Roughneck1
08-03-2006, 12:46 PM
News just arrived in from our Philly office about HD DVD's and players.
As reported in todays Philadelphia Daily News:
"BLU-RAY DOES MPEG-2: To tweak out an extra bit of picture quality, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment announced last week that its first Blu-ray formatted, 1080-by-1920, high-def discs (due out May 23) will be encoded in MPEG-2, rather than in MPEG-4 or the even more efficient, Microsoft-developed VC-1 codec.
By contrast, the first titles for the rival HD-DVD disc format (which has lower storage capacity) will come out at the end of March in the VC-1 format to maximize available space for all the other cool features the discs will pack.
Four film studios have announced that they will not activate the "down resolution" flag option on their first Blu-ray and HD-DVD discs.
Subject of a recent column (which provoked much irate reader mail), that scheme would have diminished the quality of the pictures delivered through the nonsecured, analog component outputs of the player, while reserving the highest-grade picture for the latest-generation HDTVs with digitally "secured" HDMI inputs.
What really persuaded Sony, Disney, Fox and Paramount to back away from down rezzing was an ultimatum put out by developers of the AACS copy protection technology, adopted by both high-def disc systems.
The Advanced Access Content System gang has demanded that any discs with a down-rez flag carry a warning label on the package, sure to confuse and put off buyers.
AACS appears more than sufficient to handle piracy matters and will actually lock up players that have been fed unauthorized discs.
So there you go...
As reported in todays Philadelphia Daily News:
"BLU-RAY DOES MPEG-2: To tweak out an extra bit of picture quality, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment announced last week that its first Blu-ray formatted, 1080-by-1920, high-def discs (due out May 23) will be encoded in MPEG-2, rather than in MPEG-4 or the even more efficient, Microsoft-developed VC-1 codec.
By contrast, the first titles for the rival HD-DVD disc format (which has lower storage capacity) will come out at the end of March in the VC-1 format to maximize available space for all the other cool features the discs will pack.
Four film studios have announced that they will not activate the "down resolution" flag option on their first Blu-ray and HD-DVD discs.
Subject of a recent column (which provoked much irate reader mail), that scheme would have diminished the quality of the pictures delivered through the nonsecured, analog component outputs of the player, while reserving the highest-grade picture for the latest-generation HDTVs with digitally "secured" HDMI inputs.
What really persuaded Sony, Disney, Fox and Paramount to back away from down rezzing was an ultimatum put out by developers of the AACS copy protection technology, adopted by both high-def disc systems.
The Advanced Access Content System gang has demanded that any discs with a down-rez flag carry a warning label on the package, sure to confuse and put off buyers.
AACS appears more than sufficient to handle piracy matters and will actually lock up players that have been fed unauthorized discs.
So there you go...