|  | Posted by Adrian on 11/06/05 21:29 
Alpha wrote:> "Colon Terminus" <Colon_Terminus@hotmail.com> wrote in message
 > news:436e5446$0$29341$b9f67a60@news.newsdemon.com...
 >>
 >> "Alpha" <none@none.net> wrote in message
 >> news:11mqf3ki18dmi49@corp.supernews.com...
 >>>
 >>> "Adrian" <anca@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
 >>> news:XsydnfdWAIVetfDeRVnyjw@brightview.com...
 >>>> Alpha wrote:
 >>>>> "Adrian" <anca@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
 >>>>> news:pe6dnboKMYCU6fHeRVnygw@brightview.com...
 >>>>>> marks542004@yahoo.com wrote:
 >>>>>>> My understanding is that a single layer DVD will contain 2
 >>>>>>> hours of video. Depending on what else is being stuck on the
 >>>>>>> disk that figure might vary a few minutes.
 >>>>>>>
 >>>>>>> try www.govideo.com for technical support.
 >>>>>>
 >>>>>> That should read, your misunderstanding. DVDs contain data which
 >>>>>> may or may
 >>>>>> not be video, which, if the data rate is low enough could be up
 >>>>>> to six hours.
 >>>>>>
 >>>>>>
 >>>>>
 >>>>> What?  If it is a DVD video it must contain video.  If it is DVD
 >>>>> data, then are you talking about raw Mpeg files?
 >>>>
 >>>> Data is data, it makes no difference whether it's video or
 >>>> otherwise. The only important thing as far as DVD Video is
 >>>> concerned is the file structure
 >>>> of the disc.
 >>>
 >>> I suggest you read DVD Demystified.  To say data is data is
 >>> true...but your extrapolation is, well, stupid.
 >>>
 >>>
 >>
 >> Alpha ... you're way off base here. I doubt that anyone here is
 >> actually stupid, just ignorant. Ignorance can be cured by education
 >> but there is no cure for stupidity. Here's a little education for
 >> you.
 >>
 >> DVD's hold a binary representation of something ... it doesn't care
 >> what, just a buncha one's and zeroes. This can be a few minutes of
 >> raw uncompressed video, a 3 hour compressed movie, 4.5 gigs of wareZ
 >> or your granny's recipes. Neither the disc nor the recorder care one
 >> way or the other.
 >
 > All obvious.  However the player DOES care, and there are significant
 > differences in TOC and overhead elements between raw data formats and
 > video discs.  That is all I am saying.  Data is data - how brilliant
 > a tautology.
 
 Hint, when you're in a hole, don't keep digging.
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