|
Posted by JNugent on 01/14/08 23:02
Don Del Grande wrote:
> JNugent wrote:
>>Mike S. wrote:
>>>JNugent wrote:
>>>>P.V. wrote:
>>>>>Mamadu.Bwana kirjoitti
>>>>>>I recently moved to the USA form Europe and I might move to Canada or
>>>>>>back to Europe in the future. I am looking for your advice concerning
>>>>>>the purchase of a DVD player which would allow me to play any DVD in
>>>>>>any country on any TV. [ ... ]
>>>>>I'm not sure about multi-system, but I would guess it means that the
>>>>>player can convert PAL material for NTSC tv and vice versa.
>>>>Is that what happens?
>>>>I thought (without giving it too much consideration) that a DVD player
>>>>simply converts the mpeg material on the disc into whatever sort of
>>>>broadcast-type signal the TV set needs to "see", whether that be NTSC,
>>>>Secam, PAL or whatever?
>>>The MPEG bitstream contains flags indicating the TV system that the video
>>>is formatted for. In a non-converting player, this must match the system
>>>of the player or else it returns an error (like "cannot play this type of
>>>disc"). A player capable of dual TV systems may reformat the output for
>>>more appropriate display on the other system.
>>So fpr which system is the video formmatted on a region 0 DVD?
> Isn't that like saying which system is the video formatted on a region
> 4 DVD?
Similar but not the same. A Region 4 DVD will not play on a Region 2
player, but a Region 0 disc will play on any DVD player.
That indicates to me that the disc itself is the same the world over,
*except* for the region-coding, which is only necessary in order to
prevent large-scale personal or grey imports. It necessarily follows
that "PAL", "Secam" or "NTSC" is not the big issue it might seem.
> It can be either (if it's meant for Australia, PAL; if it's meant for
> Mexico or Jamaica, NTSC - more accurately, 25 frames/sec vs 29.97).
> The same with Region 0. (The only Region 0 DVD I own is a Secret
> Policemen's Balls box set, which is PAL.)
Music DVDs are frequently authored in Region 0 coding.
> As for the original post, one problem you may have with a "universal"
> DVD player is the different voltage systems used in Europe and the
> USA.
I didn't think he meant that. I thought he meant a player that would
play any disc. They are available. I've got one.
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|