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#1 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I thought that this was supposed to be a practice that the studio promised to stop. Now we get BDs of classic Peanuts and Dr. Suess cartoons with crappy lossy Dolby Digital?
it's ludicrous. There is plenty of space on these discs for TrueHD or HD-MA. Aren't folks upset? Or do they not care when vintage animation material doesn't get lossless treatment? Just like all films deserve OAR and proper film transfers and lack of EE and DNR, so do all films deserve lossless audio. Even optical mono tracks from the 1920s sound better in lossless than they do in lossy. There's no reason not to provide it, especially from a studio that has PROMISED to do provide lossless on all titles. ![]() |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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But, for the record, I do think it would be great if it does ![]() |
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#8 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
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Really. Take a 100 year old edison phonograph recording and transfer it to 24-bit 96kHz linear PCM. That sounds pretty much identical to the original recording. Now downconvert to lossy Dolby at 192. It sounds anemic by comparison... yes... even when we're talking about a frequency-limited hiss-filled recording. Since it's no harder, and no more expensive to put lossy on the disc, it should always be there. PERIOD. Quote:
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#9 |
Super Moderator
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#10 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Jeff commented on this earlier over in the Digital Bits thread I believe- basically just like where on DVD a lot of "cheap" or "old" animation had just stereo or mono tracks instead of DD or DTS, the same is occurring here, only instead using DD 5.1 instead of TrueHD or DTS-HD MA. Let's be realistic and note that this is Peanuts we're talking about, not War of the Worlds or something else with a little more... life in the audio.
I don't disagree with the OP's argument, but I think that some pragmatism needs to be applied. They're simply not going to put the work into some of these titles that they would a blockbuster. Last edited by aramis109; 11-06-2009 at 04:03 PM. |
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#11 |
Special Member
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Just to play devil's advocate, how do you know it's no harder and no more expensive? If a DD track already exists for a catalog title and a lossless one does not, surely it's somewhat harder and more expensive, even if only slightly.
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#14 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#15 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Lossless ALWAYS sounds better. Really. My example of transfering a 100 year old edison phonograph recording is not an exaggeration. Statements like yours are no different that folks who say things like "Television animation can't really benefit from HD because of limitations of the source". Just like the picture, with all its faults, can look better in HD than in SD, so can the audio sound better in lossless than lossy. Really. As long as a studio is taking the time and trouble to author a Blu-ray, and consumers are spending the cash to buy it, lossless audio should be part of the package. PERIOD. If you personally don't appreciate the improvement in audio quality with that particular source or on your system, no harm no foul. But for those who can and do, they get a BD that's authored up to industry standards. |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Warner's home video department is a corporate and poorly structured behemoth. The television releases and family releases (which the Peanuts titles fall under) are run by different people than the theatrical film department. It is why WB is so inconsistent from release to release and are the only major studio left releasing anything but lossless audio.
It has cost them sales, as I simply will not buy new Blu-rays with lossy audio. I wait until I can get them on the secondary market, to avoid directly supporting these flawed releases with my money. Warner's entire vision of the Blu-ray market appears to be very different from the other Hollywood studios. Their releases mostly appear to be just another chance to double-dip on movies they sold repeatedly on dvd, in a slightly new format. Shortsighted cost-cutting maneuvers have made many of their Blu-rays substandard and hurt the brand's reputation. |
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#18 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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They come from lossless PCM masters. Therefore, for every lossy audio track out there, there's a linear PCM master that was used to make it also on the shelf. It's as hard as pressing a button to have that LPCM master encoded in TrueHD or DTS-HD. It's even easier just to do stereo or mono LPCM on the BD... which is an option that's 100% legitimate. |
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#20 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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I hope the people responsible for these decisions are fired, much as the HD DVD cabal at Warner was pushed out. |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Is "lossy" audio always lossy? | Audio Theory and Discussion | jsteinhauer | 14 | 01-29-2010 04:56 PM |
Interview With A Vampire- still worth buying even with the lossy audio? | Movies | JLant19 | 8 | 09-25-2009 11:32 PM |
is Warner going to re-release virtually all prior lossy audio releases? | Blu-ray Movies - North America | zor | 9 | 09-02-2008 02:28 AM |
HD-AAC - new lossless audio codec with lossy AAC core | Blu-ray Music and High Quality Music | Shin-Ra | 4 | 01-10-2008 04:03 PM |
Dolby Digital+ and DTS+ lossy (lossless) HD-Audio format | Blu-ray Technology and Future Technology | in2thelord | 1 | 06-20-2005 12:01 AM |
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