HD DVD peaked right at the start. Gary |
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#38 | |
Banned
Feb 2007
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Chris |
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#39 |
Super Moderator
![]() Nov 2006
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It is infact VC-1 that should have a different name, AVC has been around for much longer.
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#40 | |
Power Member
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Multiple lossless audio tracks: it's not important to me, but it is surely important to the studios, and the ability to support this sort of thing without damaging picture quality is where Blu-ray has a clear advantage over HD DVD. I really don't see how anyone could argue otherwise. I'm with you, I don't need a lossless dubbed audio track either, but the studio may feel the need to put it on there for certain markets. Just take a look at the Identity release that has already been mentioned. It's important to remember also that, when speaking about bandwidth and audio, it's not just the main audio soundtrack we're talking about here, but any additional audio commentaries, etc. all of that adds to the total mux-rate and takes up bandwidth. I agree with you about using Dolby TrueHD and uncompressed PCM when it comes to movie soundtracks. DTS screwed up by changing the specs too much and arriving too late in the game. I don't really see any advantage to using DTS-HD MA over TrueHD, unless maybe it uses less bandwidth (does anyone know if it does?). The only use I see for DTS-HD MA is possibly for music-only Blu-ray releases as it can do 192/24 all the way up to 8 channels, which I believe TrueHD cannot - someone correct me if I'm wrong, please. Last edited by GoldenRedux; 04-15-2007 at 04:30 PM. |
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