This is the January 28, 2004 revision of the official Internet
DVD FAQ for the rec.video.dvd Usenet newsgroups.
(See below for what's new.) Please send corrections, additions,
and new questions to Jim Taylor <jtfrog@usa.net>.
This FAQ is updated
at least once a month. If you are looking at a version more than
a month old, it's an out-of-date copy. The most current version
is at DVD Demystified.
- [0] Where can I get the DVD FAQ?
- [1] General DVD
- [1.1] What is DVD?
- [1.2] What are the features of DVD-Video?
- [1.3] What's the quality of DVD-Video?
- [1.4] What are the disadvantages of DVD?
- [1.5] What DVD players and drives are available?
- [1.6] What DVD titles are available?
- [1.7] How much do players and drives cost?
- [1.8] How much do discs cost?
- [1.9] How is DVD doing? Where can I get statistics?
- [1.10] What are "regional codes," "country
codes," or "zone locks"?
- [1.11] What are the copy protection issues?
- [1.12] What about DVD-Audio or Music DVD?
- [1.13] Which studios are supporting DVD?
- [1.14] Can DVD record from VCR/TV/etc?
- [1.15] What happens if I scratch the disc?
Aren't discs too fragile to be rented?
- [1.16] VHS is good enough, why should I
care about DVD?
- [1.17] Is the packaging different from CD?
- [1.18] What's a dual-layer disc? Will it
work in all players?
- [1.19] Is DVD-Video a worldwide standard?
Does it work with NTSC, PAL, and SECAM?
- [1.20] What about animation on DVD? Doesn't
it compress poorly?
- [1.21] Why do some discs require side flipping?
Can't DVDs hold four hours per side?
- [1.22] Why is the picture squished, making
things look too skinny?
- [1.23] Do all videos use Dolby Digital (AC-3)?
Do they all have 5.1 channels?
- [1.24] Can DVDs have laser rot?
- [1.25] Which titles are pan & scan only?
Why?
- [1.26] How do I make the subtitles on my
Pioneer player go away?
- [1.27] What is a layer change? Where is
it on specific discs?
- [1.28] The disc says Dolby Digital. Why
do I get 2-channel surround audio?
- [1.29] Why doesn't the repeat A-B feature
work on some discs?
- [1.30] What's the difference between first,
second, and third generation DVD?
- [1.31] What's a hybrid DVD?
- [1.32] What's the deal with DTS and DVD?
- [1.33] Why is the picture black and white?
- [1.34] Why are both sides fullscreen when
one side is supposed to be widescreen?
- [1.35] Why are the audio and video out of
sync?
- [1.36] Why does the picture alternate between
light and dark?
- [1.37] How do I find "Easter eggs" and other
hidden features?
- [1.38] How do I get rid of the black bars
at the top and bottom?
- [1.39] How should I clean and care for DVDs?
- [1.40] What's a progressive DVD player?
- [1.41] Why doesn't disc X work on player
Y?
- [1.42] How do the parental control and multi-ratings
features work?
- [1.43] Which discs include multiple camera
angles?
- [1.44] Is it ok to put labels or magnetic
strips on DVDs?
- [1.45] What's the difference between Closed
Captions and subtitles?
- [1.46] What do the "D" codes on region 2
DVDs mean?
- [1.47] What's firmware and why would I need
to upgrade it?
- [1.48] Are there discs to help me test,
optimize, or show off my audio/video system?
- [1.49] What do Sensormatic and Checkpoint
mean?
- [1.50] What are Superbit, Infinifilm, and
other variations of DVD?
- [1.51] I don't know the parental control
password for my player. What do I do?
- [2] DVD's relationship to other products and technologies
- [3] DVD technical details
- [4] DVD and computers
- [4.1] Can I play DVD movies on my computer?
- [4.2] What are the features and speeds of
DVD-ROM drives?
- [4.3] What about recordable DVD: DVD-R, DVD-RAM,
DVD-RW, DVD+RW, and DVD+R?
- [4.4] Why can't I take a screenshot of DVD
video? Why do I get a pink or black square?
- [4.5] Why can't I play movies copied to my
hard drive?
- [4.6] Why do I have problems playing DVDs
on my computer?
- [4.7] Can I stream DVD over a network or
the Internet?
- [4.8] What is DeCSS?
- [4.9] How do I play DVD video in HTML, PowerPoint,
Director, VB, etc.?
- [4.10] What are .IFO, .VOB, and .AOB files?
How can I play them?
- [4.11] How do I get the Microsoft Windows
DVD player application to run?
- [4.12] I upgraded to Windows XP, why did
my DVD software stop working?
- [4.13] How can I rip audio from a DVD to
play as MP3 or burn to a CD?
- [5] DVD production
- [6] Miscellaneous
- [7] Leftovers
Recent changes (last posted
to newsgroups on Feb 9):
-
2004-01-28: Mentioned software to convert between
PAL and NTSC. (1.19)
-
2004-01-04: Corrections on low data rate vs. high
data rate (text was inverted). (4.3.7)
-
2002-12-17: Updated production costs. (5.1)
-
2002-12-17: More on aspect ratio issues between
progressive-scan players and TVs. (1.40)
-
2002-11-18: Emphasized that regions don't apply
to DVD-Audio or recordable DVD. (1.10)
-
2002-11-16: Explained a bit better what a pressed
disc is. (5)
-
2002-11-14: Note about DVD-R/RW lead-out writing
time. (4.3.7)
-
2002-11-13: Updated Nuon section to better reflect
its demise. (2.16)
-
2002-11-07: Updated section on DVD recorders replacing
VCRs. (2.1)
-
2002-10-29: Noted the demise of C3D. (2.13)
-
2002-10-21: New questions:
[1.51] I don't know the parental control password for my player.
What do I do?
[4.3.7] How long does DVD recording take?
-
2002-10-19: Added HDMI info to DTCP section and
HDTV section. (1.11 and 2.9)
-
2002-10-10: Updates to recordable DVD info and link
to CustomFlix's DVD-R compatibility chart. (1.14, 4.3, and 4.3.1)
-
2002-10-10: Got around to including minor detail
that encrypted files can be copied if disc is authenticated.
(4.5)
-
2002-10-04: Finally, DVD-Audio can be played on
a PC. (4.1.1)
-
2002-10-04: Updated laserdisc section to admit that
it's completely dead. (2.6)
-
2002-10-04: More on DVD and HDTV. (2.9)
-
2002-10-04: Newer players can read Picture CDs and
Photo CDs. (2.4.7)
-
2002-10-04: Got around to mentioning that most new
DVD burners can write CD-R/RW. (2.4.3 and 2.4.4)
-
2002-10-01: Updated links to MSWebDVD docs. Addition
of link to MSVidWebDVD. (4.9)
-
2002-10-01: Updated section on DVD video recorders.
(1.14)
-
2002-09-30: Updated link to Joe Clark's DVD accessibility
page. (1.45)
-
2002-09-29: 1394 digital audio output now available.
(3.1 and 1.12)
-
2002-09-27: Additional info on user operation control.
(3.7)
-
2002-09-16: Updated description of DivX, moved from
4.8 to 2.10.
-
2002-09-14: More on using zoom feature to "home
pan and scan" widescreen discs. (1.38)
-
2002-09-12: New question:
[5.12] How can I sell DVDs that I made?
-
2002-09-11: Panasonic Blu-ray variation not confirmed.
(6.5)
-
2002-08-26: More candidates for HD-DVD. More Blu-ray
tech details. (6.5)
-
2002-08-15: Links to Kodak disc longevity info.
(3.12)
- The most current version is on the Web at <dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html>.
- A text version is posted periodically as "rec.video.dvd Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQ)" to rec.video.dvd.tech, rec.video.dvd.misc,
rec.answers, news.answers, and other relevant newsgroups.
- Official mirror copy locations:
- A text archive of the version last posted to newsgroups is at
<www.faqs.org/faqs/rec-video/dvd-faq>
and other FAQ mirrors, as well as <www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.txt>.
The following translations of the DVD FAQ are available. Translations
to a few other languages are in progress.
- Chinese <dvdfaq.126.com>.
Míngxič to Wu Lingchao.
- French <www.mygale.org/~abela/DVD/DVDfaq.html>.
(Site is no longer accessible.) Merci
beaucoup to Zahir Abela.
- Hungarian <www.dvdcenter.hu/dvdfaq.html>.
Köszönöm szépen to Ferenc Fellner.
- Italian <digilander.iol.it/pierugo1/traduzione_faq_dvd.html>.
Molti ringraziamenti to Pierugo Mazzaccheri.
-
Japanese <http://discaid.co.jp/dvd/dvdfaq_j.html>.
Otsukaresama to Yoshida Toshinori.
- Korean <www.dvdprime.com/dvdfaq_kor.html>.
Gamsahamnida to Park, Jin Hong.
- Norwegian <www.dvdnett.no/dvdfaq/norsk/>.
Tusen takk to Paul H. Brekke and Lasse Hatletvedt.
- Russian <http://www.rusdvd.com/dvdfaq>. Spasibo
bolshoye to Alexander Lokshin.
- Spanish <club.idecnet.com/~modegar/video/dvdfaq.html>.
Muchisimas gracias to Modesto Garrido.
- Turkish (portions only) <www.film.gen.tr/dvd/dvdfaqtr.cfm>.
Cok tesekkurler to Bilgehan Maraţ.
If you'd like to translate the DVD FAQ into another language (Klingon,
anyone?), please contact Jim.
Also see 6.4.5 for DVD info in other languages.
You betcha. Take a gander at Earl's Famous DVD Technology
Exposition Web Page Extravaganza Supreme Deluxe <lonestar.texas.net/~bdub/earl/dvd.htm>.
Or you might prefer The Simpsons' DVD
Q&A. (Although Lisa erroneously claims DVD stands for "digital
versatile disc" -- who you gonna believe, me or an 8-year old genius?)
Here are a few user
comments on the DVD FAQ. It's the most accurate source of DVD
information in this galaxy. If you find something you think is in
error, please let Jim know.
Pointers to other DVD sites are scattered throughout the FAQ and
in section 6.4.
Since you asked, here are the stats as of Oct, 2002:
Size: 538 KB (551,169 bytes)
Number of words: 64,016
Number of external links: 2,776
If you're wondering why it's all in one big piece instead of broken
into smaller pieces that would load faster, the main reason is so
you can use the find feature of your browser to easily search the
entire FAQ. I realize this causes problems with WebTV browsers.
Sorry. I might break it up some day.
DVD once stood for digital video disc or digital versatile disc,
but now it just stands for DVD -- the next generation of optical
disc storage technology. DVD is essentially a bigger, faster CD
that can hold cinema-like video, better-than-CD audio, and computer
data. DVD aims to encompass home entertainment, computers, and business
information with a single digital format, eventually replacing audio
CD, videotape, laserdisc, CD-ROM, and video game cartridges. DVD
has widespread support from all major electronics companies, all
major computer hardware companies, and all major movie and music
studios. With this unprecedented support, DVD has become the most
successful consumer electronics product of all time in less than
three years of its introduction.
It's important to understand the difference between the physical
formats (such as DVD-ROM or DVD-R) and the application formats
(such as DVD-Video or DVD-Audio). DVD-ROM is the base format that
holds data. DVD-Video (often simply called DVD) defines how video
programs such as movies are stored on disc and played in a DVD-Video
player or a DVD computer (see 4.1). The difference is similar to that between CD-ROM and Audio
CD. DVD-ROM includes recordable variations DVD-R/RW, DVD-RAM, and
DVD+R/RW (see 4.3). The application formats include DVD-Video, DVD-Video Recording,
DVD-Audio (see 1.12), DVD-Audio Recording, DVD Stream Recording, and SACD. There
are also special application formats for game consoles such as Sony
PlayStation 2.
[1.1.1] What do the letters DVD stand for?
All of the following have been proposed as the words behind the
letters DVD.
- Delayed, very delayed (referring to the many late releases of
DVD formats)
- Diversified, very diversified (referring to the proliferation
of recordable formats and other spinoffs)
- Digital venereal disease (referring to piracy and copying of
DVDs)
- Dead, very dead (from naysayers who predicted DVD would never
take off)
- Digital video disc (the original meaning suggested by some of
DVD's creators)
- Digital versatile disc (the meaning later suggested by some
of DVD's creators)
- Nothing
And the official answer is? "Nothing." The original acronym came
from "digital video disc." Some members of the DVD Forum (see 6.1) tried to express that DVD goes far beyond video by retrofitting
the painfully contorted phrase "digital versatile disc," but this
has never been officially accepted by the DVD Forum as a whole.
The consensus is now that DVD, as an international standard, is
simply three letters. After all, who cares what VHS stands for?
(Guess what, no one agrees on that one either.
- Over 2 hours of high-quality digital video (a double-sided,
dual-layer disc can hold 8 hours of high-quality video, or 30
hours of VHS quality video).
- Support for widescreen movies on standard or widescreen TVs
(4:3 and 16:9 aspect ratios).
- Up to 8 tracks of digital audio (for multiple languages, DVS,
etc.), each with as many as 8 channels.
- Up to 32 subtitle/karaoke tracks.
- Automatic "seamless" branching of video (for multiple story
lines or ratings on one disc).
- Up to 9 camera angles (different viewpoints can be selected
during playback).
- Menus and simple interactive features (for games, quizzes, etc.).
- Multilingual identifying text for title name, album name, song
name, cast, crew, etc.
- Instant rewind and fast forward (no "be kind, rewind" stickers
and threats on rental discs)
- Instant search to title, chapter, music track, and timecode.
- Durable (no wear from playing, only from physical damage).
- Not susceptible to magnetic fields. Resistant to heat.
- Compact size (easy to handle, store, and ship; players can be
portable; replication is cheaper than tapes or laserdiscs).
- Noncomedogenic.
Note: Most discs do not contain all features (multiple
audio/subtitle tracks, seamless branching, parental control, etc.),
as each feature must be specially authored. Some discs may not allow
searching or skipping.
Most players support a standard set of features:
- Language choice (for automatic selection of video scenes, audio
tracks, subtitle tracks, and menus).*
- Special effects playback: freeze, step, slow, fast, and scan
(no reverse play or reverse step).
- Parental lock (for denying playback of discs or scenes with
objectionable material).*
- Programmability (playback of selected sections in a desired
sequence).
- Random play and repeat play.
- Digital audio output (PCM stereo and Dolby Digital).
- Recognition and output of DTS Digital Surround audio tracks.
- Playback of audio CDs.
* Must be supported by additional content
on the disc.
Some players include additional features:
- Component video output (YUV or RGB) for higher quality picture.
- Progressive-scan component output (YUV or RGB) for highest quality
analog picture.
- Digital video output (SDI, 1394, or DVI) for perfect digital
picture.
- Six-channel analog output from internal audio decoder.
- Playback of Video CDs or Super Video CDs.
- Playback of laserdiscs and CDVs.
- Playback of MP3 CDs.
- Reverse single frame stepping.
- Reverse play (normal speed).
- RF output (for TVs with no direct video input).
- Multilingual on-screen display.
- Multiple disc capacity.
- Digital zoom (2x or 4x enlargement of a section of the picture).
This is a player feature, not a DVD disc feature.
DVD has the capability to produce near-studio-quality video and
better-than-CD-quality audio. DVD is vastly superior to consumer
videotape and generally better than laserdisc (see 2.8.). However, quality depends on many production factors. As
compression experience and technology improves we will see increasing
quality, but as production costs decrease we will also see more
shoddily produced discs. A few low-budget DVDs will even use MPEG-1
encoding (which is no better than VHS) instead of higher-quality
MPEG-2.
DVD video is usually encoded from digital studio master tapes to
MPEG-2 format. The encoding process uses lossy compression
that removes redundant information (such as areas of the picture
that don't change) and information that's not readily perceptible
by the human eye. The resulting video, especially when it is complex
or changing quickly, may sometimes contain visual flaws, depending
on the processing quality and amount of compression. At average
video data rates of 3.5 to 5 Mbps (million bits/second), compression
artifacts may be occasionally noticeable. Higher data rates can
result in higher quality, with almost no perceptible difference
from the master at rates above 6 Mbps. As MPEG compression technology
improves, better quality is being achieved at lower rates.
Video from DVD sometimes contains visible artifacts such
as color banding, blurriness, blockiness, fuzzy dots, shimmering,
missing detail, and even effects such as a face that "floats" behind
the rest of the moving picture. It's important to understand that
the term "artifact" refers to anything that was not originally present
in the picture. Artifacts are sometimes caused by poor MPEG encoding,
but artifacts are more often caused by a poorly adjusted TV, bad
cables, electrical interference, sloppy digital noise reduction,
improper picture enhancement, poor film-to-video transfer, film
grain, player faults, disc read errors, etc. Most DVDs exhibit few
visible MPEG compression artifacts on a properly configured system..
If you think otherwise, you are misinterpreting what you see.
Some early DVD demos were not very good, but this is simply an
indication of how bad DVD can be if not properly processed and correctly
reproduced. Many demo discs were rushed through the encoding process
in order to be distributed as quickly as possible. Contrary to common
opinion, and as stupid as it may seem, these demos were not
carefully "tweaked" to show DVD at its best. In-store demos should
be viewed with a grain of salt, since most salespeople are incapable
of properly adjusting a television set.
Most TVs have the sharpness set too high for the clarity of DVD.
This exaggerates high-frequency video and causes distortion, just
as the treble control set too high for a CD causes it to sound harsh.
Many DVD players output video with a black-level setup of 0 IRE
(Japanese standard) rather than 7.5 IRE (US standard). On TVs that
are not properly adjusted this can cause some blotchiness in dark
scenes. DVD video has exceptional color fidelity, so muddy or washed-out
colors are almost always a problem in the display (or the original
source), not in the DVD player or disc.
DVD audio quality is superb. DVD includes the option of PCM (pulse
code modulation) digital audio with sampling sizes and rates higher
than audio CD. Alternatively, audio for most movies is stored as
discrete, multi-channel surround sound using Dolby Digital or DTS
audio compression similar to the digital surround sound formats
used in theaters. As with video, audio quality depends on how well
the processing and encoding was done. In spite of compression, Dolby
Digital and DTS can be close to or better than CD quality.
The final assessment of DVD quality is in the hands of consumers.
Most viewers consistently rate it better than laserdisc, but no
one can guarantee the quality of DVD, just as no one should dismiss
it based on demos or hearsay. In the end it's a matter of individual
perception and the level of quality delivered by the playback system.
- It will take years for movies, TV shows, other video programming,
and computer software to become widely available.
- Vagueness of spec and inadequate testing of players and discs
has resulted in incompatibilities. Some movie discs don't function
fully (or don't play at all) on some players. (See 1.41)
- DVD recorders are still expensive. (See 1.14 and 4.3)
- It has built-in copy protection and regional lockout. (See 1.11 and 1.10)
- It uses digital compression. Poorly compressed audio or video
may be blocky, fuzzy, harsh, or vague. (See 1.3)
- The audio downmix process for stereo/Dolby Surround can reduce
dynamic range. (See 3.6)
- It doesn't fully support HDTV. (See 2.9)
- Some DVD players and drives may not be able to read CD-Rs. (See
2.4.3)
- Current DVD players and drives can't read DVD-RAM discs. (See
4.3)
- Very few players can play in reverse at normal speed.
- Variations and options such as DVD-Audio, DVD-VR, and DTS audio
tracks are not supported by all players.
Some manufacturers originally announced that DVD players would
be available as early as the middle of 1996. These predictions were
woefully optimistic. Delivery was initially held up for "political"
reasons of copy protection demanded by movie studios, but was later
delayed by lack of titles. The first players appeared in Japan in
November, 1996, followed by U.S. players in March, 1997. Players
slowly trickled in to other regions. Now, almost four years after
the initial launch, over two hundred models of DVD players are available
from dozens of electronics companies. Prices for the first players
were $1000 and up. By the end of 2000, players were available for
under $100 at discount retailers.
See section 6.2 for a list of companies that
provide DVD players.
Fujitsu supposedly released the first DVD-ROM-equipped computer
on Nov. 6 in Japan. Toshiba released a DVD-ROM-equipped computer
and a DVD-ROM drive in Japan in early 1997 (moved back from December
which was moved back from November). DVD-ROM drives from Toshiba,
Pioneer, Panasonic, Hitachi, and Sony began appearing in sample
quantities as early as January 1997, but none were to be available
before May. The first upgrade kits (combination DVD-ROM drive and
decoder hardware) became available from Creative Labs, Hi-Val, and
Diamond Multimedia in April and May of 1997.
Today, every major PC manufacturer has models that include DVD-ROM
drives. The price difference from the same system with a CD-ROM
drive ranges from $30 to $200 (laptops have more expensive drives).
Upgrade kits for older computers are available for $100 to $700
from Creative Labs, DynaTek,
E4 (Elecede), Hi-Val, Leadtek, Margi Systems (for laptops), Media Forte, Pacific Digital, Sigma Designs, Sony, STB Systems,
Toshiba, Utobia, and others. For more information
about DVDs on computers, including writable DVD drives, see section 4.
Note: If you buy a player or
drive from outside your country (e.g., a Japanese player for use
in the US) you may not be able to play region-locked discs on it.
(See 1.10.)
The first DVD-Audio players were released in Japan by Pioneer in
late 1999, but they did not play copy-protected discs. Matsushita
(under the Panasonic and Technics labels) released full-fledged
players in July 2000 for $700 to $1,200. DVD-Audio players are now
also made by Aiwa, Denon, JVC, Kenwood, Madrigal, Marantz, Nakamichi,
Onkyo, Toshiba, and Yamaha. Sony released the first SACD players
in May 1999 for $5,000. Pioneer's first DVD-Audio players released
in late 1999 also played SACD. SACD players are now also made by
Accuphase, Aiwa, Denon, Kenwood, Marantz, Philips, and Sharp. (See
1.12 for more information on DVD-Audio and SACD.)
More information on players and drives:
- CNET DVD
players and DVD-ROM
drives
- The uk.media.dvd
FAQ.
- aus.dvd
(Australia/New Zealand/region 4 player info)
- Computer Shopper DVD
players and DVD-ROM
drives
There are many good players available. Video and audio performance
in all modern DVD players is excellent. Personal preferences, your
budget, and your existing home theater setup all play a large role
in what player is best for you. Unless you have a high-end home
theater setup, a player that costs under $400 should be completely
adequate. Make a list of things that are important to you (such
as ability to play CD-Rs, ability to play Video CDs, 96 kHz/24-bit
audio decoding, DTS Digital Out, internal 6-channel Dolby Digital
decoder) to help you come up with a set of players. Then try out
a few of the players in your price range, focusing on ease of use
(remote control design, user interface, front-panel controls). Since
there is not a big variation in picture quality and sound quality
within a given price range, convenience features play a big part.
The remote control, which you'll use all the time, can drive you
crazy if it doesn't suit your style.
Some players, especially cheaper models, don't properly play all
discs. Before buying a player, you may want to test it with a few
complex discs such as The Matrix, The Abyss, Independence Day, and
DVD Demystified. See 1.41 for more information.
In certain cases, you might want to buy a DVD PC instead of a standard
DVD player, especially if you want progressive video. See 1.40 and 4.1.
Here are a few questions to ask yourself.
- Do I want selectable sound tracks and subtitles, multiangle viewing,
aspect ratio control, parental/multirating features, fast and slow
playback, great digital video, multichannel digital audio, compatibility
with Dolby Pro Logic receivers, on-screen menus, dual-layer playback,
and ability to play audio CDs? If so, this is the wrong question
to ask yourself, since all DVD players have all of these features.
- Do I want DTS audio? If so, look for a player with the "DTS Digital
Out" logo. (See 3.6.2.)
- Do I want to play Video CDs? If so, check the specs for Video
CD compatibility. (See 2.4.5.)
- Do I need a headphone jack?
- Do I want player setup menus in languages other than English?
If so, look for multilanguage setup feature. (Note: the multilanguage
menus on certain discs are supported by all players.)
- Do I want to play homemade CD-R audio discs? If so look for the
"dual laser" feature. (See 2.4.3.)
- Do I want to replace my CD player? If so, you might want a changer
that can hold 3, 5, or even hundreds of discs.
- Do I want to control all my entertainment devices with one remote
control? If so, look for a player with a programmable universal
remote, or make sure your existing universal remote is compatible
with the DVD player.
- Do I want to zoom in to check details of the picture? If so, look
for players with picture zoom.
- Do I want to play HDCDs? If so, check for the HDCD logo. (See
2.4.13.)
- Does my receiver have only optical or only coax digital audio
inputs? If so, make sure the player has outputs to match. (See 3.2.)
- Do I care about black-level adjustment?
- Do I appreciate special deals? If so, look for free DVD coupons
and free DVD rentals that are available with many players.
For more information, read hardware reviews at Web sites such as
DVDFile or in magazines such as Widescreen Review. You may also want
to read about user experiences at Audio Review and in online
forums at Home Theater
Forum and DVDFile. There's
more advice at DVDBuyingGuide and at eCoustics.com, which
also has a list of links to reviews on other sites.
See sections 3.1 and 3.2
for specific information on what audio/video connections are needed
to fit into your existing setup.
[In the video distribution industry, a title
refers to a movie or other production release, like Snow White,
or Star Wars, or a boxed edition of one season of a TV series.
All of these are collectively referred to as software.]
DVD started off slowly. Rosy predictions of hundreds of movie titles
for Christmas of 1996 failed to materialize. Only a handful of DVD
titles, mostly music videos, were available in Japan for the November
1996 launch of DVD. The first actual feature films appeared in Japan
in December 20 (The Assassin, Blade Runner, Eraser, and
The Fugitive from Warner Home Video). By April there were over
150 titles in Japan. The first titles released in the U.S., on March
19, 1997, by Lumivision, authored by AIX Entertainment, were IMAX
adaptations: Africa: The Serengeti, Antarctica: An Adventure
of a Different Nature, Tropical Rainforest, and Animation
Greats. (Other movies such as Batman and Space Jam
had been demonstrated earlier, but were not full versions available
for sale.) The Warner Bros. U.S. launch followed on March 24, but
was limited to seven cities. Almost 19,000 discs were purchased
in the first two weeks of the US launch -- more than expected. InfoTech
predicted over 600 titles by the end of 1997 and more than 8,000
titles by 2000. By December 1997, over 1 million individual DVD
discs were shipped, representing about 530 titles. By the end of
1999, over 100 million discs had shipped, representing about 5,000
titles. By the end of 2000 there were over 10,000 titles available
in the US and over 15,000 worldwide. By the end of 2001 there were
about 14,000 titles available in the U.S. Compared to other launches
(CD, LD, etc.) these are a huge numbers of titles released in a
very short time. (Note that this does not include adult titles,
which accounts for an additional 15% or so.)
See 6.3 for a list of Web sites where you can
buy or rent DVDs.
Availability of DVD hardware and software in Europe runs about
a year behind the US. A number of launches were announced with little
follow-through, but DVD began to become established in Europe around
the end of 1998.
There are many searchable DVD databases on the Internet. Here are
a few of the best:
- Internet Movie Database DVD
Browser (all regions)
- Doug MacLean's Home
Theater Info list (region 1, downloadable list)
- DVD Entertainment
Group (region 1, searchable and downloadable database)
- Perry's
DVD Release List (region 1, text list)
- Widescreen Review
(widescreen-specific DVD titles)
- Most Internet DVD stores also have searchable lists (see 6.3).
DVD-Audio started even slower than DVD-Video. The first commercially
available DVD-Audio title, Big Phat Band, was released in
October 2000 by on the Silverline label of 5.1 Entertainment. Major
music labels BMG Entertainment, EMI Music, Universal Music, and
Warner Music have committed to DVD-Audio titles, although in fall
2001 Universal announced that it would release SACD titles first.
As of the end of 2001, just under 200 DVD-Audio titles were available.
The first SACD titles were released in Japan in May 1999.
DVD-ROM computer software is slowly appearing. See 6.2 for a list. Many initial DVD-ROM titles are only be available
as part of a hardware or software bundle until the market grows
larger. IDC expected that over 13 percent of all software would
be available in DVD-ROM format by the end of 1998, but reality didn't
meet expectations. In one sense, DVD-ROMs are simply larger faster
CD-ROMs and will contain the same material. But DVD-ROMs can also
take advantage of the high-quality video and multi-channel audio
capabilities being added to many DVD-ROM-equipped computers.
The following sites have reviews of at least 800 discs. Also see
the list of DVD
review sites at Yahoo.
First, check one of the lists and databases mentioned in 1.6 to make sure it's not already available. Then check the upcoming
release lists at DVD Review and Laser Scans. There's also the
release list at Image
Entertainment. A good source of info about unannounced titles
is The Digital Bits Rumor
Mill.
Use one of the searchable databases in 1.6. Select the features you're looking for (anamorphic widescreen,
French audio track, Flemish subtitles, and so on). If a database
doesn't include the characteristic you're looking for, try another
one.
Rental chains such as Blockbuster and Hollywood Video have decided
to only carry full-screen (pan-scan) versions of movies when both
widescreen and a full-screen versions are available. This has infuriated
a certain segment of DVD fans who could never countenance watching
a non-widescreen version of a movie on DVD. Blockbuster and Hollywood
Video hide behind the claim that directors, not the rental outlets,
choose the format when releasing a DVD. This is true to a point,
but in cases where there are both widescreen versions and full-screen
versions of a title the rental chains carry only the full-screen
version. If you would like to voice your opinion about this, sign
the online petition.
See 3.5 for more about widescreen. See 1.38 for pros and cons of letterboxing.
Mass-market DVD movie players currently list for $140 to $3000.
(See 1.5 for more information.) DVD-ROM drives and upgrade kits for
computers sell for around $50 to $600. (OEM drive prices are around
$60.) Prices are expected to eventually drop to current CD-ROM drive
levels.
It varies, but most DVD movies list for $20 to $30 with street
prices between $15 and $25, even those with supplemental material.
Low-priced movies can be found for under $10. So far DVD has not
followed the initial high rental-price model of VHS.
DVD-ROMs are usually slightly more expensive than CD-ROMs since
there is more on them, they cost a bit more to replicate, and the
market is smaller. But as the installed base of drives grow, DVD-ROMs
will eventually cost about the same as CD-ROMs do today.
Search for lowest prices and online discount coupons:
DVD did not take off quite as fast as some early predictions, but
it has sold faster than videotape, CD, and laserdisc. In fact, before
its third birthday in March 2000, DVD had become the most successful
consumer electronics entertainment product ever.
Here are some predictions:
- InfoTech (1995): Worldwide sales of DVD players in 1997 will
be 800,000. Worldwide sales of DVD-ROM drives in 1997 will be
1.2 million, with sales of 39 million drives in 2000.
- Toshiba (1996): 100,000 to 150,000 DVD-Video players will be
sold in Japan between Nov. 1 and Dec. 31, 1996, and 750,000-1
million by Nov. 1, 1997. (Actual count of combined shipments by
Matsushita, Pioneer, and Toshiba was 70,000 in Oct-Dec 1996.)
Total worldwide DVD hardware market expected to reach 120 million
units in the year 2000. Worldwide settop DVD player market will
be 2 million units in the first year, with sales of 20 million
in the year 2000.
- Pioneer (1996): 400,000 DVD-Video players in 1996, 11 million
by 2000. 100,000 DVD-Audio players in 1996, 4 million by 2000.
- InfoTech (1996): 820,000 DVD-Video players in first year, 80
million by 2005.
- CEMA (1997): 400,000 DVD-Video players in U.S. in 1997, 1 million
in 1998.
- Time-Warner (1996): 10 million DVD players in the U.S. by 2002.
- Paul Kagan (1997): 800,000 DVD players in the U.S. in 1997,
10 million in 2000, and 40 million in 2006 (43% penetration).
5.6 million discs sold in 1997, 172 million discs in 2000, and
623 million in 2006.
- C-Cube (1996): 1 million players and drives in 1997.
- BASES: 3 million DVD-Video players sold in first year, 13 million
sold in 6th year.
- Dataquest (1997): over 33 million shipments of DVD players and
drives by 2000.
- Philips (1996): 25 million DVD-ROM drives worldwide by 2000
(10% of projected 250 million optical drives).
- Pioneer (1996): 500,000 DVD-ROM drives sold in 1997, 54 million
sold in 2000.
- Toshiba (1996): 120 million DVD-ROM drives in 2000 (80% penetration
of 100 million PCs). Toshiba says they will no longer make CD-ROM
drives in 2000.
- IDC (1997): 10 million DVD-ROM drives sold in 1997, 70 million
sold in 2000 (surpassing CD-ROM), 118 million sold in 2001. Over
13% of all software available on DVD-ROM in 1998. DVD recordable
drives more than 90% of combined CD/DVD recordable market in 2001.
- AMI (1997): installed base of 7 million DVD-ROM drives by 2000.
- Intel (1997): 70 million DVD-ROM drives by 1999 (sales will
surpass CD-ROM drives in 1998).
- SMD (1997): 100 million DVD-ROM/RAM drives shipped in 2000.
- Microsoft (Peter Biddle, 1997): 15 million DVD PCs sold in 1998,
50 million DVD PCs sold in 1999.
- Microsoft (Jim Taylor, 1998): installed base of 35 million DVD
PCs in 1999.
- Forrester Research (1997): U.S. base of 53 million DVD-equipped
PCs by 2002. 5.2% of U.S. households (5 million) will have a DVD-V
player in 2002; 2% will have a DVD-Audio player.
- Yankee Group (Jan 1998): 650,000 DVD-Video players by 1998,
3.6 million by 2001. 19 million DVD-PCs by 2001.
- InfoTech (Jan 1998): 20 million DVD-Video players worldwide
in 2002, 58 million by 2005. 99 million DVD-ROM drives worldwide
in 2005. No more than 500 DVD-ROM titles available by the end
of 1998. About 80,000 DVD-ROM titles available by 2005.
- Screen Digest (Dec 1998): 125,000 DVD-Video player in European
homes in 1998, 485,000 in 1999, 1 million in 2000.
- IRMA (Apr 2000): 12 million players will ship worldwide in 2000.
- Baskerville (Apr 2000): Worldwide spending on DVD software will
surpass that of VHS by 2004. There will be a worldwide installed
based of 625 million DVD players by 2010 (55% of TV households).
- Jon Peddie (Jun 2000): Almost 20 million DVD players will be
sold in the U.S. in 2004.
- IDC (July 2000): 70 million DVD players and drives will be sold
by year's end.
- Screen Digest (June 2000): European installed base of DVD-Video
players (1998) 0.3m; (1999) 1.5m; (2000) 5.4m; (2004) 47.1m.
- Japanese Electronics and Information Technologies Association
(December 2000): 37 million DVD players worldwide by 2001.
- DVD Entertainment Group (July 2001): Approximately 30 million
DVD players sold in the U.S. by the end of 2001.
- Understanding & Solutions (April 2002): DVD player penetration
in the UK could grow to 70% by 2006 (CD player penetration reached
only 50% in the same time period after launch).
Here's reality:
- 1997
- 349,000 DVD-Video players shipped in the U.S. (About 200,000
sold into homes.)
- 900 DVD-Video titles available in the U.S. Over 5 million
copies shipped; about 2 million sold.
- Over 500,000 DVD-Video players shipped worldwide.
- Around 330,000 DVD-ROM drives shipped worldwide with about
1 million bundled DVD-ROM titles.
- 60 DVD-ROM titles (mostly bundled).
- 1998
- 1,089,000 DVD-Video players shipped in the U.S. (Installed
base of 1,438,000.)
- 400 DVD-Video titles in Europe (135 movie and music titles).
- 3,000 DVD-Video titles in the U.S. (2000 movie and music
titles).
- 7.2 million DVD-Video discs purchased.
- 1999
- 4,019,000 DVD-Video players shipped in the U.S. (Installed
base of 5,457,000.)
- Over 6,300 DVD-Video titles in the U.S.
- About 26 million DVD-ROM drives worldwide.
- About 75 DVD-ROM titles available in the U.S.
- 2000
- 8.5 million DVD-Video players shipped in the U.S. (Installed
base of 13,922,000.)
- About 46 million DVD-ROM drives worldwide.
- Over 10,000 DVD-Video titles available in the U.S.
- Belgium: 100 thousand installed base
- France: 1.2 million installed base
- Germany: 1.2 million installed base
- Italy: 360 thousand installed base
- Netherlands: 200 thousand installed base
- Spain: 300 thousand installed base
- Sweden: 120 thousand installed base
- Switzerland: 250 thousand installed base
- UK: 1 million installed base
- 2001
- 12.7 million DVD-Video players shipped in the U.S. (Installed
base of 26,629,000.)
- Over 45 million DVD-ROM drives shipped
- Over 90 million DVD-ROM drives worldwide.
- UK: 3 million installed base
For comparison, there were about 700 million audio CD players and
160 million CD-ROM drives worldwide in 1997. 1.2 billion CD-ROMs
were shipped worldwide in 1997 from a base of about 46,000 different
titles. There were about 80 million VCRs in the U.S. (89% of households)
and about 400 million worldwide. 110,000 VCRs shipped in the first
two years after release. Nearly 16 million VCRs were shipped in
1998. In 2000 there were about 270 million TVs in the U.S. and 1.3
billion worldwide.When DVD came out in 1997 there were about 3 million
laserdisc players in the U.S.
For latest U.S. player sales statistics, see the CEA page at
The Digital Bits. Other DVD statistics and forecasts can be found
at IRMA, MediaLine, Twice. Industry analyses and forecasts can be
purchased from Adams
Media Research, Alexander
& Associates, British Video
Association, Cahners In-stat,
Centris, Datamonitor, Dataquest, DVD Intelligence, eBrain, International Data Corporation (IDC), InfoTech, Jon Peddie Associates (JPA), Paul Kagan Associates, Screen Digest, SIMBA Information, Strategy Analytics, Understanding & Solutions and others.
Motion picture studios want to control the home release of movies
in different countries because theater releases aren't simultaneous
(a movie may come out on video in the U.S. when it's just hitting
screens in Europe). Also, studios sell distribution rights to different
foreign distributors and would like to guarantee an exclusive market.
Therefore they required that the DVD standard include codes that
can be used to prevent playback of certain discs in certain geographical
regions. Each player is given a code for the region in which it's
sold. The player will refuse to play discs that are not coded for
its region. This means that discs bought in one country may not
play on players bought in another country. Some people believe that
region codes are an illegal restraint of trade, but there have been
no legal cases to establish this.
Regional codes are entirely optional for the maker of a disc. Discs
without region locks will play on any player in any country. It's
not an encryption system, it's just one byte of information on the
disc that the player checks. Some studios originally announced that
only their new releases would have regional codes, but so far almost
all Hollywood releases play in only one region. Region codes are
a permanent part of the disc, they won't "unlock" after a period
of time. Region codes don't apply to DVD-Audio, DVD-ROM, or recordable
DVD (see below for more detail).
There are 8 regions (also called "locales"). Players and discs
are often identified by the region number superimposed on a world
globe. If a disc plays in more than one region it will have more
than one number on the globe.
1: U.S., Canada, U.S. Territories
2: Japan, Europe, South Africa, and Middle East (including Egypt)
3: Southeast Asia and East Asia (including Hong Kong)
4: Australia, New Zealand, Pacific Islands, Central America, Mexico,
South America, and the Caribbean
5: Eastern Europe (Former Soviet Union), Indian subcontinent, Africa,
North Korea, and Mongolia
6: China
7: Reserved
8: Special international venues (airplanes, cruise ships, etc.)
(See the map at <www.unik.no/~robert/hifi/dvd/world.html>.)
Technically there is no such thing as a region 0 disc or a region
0 player. There is such thing as an all-region disc. There are also
all-region players. Some players can be "hacked" with special command
sequences from the remote control to switch regions or play all
regions. Some players can be physically modified ("chipped") to
play discs regardless of the regional codes on the disc. This usually
voids the warranty, but is not illegal in most countries. (The only
thing that requires player manufacturers to region-code their players
is the CSS license. See 1.11) On Feb. 7, 2001,
NASA sent two multiregion DVD players
to the International Space Station. Information about modifying
players and buying region-free players can be found on the Internet
(see 6.4.2)
Some discs from Fox, Buena Vista/Touchstone/Miramax, MGM/Universal,
Polygram, and Columbia TriStar contain program code that checks
for the proper region setting in the player. (There's Something
About Mary and Psycho are examples.) In late 2000, Warner
Bros. began using the same active region code checking that other
studios had been using for over a year. They called it "region code
enhancement" (RCE, also known as REA), and it received much publicity.
RCE was first added to discs such as The Patriot and Charlie's
Angels. "Smart discs" with active region checking won't play
on code-free players that are set for all regions (FFh),
but they can be played on manual code-switchable players
that allow you to change the region using the remote control. They
may not work on auto-switching players that recognize and
match the disc region. (It depends on the default region setting
of the player. An RCE disc has all its region flags set so that
the player doesn't know which one to switch to, then it queries
the player for the region setting and aborts if it's the wrong one.
A default player setting of region 1 will fool RCE discs from region
1. Playing a region 1 disc for a few seconds will set most auto-switching
players to region 1 and allow them to play an RCE disc.) When an
RCE disc detects the wrong region or an all-region player, it will
usually put up a message saying that the player may have been altered
and that the disc is not compatible with the player. A serious side
effect is that some legitimate players fail the test, such as the
Fisher DVDS-1000.
There was much wailing and gnashing of teeth when RCE first appeared,
but DVD fans quickly learned that it only affected some players.
Makers of player modification kits that didn't work with RCE soon
modified their chips to get around it. For every higher wall there
is a taller ladder. See DVDTalk's RCE FAQ for more info and workarounds.
In addition to region codes, there are also differences in discs
for NTSC and PAL TV systems (see 1.19).
Region codes do not apply to DVD-Audio. In general, region codes
don't apply to recordable DVDs. A DVD that you make on a DVD PC
or a DVD video recorder will play in all regions (but don't forget
NTSC vs. PAL differences, see 1.19).
Regional codes apply to game consoles such as PlayStation 2 and
Xbox, but only for DVD-Video (movie) discs (see DVDRegionX for region modifications to PS2).
PlayStation has a separate regional lockout scheme for games. Regional
codes also apply to DVD-ROM systems, but affect only DVD-Video discs,
not DVD-ROM discs containing computer software. Computer playback
systems check for regional codes before playing movies from a CSS-protected
DVD-Video (see 1.11 for CSS info). Newer RPC2 DVD-ROM drives let you
change the region code several times. (RPC stands for region protection
control.) Once an RPC2 drive has reached the limit of 5 changes
it can't be changed again unless the vendor or manufacturer resets
the drive. The Drive Info utility can tell you if you have
an RPC2 drive (it will say "This drive has region protection").
Drive Info and information about circumventing DVD-ROM region
restrictions is available from Internet sites such as Visual
Domain and DVD Infomatrix,
as well as links listed above. After December 31, 1999, only RPC2
drives are being manufactured.
CPSA (content protection system architecture) is the name given
to the overall framework for security and access control across
the entire DVD family. Developed by the "4C"
entity (Intel, IBM, Matsushita, and Toshiba) in cooperation with
the Copy Protection Technical Working Group (CPTWG), it covers encryption,
watermarking, protection of analog and digital outputs, and so on.
There are many forms of content protection that apply to DVD.
1) Analog CPS (Macrovision)
Videotape (analog) copying is prevented with a Macrovision
7.0 or similar circuit in every player. The general term is APS
(Analog Protection System), also sometimes called copyguard. Computer
video cards with composite or s-video (Y/C) output must also use
APS. Macrovision adds a rapidly modulated colorburst signal ("Colorstripe")
along with pulses in the vertical blanking signal ("AGC") to the
composite video and s-video outputs. This confuses the synchronization
and automatic-recording-level circuitry in 95% of consumer VCRs.
Unfortunately, it can degrade the picture, especially with old or
nonstandard equipment. Macrovision may show up as stripes of color,
distortion, rolling, black & white picture, and dark/light cycling.
Macrovision creates problems for most TV/VCR combos (see 3.2.1) and some high-end equipment such as line doublers and
video projectors. Macrovision was not present on analog component
video output of early players, but is required on newer players
(AGC only, since there is no burst in a component signal). The discs
contain "trigger bits" telling the player whether or not to enable
Macrovision AGC, with the optional addition of 2-line or 4-line
Colorstripe. The triggers occur about twice a second, which allows
fine control over what part of the video is protected. The producer
of the disc decides what amount of copy protection to enable and
then pays Macrovision royalties accordingly (several cents per disc).
Just as with videotapes, some DVDs are Macrovision-protected and
some aren't. (For a few Macrovision details see STMicroelectronics'
NTSC/PAL video encoder datasheets at <www.st.com/stonline/books/>.)
There are inexpensive devices that defeat Macrovision, although
only a few work with the new Colorstripe feature. These devices
go under names such as Video Clarifier, Image Stabilizer, Color
Corrector, and CopyMaster. Or you can build your own.
Professional time-base correctors (TBCs) that regenerate line 21
also remove Macrovision. APS affects only video, not audio.
2) CGMS
Each disc also contains information specifying if the contents can
be copied. This is a "serial" copy generation management system
(SCMS) designed to prevent copies or copies of copies. The CGMS
information is embedded in the outgoing video signal. For CGMS to
work, the equipment making the copy must recognize and respect the
CGMS information. The analog standard (CGMS-A) encodes the data
on NTSC line 21 (in the XDS service) or line 20. CGMS-A is recognized
by most digital camcorders and by some computer video capture cards
(they will flash a message such as "recording inhibited"). Professional
time-base correctors (TBCs) that regenerate lines 20 and 21 will
remove CGMS-A information from an analog signal. The digital standard
(CGMS-D) is not yet finalized, but will apply to digital connections
such as IEEE 1394/FireWire. See section 6, below.
3) Content Scrambling System (CSS)
Because of the potential for perfect digital copies, paranoid movie
studios forced a deeper copy protection requirement into the DVD
standard. Content Scrambling System (CSS) is a data encryption and
authentication scheme intended to prevent copying video files directly
from DVD-Video discs. CSS was developed primarily by Matsushita
and Toshiba. Each CSS licensee is given a key from a master set
of 400 keys that are stored on every CSS-encrypted disc. This allows
a license to be revoked by removing its key from future discs. The
CSS decryption algorithm exchanges keys with the drive unit to generate
an encryption key that is then used to obfuscate the exchange of
disc keys and title keys that are needed to decrypt data from the
disc. DVD players have CSS circuitry that decrypts the data before
it's decoded and displayed. On the computer side, DVD decoder hardware
and software must include a CSS decryption module. All DVD-ROM drives
have extra firmware to exchange authentication and decryption keys
with the CSS module in the computer. Beginning in 2000, new DVD-ROM
drives are required to support regional management in conjunction
with CSS (see 1.10 and 4.1). Makers of equipment used to display DVD-Video (drives, decoder
chips, decoder software, display adapters, etc.) must license CSS.
There is no charge for a CSS license, but it's a lengthy process,
so it's recommended that interested parties apply early. CSS is
administered by the DVD DVD Copy
Control Association (DVD CCA). Near the end of May 1997, CSS
licenses were finally granted for software decoding. The license
is extremely restrictive in an attempt to keep the CSS algorithm
and keys secret. Of course, nothing that's used on millions of players
and drives worldwide could be kept secret for long. In October 1999,
the CSS algorithm was cracked and posted on the Internet, triggering
endless controversies and legal battles (see 4.8).
4) Content Protection for Prerecorded Media (CPPM)
CPPM is used only for DVD-Audio. It was developed to improve on
CSS. Keys are stored in the lead-in area, but unlike CSS there are
no title keys in the sector headers. Each volume has a 56-bit "album
identifier," similar to a CSS disc key, stored in the control area.
Each disc contains a media key block, stored in a file in the clear
on the disc. The media key block data is logically ordered in rows
and columns that are used during the authentication process to generate
a decryption key from a specific set of player keys (device keys).
If the device key is revoked, the media key block processing step
will result in an invalid key value. As with CSS, the media key
block can be updated to revoke the use of compromised player keys.
The authentication mechanism is the same as for CSS, so no changes
are required to existing drives. A disc may contain both CSS and
CPPM content if it is a hybrid DVD-Video/DVD-Audio disc.
5) Content Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM)
CPRM is a mechanism that ties a recording to the media on which
it is recorded. It is supported by all DVD recorders released after
1999. Each blank recordable DVD has a unique 64-bit media ID etched
in the BCA (see 3.11). When protected content is recorded onto the disc, it can
be encrypted with a 56-bit C2 (Cryptomeria) cipher derived from
the media ID. During playback, the ID is read from the BCA and used
to generate a key to decrypt the contents of the disc. If the contents
of the disc are copied to other media, the ID will be absent or
wrong and the data will not be decryptable.
6) Digital Copy Protection System (DCPS)
In order to provide for digital connections between components without
allowing perfect digital copies, five digital copy protection systems
were proposed to the CEA. The frontrunner is DTCP (digital transmission content protection),
which focuses on IEEE 1394/FireWire but can be applied to other
protocols. The draft proposal (called 5C, for the five companies
that developed it) was made by Intel, Sony, Hitachi, Matsushita,
and Toshiba in February 1998. Sony released a DTCP chip in mid 1999.
Under DTCP, devices that are digitally connected, such as a DVD
player and a digital TV or a digital VCR, exchange keys and authentication
certificates to establish a secure channel. The DVD player encrypts
the encoded audio/video signal as it sends it to the receiving device,
which must decrypt it. This keeps other connected but unauthenticated
devices from stealing the signal. No encryption is needed for content
that is not copy protected. Security can be "renewed" by new content
(such as new discs or new broadcasts) and new devices that carry
updated keys and revocation lists (to identify unauthorized or compromised
devices). A competing proposal, XCA (extended conditional access),
from Zenith and Thomson, is similar to DTCP but can work with one-way
digital interfaces (such as the EIA-762 RF remodulator standard)
and uses smart cards for renewable security. Other proposals have
been made by MRJ Technology, NDS, and Philips. In all five proposals,
content is marked with CGMS-style flags of "copy freely", "copy
once," "don't copy," and sometimes "no more copies". Digital devices
that do nothing more than reproduce audio and video will be able
to receive all data (as long as they can authenticate that they
are playback-only devices). Digital recording devices are only able
to receive data that is marked as copyable, and they must change
the flag to "don't copy" or "no more copies" if the source is marked
"copy once." DCPS in general is designed for the next generation
of digital TVs, digital receivers, and digital video recorders.
It will require new DVD players with digital connectors (such as
those on DV equipment). These new products won't appear until 2004
at the earliest. Since the encryption is done by the player, no
changes are needed to existing discs.
7) High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP)
HDCP is similar to DTCP, but designed for digital video monitor
interfaces such as DVI. In 1998, the Digital
Display Working Group (DDWG) was formed to create a universal
interface standard between computers and displays to replace the
analog VGA connection standard. The resulting Digital Visual Interface
(DVI) specification, released in April 1999, was based on Silicon
Image's PanelLink technology, which at 4.95 Gbps can support 1600×1200
(UXGA) resolution, which covers all the HDTV resolutions. Intel
proposed a security component for DVI: High-Bandwidth Digital Content
Protection. There is now a new connection standard called HDMI that
combines DVI and HDCP. Many new HDTV displays are likely to have
both IEEE 1394 and HDMI connections. HDCP provides authentication,
encryption, and revocation. Specialize circuitry in the playback
device and in the display monitor encrypts video data before it
is sent over the link. When an HDMI output senses that the connected
monitor does not support HDCP, it lowers the image quality of protected
content. The HDCP key exchange process verifies that a receiving
device is authorized to display or record video. It uses an array
of forty 56-bit secret device keys and a 40-bit key selection vector
-- all supplied by the HDCP licensing entity. If the security of
a display device is compromised, its key selection vector is placed
on the revocation list. The host device has the responsibility of
maintaining the revocation list, which is updated by system renewability
messages (SRMs) carried by newer devices and by video content. Once
the authority of the receiving device has been established, the
video is encrypted by an exclusive-or operation with a stream cipher
generated from keys exchanged during the authentication process.
If a display device with no decryption ability attempts to display
encrypted content, it appears as random noise.
The first four forms of copy protection are optional for the producer
of a disc. Movie decryption is also optional for hardware and software
playback manufacturers: a player or computer without decryption
capability will only be able to play unencrypted movies. CPRM is
handled automatically by DVD recorders. DCPS and HDCP will be performed
by the DVD player, not by the disc developer.
These copy protection schemes are designed only to guard against
casual copying (which the studios claim causes billions of dollars
in lost revenue). The goal is to "keep the honest people honest."
The people who developed the copy protection standards are the first
to admit that they won't stop well-equipped pirates.
Movie studios have promoted legislation making it illegal to defeat
DVD copy protection. The result is the World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Copyright Treaty and
the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (December 1996) and
the compliant U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), passed
into law in October 1998. Software intended specifically to circumvent
copy protection is now illegal in the U.S. and many other countries.
A co-chair of the legal group of the DVD copy protection committee
stated, "in the video context, the contemplated legislation should
also provide some specific assurances that certain reasonable and
customary home recording practices will be permitted, in addition
to providing penalties for circumvention." It's not at all clear
how this might be "permitted" by a player or by studios that routinely
set the "don't copy" flag on all their discs.
DVD-ROM drives and computers, including DVD-ROM upgrade kits, are
required to support Macrovision, CGMS, and CSS. PC video cards with
TV outputs that don't support Macrovision will not work with encrypted
movies. Computers with IEEE 1394/FireWire connections must support
the final DCPS standard in order to work with other DCPS devices.
Every DVD-ROM drive must include CSS circuitry to establish a secure
connection to the decoder hardware or software in the computer,
although CSS can only be used on DVD-Video content. Of course, since
a DVD-ROM can hold any form of computer data, other encryption schemes
can be implemented. See 4.1 for more information
on DVD-ROM drives.
The Watermarking Review Panel (WaRP) --the successor to the Data-Hiding
Sub-Group (DHSG)-- of the CPTWG selected an audio watermarking system
that has been accepted by the DVD Forum for DVD-Audio (see 1.12). The original seven video watermarking proposals were merged
into three: IBM/NEC, Hitachi/Pioneer/Sony, and Macrovision/Digimarc/Philips.
On February 17, 1999, the first two groups combined to form the
"Galaxy Group" and merged their technologies into a single proposal.
The second group has dubbed their technology "Millennium." Watermarking
permanently marks each digital audio or video frame with noise that
is supposedly undetectable by human ears or eyes. Watermark signatures
can be recognized by playback and recording equipment to prevent
copying, even when the signal is transmitted via digital or analog
connections or is subjected to video processing. Watermarking is
not an encryption system, but rather a way to identify whether a
copy of a piece of video or audio is allowed to be played. New players
and software are required to support watermarking, but the DVD Forum
intends to make watermarked discs compatible with existing players.
There were reports that the early watermarking technique used by
Divx caused visible "raindrop" or "gunshot" patterns, but the problem
was apparently solved for later releases.
When DVD was released in 1996 there was no DVD-Audio format, although
the audio capabilities of DVD-Video far surpassed CD. The DVD Forum
sought additional input from the music industry before defining
the DVD-Audio format. A draft standard was released by the DVD Forum's
Working Group 4 (WG4) in January 1998, and version 0.9 was released
in July. The final DVD-Audio 1.0 specification (minus copy protection)
was approved in February 1999 and released in March, but products
were delayed in part by the slow process of selecting copy protection
features (encryption and watermarking), with complications introduced
by the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI). The scheduled October
1999 release was further delayed until mid 2000, ostensibly because
of concerns caused by the CSS crack (see 4.8), but also because the hardware wasn't quite ready, production
tools weren't up to snuff, and there was lackluster support from
music labels. Pioneer released some early models of DVD-Audio players
in Japan in late 1999, but they don't play copy-protected discs.
Matsushita released Panasonic and Technics brand universal DVD-Audio/DVD-Video
players available in July 2000 for $700 to $1,200. Pioneer, JVC,
Yamaha, and others released DVD-Audio players in fall 2000 and early
2001. By the end of 2000 there were about 50 DVD-Audio titles available.
By the end of 2001 there were just under 200 DVD-Audio titles available.
DVD-Audio is a separate format from DVD-Video. DVD-Audio discs
can be designed to work in DVD-Video players, but it's possible
to make a DVD-Audio disc that won't play at all in a DVD-Video player,
since the DVD-Audio specification includes new formats and features,
with content stored in a separate "DVD-Audio zone" on the disc (the
AUDIO_TS directory) that DVD-Video players never look at. New DVD-Audio
players are needed, or new "universal players" that can play both
DVD-Video and DVD-Audio discs. Universal players are also called
VCAPs (video-capable audio players).
Plea to producers: Universal
players won't be available for some time, but you can make universal
discs today. With a small amount of effort, all DVD-Audio discs
can be made to work on all DVD players by including a Dolby Digital
version of the audio in the DVD-Video zone.
Plea to DVD-Audio authoring system developers:
Make your software do this by default or strongly recommend this
option during authoring.
DVD-Audio players (and universal players) work with existing receivers.
They output PCM and Dolby Digital, and some will support the optional
DTS and DSD formats. However, most current receivers can't decode
high-definition, multichannel PCM audio (see 3.6.1 for details), and even if they could it can't be carried
on standard digital audio connections. DVD-Audio players with high-end
digital-to-analog converters (DACs) can only be hooked up to receivers
with 2-channel or 6-channel analog inputs, but some quality is lost
if the receiver converts back to digital for processing. New receivers
with improved digital connections such as IEEE 1394 (FireWire) are
needed to use the full digital resolution of DVD-Audio.
DVD audio is copyright protected by an embedded signaling
or digital watermark feature. This uses signal processing
technology to apply a digital signature and optional encryption
keys to the audio in the form of supposedly inaudible noise so that
new equipment will recognize copied audio and refuse to play it.
Proposals from Aris, Blue Spike, Cognicity, IBM, and Solana were
evaluated by major music companies in conjunction with the 4C Entity,
comprising IBM, Intel, Matsushita, and Toshiba. Aris and Solana
merged to form a new company called Verance, whose Galaxy
technology was chosen for DVD-Audio in August 1999. (In November
1999, Verance watermarking was also selected for SDMI.) Verance
and 4C claimed that tests on the Verance watermarking method showed
it was inaudible, but golden-eared listeners in later tests were
able to detect the watermarking noise.
Sony and Philips have developed a competing Super Audio CD format
that uses DVD discs. (See 3.6.1 for details.)
Sony released version 0.9 of the SACD spec in April 1998, the final
version appeared in April (?) 1999. SACD technology is available
to existing Sony/Philips CD licensees at no additional cost. Most
initial SACD releases have been mixed in stereo, not multichannel.
SACD was originally supposed to provide "legacy" discs with two
layers, one that plays in existing CD players, plus a high-density
layer for DVD-Audio players, but technical difficulties kept dual-format
discs from being produced until the end of 2000, and only then in
small quantities. Pioneer, which released the first DVD-Audio players
in Japan at the end of 1999, included SACD support in their DVD-Audio
players. If other manufacturers follow suit, the entire SACD vs.
DVD-Audio standards debate could be moot, since DVD-Audio players
would play both types of discs.
Sony released an SACD player in Japan in May 1999 at the tear-inducing
price of $5,000. The player was released in limited quantities in
the U.S. at the end of 1999. Philips released a $7,500 player in
May 2000. Sony shipped a $750 SACD player in Japan in mid 2000.
About 40 SACD titles were available at the end of 1999, from studios
such as DMP, Mobile Fidelity Labs, Pioneer, Sony, and Telarc. Over
500 SACD titles were available by the end of 2001.
A drawback related to DVD-Audio and SACD players is that most audio
receivers with 6 channels of analog input aren't able to do bass
management. Receivers with Dolby Digital and DTS decoders handle
bass management internally, but most receivers with 6-channel audio
inputs simply pass them through to the amplifier. Until new audio
systems with full bass management from 6-channel inputs are developed,
any setup that doesn't have full-range speakers for all 5 surround
channels will not properly reproduce all the bass frequencies. In
the interim, you may be able to use an outboard bass managment box,
such as from Outlaw Audio.
If you are interested in making the most of a DVD-Audio or SACD
player, you need a receiver with 6-channel analog audio inputs.
You also need 5 full-frequency speakers (that is, each speaker should
be able to handle subwoofer frequencies) and a subwoofer, unless
you have a receiver that can perform bass management on the analog
inputs.
For more on DVD-Audio, including lists of titles and player models,
visit Digital Audio Guide.
All major movie studios, most major music studios.
When DVD players became available in early 1997, Warner and Polygram
were the only major movie studios to release titles. Additional
titles were available from small publishers. The other studios gradually
joined the DVD camp (see 6.2 for a full list, see 1.6 for movie info). Dreamworks was the last significant studio
to announce full DVD support. Paramount, Fox, and Dreamworks initially
supported only Divx, but in summer 1998 they each announced support
for open DVD.
Yes. When DVD was originally introduced in 1997 it could only play.
DVD video recorders appeared in Japan at the end of 1999, and in
the rest of the world at the end of 2000. Early units were expensive:
$2,500 to $4,000. DVD recorders are still quite expensive (typically
$500 to $2000 as of fall 2002), but will eventually be as cheap
as VCRs. DVD recorders are already being added to satellite and
cable receivers, hard-disk video recorders, and similar boxes.
A DVD recorder is just like a VCR -- it has a tuner and A/V inputs,
and it can be programmed to record shows. An important difference
is that you never have to rewind or fast forward -- recordings on
a disc are instantly accessible, usually from an on-screen menu.
Note that DVD video recorders can't copy most DVD movie discs, which
are protected.
Unfortunately there is more than one recordable DVD format, and
they don't all play together nicely. It's nothing like the old "VHS
vs. Betamax battle" as many in the press would have you believe,
but it is rather confusing. See 4.3 to get more confused.
Don't be further confused by DVD recordable drives for computers
(see 4.3). These recorders can store data, but to create full-featured
DVD-Videos requires additional software to do video encoding (MPEG),
audio encoding (Dolby Digital, MPEG, or PCM), navigation and control
data generation, and so on (see 5.4 and 5.8).
Most scratches will cause minor data errors that are easily corrected.
That is, data is stored on DVDs using powerful error correction
techniques that can recover from even large scratches with no loss
of data. A common misperception is that a scratch will be worse
on a DVD than on a CD because of higher storage density and because
video is heavily compressed. DVD data density (say that fast ten
times!) is physically four times that of CD-ROM, so it's true that
a scratch will affect more data. But DVD error correction is at
least ten times better than CD-ROM error correction and more than
makes up for the density increase. It's also important to realize
that MPEG-2 and Dolby Digital compression are partly based on removal
or reduction of imperceptible information, so decompression doesn't
expand the data as much as might be assumed. Major scratches may
cause uncorrectable errors that will produce an I/O error on a computer
or show up as a momentary glitch in DVD-Video picture. Paradoxically,
sometimes the smallest scratches can cause the worst errors (because
of the particular orientation and refraction of the scratch). There
are many schemes for concealing errors in MPEG video, which may
be used in future players.
See 1.39 for information on care and cleaning
of DVDs.
The DVD computer advisory group specifically requested no mandatory
caddies or other protective carriers. Consider that laserdiscs,
music CDs, and CD-ROMs are likewise subject to scratches, but many
video stores and libraries rent them. Major chains such as Blockbuster
and West Coast Entertainment rent DVDs in many locations. Most reports
of rental disc performance are positive, although if you have problems
playing a rental disc check for scratches.
The primary advantages of DVD are quality and extra features (see
1.2). DVD will not degrade with age or after many playings like
videotape will (which is an advantage for parents with kids who
watch Disney videos twice a week!). This is the "collectability"
factor present with CDs vs. cassette tapes.
If none of this matters to you, then VHS probably is good enough.
Manufacturers are worried about customers assuming DVDs will play
in their CD player, so they would like the packaging to be different.
There are a number of DVD packages that are as wide as a CD jewel
box (about 5-5/8") and as tall as a VHS cassette box (about 7-3/8"),
as recommended by the Video Software Dealers Association (VSDA).
However, no one is being forced to use a larger package size. Some
companies use standard jewel cases or paper and vinyl sleeves. Divx
discs came in paperboard and plastic Q-Pack cases the same size
as a CD jewel case.
Most movies are packaged in the Amaray "keep case," an all-plastic
clamshell with clear vinyl pockets for inserts, that's popular among
consumers. Time Warner's "snapper," a paperboard case with a plastic
lip, is less popular. There's also a "super jewel box," the stretch-limo
version of a CD jewel case, that's common in Europe.
A dual-layer disc has two layers of data, one of them semi-transparent
so that the laser can focus through it and read the second layer.
Since both layers are read from the same side, a dual-layer disc
can hold almost twice as much as a single-layer disc, typically
4 hours of video (see 3.3 for more details). Many discs use dual layers. Initially only
a few replication plants could make dual-layer discs, but most plants
now have the capability. The second layer can use either a PTP (parallel
track path) layout where both tracks run in parallel (for independent
data or special switching effects), or an OTP (opposite track path)
layout where the second track runs in an opposite spiral; that is,
the pickup head reads out from the center on the first track then
in from the outside on the second track. The OTP layout is designed
to provide continuous video across both layers. The layer change
can occur anywhere in the video; it doesn't have to be at a chapter
point. There's no guarantee that the switch between layers will
be seamless. The layer change is invisible on some players, but
it can cause the video to freeze for a fraction of a second or up
to 4 seconds on other players. The "seamlessness" depends as much
on the way the disc is prepared as on the design of the player.
OTP is also called RSDL (reverse-spiral dual layer). The advantage
of two layers is that long movies can use higher data rates for
better quality than with a single layer. See 1.27 for more about layer changes.
There are various ways to recognize dual-layer discs: 1) the gold
color, 2) a menu on the disc for selecting the widescreen or letterbox
version, 3) two serial numbers on one side.
The DVD specification requires that players and drives read dual-layer
discs. There are very few units that have problems with dual-layer
discs--this is a design flaw and should be corrected for free by
the manufacturer. Some discs are designed with a "seamless layer
change" that technically goes beyond what the DVD spec allows. This
causes problems on a few older players.
All players and drives also play double-sided discs if you flip
them over. No manufacturer has announced a model that will play
both sides. The added cost is hard to justify since discs can hold
over 4 hours of video on one side by using two layers. (Early discs
used two sides because dual-layer production was not widely supported.
This is no longer a problem.) Pioneer LD/DVD players can play both
sides of an LD, but not a DVD. (See 2.12 for note on reading both sides simultaneously.)
The MPEG video on DVD is stored in digital format, but it's formatted
for one of two mutually incompatible television systems: 525/60
(NTSC) or 625/50 (PAL/SECAM). Therefore, there are two kinds of
DVDs: "NTSC DVDs" and "PAL DVDs." Some players only play NTSC discs,
others play PAL and NTSC discs. Discs are also coded for different
regions of the world (see 1.10).
Almost all DVD players sold in PAL countries play both kinds of
discs. These multi-standard players partially convert NTSC
to a 60-Hz PAL (4.43 NTSC) signal. The player uses the PAL 4.43-MHz
color subcarrier encoding format but keeps the 525/60 NTSC scanning
rate. Most modern PAL TVs can handle this "pseudo-PAL" signal. A
few multi-standard PAL players output true 3.58 NTSC from NTSC discs,
which requires an NTSC TV or a multi-standard TV. Some players have
a switch to choose 60-Hz PAL or true NTSC output when playing NTSC
discs. There are a few standards-converting PAL players that
convert from a NTSC disc to standard PAL output. Proper "on the
fly" standards conversion requires expensive hardware to handle
scaling, temporal conversion, and object motion analysis. Because
the quality of conversion in DVD players is poor, using 60-Hz PAL
output with a compatible TV provides a better picture than converting
from NTSC to PAL. (Sound is not affected by video conversion.) The
latest software tools such as Adobe After Effects and Canopus
ProCoder do quite a good job of converting between PAL and
NTSC at low cost, but they are only appropriate for the production
environment (converting the video before it is encoded and put on
the DVD).
Most NTSC players can't play PAL discs. A very small number of
NTSC players (such as Apex and SMC) can convert PAL to NTSC. External
converter boxes are also available, such as the Emerson EVC1595
($350). High-quality converters are available at TenLab
and Snell and Wilcox.
Many standards-converting players can't convert anamorphic widescreen
video for 4:3 displays. See 1.22.
There are three differences between discs intended for playback
on different TV systems: picture size and pixel aspect ratio (720x480
vs. 720x576), display frame rate (29.97 vs. 25), and surround audio
options (Dolby Digital vs. MPEG audio). (See 3.4
and 3.6 for details.) Video from film is usually encoded at 24 frames/sec
but is preformatted for one of the two display rates. Movies formatted
for PAL display are usually sped up by 4% at playback, so the audio
must be adjusted accordingly before being encoded. All PAL DVD players
can play Dolby Digital audio tracks, but not all NTSC players can
play MPEG audio tracks. PAL and SECAM share the same scanning format,
so discs are the same for both systems. The only difference is that
SECAM players output the color signal in the format required by
SECAM TVs. Note that modern TVs in most SECAM countries can also
read PAL signals, so you can use a player that only has PAL output.
The only case in which you need a player with SECAM output is for
older SECAM-only TVs (and you'll probably need a SECAM RF connection,
see 3.1).
A producer can choose to put 525/60 NTSC video on one side of the
disc and 625/50 PAL on the other. Most studios put Dolby Digital
audio tracks on their PAL discs instead of MPEG audio tracks.
Because of PAL's higher resolution, the movie usually takes more
space on the disc than the NTSC version. See 3.4 for more details.
There are actually three types of DVD players if you count computers.
Most DVD PC software and hardware can play both NTSC and PAL video
and both Dolby Digital and MPEG audio. Some PCs can only display
the converted video on the computer monitor, but others can output
it as a video signal for a TV.
Bottom line: NTSC discs (with Dolby Digital audio) play
on over 95% of DVD installations worldwide. PAL discs play on very
few players outside of PAL countries. (This is irrespective of regions
-- see 1.10.)
Some people claim that animation, especially hand-drawn cell animation
such as cartoons and anime, does not compress well with MPEG-2 or
even ends up larger than the original. Other people claim that animation
is simple so it compresses better. Neither is true.
Supposedly the "jitter" between frames caused by differences in
the drawings or in their alignment causes problems. An animation
expert at Disney pointed out that this doesn't happen with modern
animation techniques. And even if it did, the motion estimation
feature of MPEG-2 would compensate for it.
Because of the way MPEG-2 breaks a picture into blocks and transforms
them into frequency information it can have a problem with the sharp
edges common in animation. This loss of high-frequency information
can show up as "ringing" or blurry spots along edges (called the
Gibbs effect). However, at the data rates commonly used for DVD
this problem does not occur.
Even though DVD's dual-layer technology (see 3.3) allows over four hours of continuous playback from a single
side, some movies are split over two sides of a disc, requiring
that the disc be flipped partway through. Most "flipper" discs exist
because of producers who are too lazy to optimize the compression
or make a dual-layer disc. Better picture quality is a cheap excuse
for increasing the data rate; in many cases the video will look
better if carefully encoded at a lower bit rate. Lack of dual-layer
production capability is also a lame excuse; in 1997 very few DVD
plants could make dual-layer discs, but this is no longer the case.
No players can automatically switch sides, but it's not needed since
most movies less than 4 hours long can easily fit on one dual-layer
(RSDL) side.
There is a list of "flipper" discs in the Film Vault at DVD Review.
Note: A flipper is not the same as a disc with a widescreen version
on one side and a pan & scan version or supplements on the other.
Please send additions to info@dvdreview.com.
(The list has gotten too long to keep in this FAQ.)
Answer: RTFM. You are watching an anamorphic picture intended for
display only on a widescreen TV. (See 3.5 for technical details). You need to go into the player's setup
menu and tell it you have a standard 4:3 TV, not a widescreen 16:9
TV. It will then automatically letterbox the picture so you can
see the full width at the proper proportions.
In some cases you can change the aspect ratio as the disc is playing
(by pressing the "aspect" button on the remote control). On most
players you have to stop the disc before you can change aspect.
Some discs are labeled with widescreen on one side and standard
on the other. In order to watch the fullscreen version you must
flip the disc over.
See 1.38 for more on letterboxing.
Apparently most players that convert from NTSC to PAL or vice-versa
(see 1.19) can't simultaneously letterbox (or pan and scan) an anamorphic
picture. Solutions are to use a widescreen TV, a multistandard TV,
or an external converter. Or get a better player.
Most DVD-Video discs contain Dolby Digital soundtracks. However,
it's not required. Some discs, especially those containing only
audio, have PCM tracks. It's also possible for a 625/50 (PAL) disc
to contain only MPEG audio, but so far MPEG audio is not widely
used. Discs with DTS audio are required to also include a Dolby
Digital audio track (or in a few rare cases they have a PCM track).
See 1.32 for more on DTS.
Don't assume that the "Dolby Digital" label is a guarantee of 5.1
channels. A Dolby Digital soundtrack can be mono, dual mono, stereo,
Dolby Surround stereo, etc. For example, Blazing Saddles and Caddyshack
are mono movies, so the Dolby Digital soundtrack on these DVDs has
only one channel. Some DVD packaging has small lettering or icons
under the Dolby Digital logo that indicates the channel configuration.
In some cases, there is more than one Dolby Digital version of a
soundtrack: a 5.1-channel track and a track specially remixed for
stereo Dolby Surround. It's perfectly normal for your DVD player
to indicate playback of a Dolby Digital audio track while your receiver
indicates Dolby Surround: it means that the disc contains a two-channel
Dolby Surround signal encoded in Dolby Digital format.
See 3.6 for more audio details.
Laserdiscs are subject to what's commonly called laser rot: the
deterioration of the aluminum layer due to oxidation or other chemical
change. This often results from the use of insufficiently pure aluminum
during replication, but can be exacerbated by mechanical shear stress
due to bending, warping or thermal cycles (the large size of laserdiscs
makes them flexible, so that movement along the bond between layers
can break the seal). Deterioration of the data layer can be caused
by chemical contaminants or gasses in the glue, or by moisture that
penetrates the acrylic substrates.
Like laserdiscs, DVDs are made of two platters glued together,
but DVDs are more rigid and use newer adhesives. DVDs are molded
from polycarbonate, which absorbs about ten times less moisture
than the slightly hygroscopic acrylic (PMMA) used for laserdiscs.
It's too early to know for sure, but DVDs will probably have few
laser rot problems. There have been reports of a few discs going
bad, possibly due to poor adhesive, chemical reactions, or oxidation
of the aluminum layer. See www.mindspring.com/~yerington/.
If a disc seems to go bad, make sure it's not dirty, scratched,
or warped (see 1.39). Try cleaning it and try
playing it in other players. If the disc consistently has problems
then it may have deteriorated. If so, there's nothing you can do
to fix it. Request a replacement from the supplier.
Some titles are available only in pan & scan because there
was no letterbox or anamorphic transfer made from film. (See 3.5 for more info on pan & scan and anamorphic formats.) Since
transfers cost $50,000 to $100,000, studios may not think a new
transfer is justified. In some cases the original film or rights
to it are no longer available for a new transfer. In the case of
old movies, they were shot full frame in the 1.37 "academy" aspect
ratio so there can be no widescreen version. Video shot with TV
cameras, such as music concerts, is already in 4:3 format.
The list of pan & scan only titles has gotten too big to keep
here. You can get a list from the Film Vault at DVD Review,
or from Internet Movie
Database (which also includes discs with both widescreen and
pan & scan versions).
On the remote control, press Subtitle, then either Clear or 0 (zero).
No need to use the menus.
Some movies, especially those over two hours long or encoded at
a high data rate, are spread across two layers on one side of the
disc. When the player changes to the second layer, the video and
audio may freeze for a moment. The length of the pause depends on
the player and on the layout of the disc. The pause is not a defect
in the player or the disc. See 1.18 for details.
There is a list of layer switch points in the Film Vault at DVD Review.
Please send new times to info@dvdreview.com. (The list has gotten
too long to keep in this FAQ.)
Some discs (many from Columbia TriStar) have 2-channel Dolby Surround
audio (or plain stereo) on track one and 5.1-channel audio on track
two. Since some studios create separate sound mixes optimized for
Dolby Surround or stereo, and they feel the default track should
match the majority of sound systems in use. Unless you specifically
select the 5.1-channel track (with the audio button on the remote
or with the on-screen menu) the player will play the default 2-channel
track. (Note: Some players such as the Sony 3000 have a feature
to automatically select the first 5.1 track.)
Dolby Digital doesn't necessarily mean 5.1 channels. See 3.6.
Almost all features of DVD such as search, pause, and scan can
be disabled by the disc, which can prevent the operation the player
needs to back up and repeat a segment. If the player uses time search
to repeat a segment, then a disc with fancy non-sequential title
organization may also block the repeat feature. In many cases the
authors don't even realize they have prevented the use of this feature.
There is no meaningful answer to this question, since you'll get
a different response from everyone you ask. The terms "2nd generation"
and "3rd generation," and so on refer both to DVD-Video players
and to DVD-ROM drives. In general, they simply mean newer versions
of DVD playback devices. The terms haven't been used (yet) to refer
to DVD products that can record, play video games, or so on.
According to some people, second-generation DVD players came out
in the fall of 1997 and third-generation players are those that
came out in the beginning of 1998. According to others, the second
generation of DVD will be HD players (see 2.12)
that won't come out until 2004 or so. There are many conflicting
variations between these extremes, including the viewpoint that
DTS-compatible players or Divx players or progressive-scan players
or 10-bit video players or players that can play The Matrix
constitute the second, third, or fourth generation.
Things are a little more clear cut on the PC side, where second
generation (DVD II) usually means 2x DVD-ROM drives that can read
CD-Rs, and third generation (DVD III) usually means 5x (or sometimes
2x or 4.8x or 6x) DVD-ROM drives, a few of which can read DVD-RAMs,
and some of which are RPC2 format. Some people refer to RPC2 drives
or 10x drives as fourth generation. See section 4.2
for more speed info. See section 1.10 for RPC2
explanation.
Do you really want the answer to this one? Ok, you asked for it...
- A disc that works in both DVD-Video players and DVD-ROM PCs.
(The most common use of the term hybrid, but more accurately called
an enhanced DVD)
- A DVD-ROM disc that runs on Windows and Mac OS computers. (More
accurately called a cross-platform DVD.)
- A DVD-ROM or DVD-Video disc that also contains Web content for
connecting to the Internet. (More accurately called a WebDVD
or Web-connected DVD.)
- A disc that contains both DVD-Video and DVD-Audio content. (More
accurately called a universal or AV DVD.)
- A disc with two layers, one that can be read in DVD players
and one that can be read in CD players. (More accurately called
a legacy or CD-compatible disc.) There are at least
three variations of this hybrid (none were commercially available
as of 12/99):
- A 0.9 to 1.2 mm CD substrate bonded to the back of a 0.6
mm DVD substrate. One side can be read by CD players, the
other side by DVD players. The resulting disc is 0.6 mm thicker
than a standard CD or DVD, which can cause problems in players
with tight tolerances, such as portables. Sonopress, the first
company to announce this type, calls it DVDPlus. It's colloquially
known as a "fat" disc. There's a variation in which an 8-cm
data area is embedded in a 12-cm substrate so that a label
can be printed on the outer ring.
- A 0.6 mm CD substrate bonded to a semitransparent 0.6 mm
DVD substrate. Both layers are read from the same side, with
the CD player being required to read through the semitransparent
DVD layer, causing problems with some CD players.
- A 0.6 mm CD substrate, with a special refractive coating
that causes a 1.2 mm focal depth, bonded to the back of a
0.6 mm DVD substrate. One side can be read by CD players,
the other side by DVD players.
- A disc with two layers, one containing pressed (DVD-ROM) data
and one containing rewritable (DVD-RAM, etc.) media for recording
and re-recording. (More accurately called a DVD-PROM,
mixed-media, or rewritable sandwich disc.)
- A disc with two layers on one side and one layer on the other.
(More accurately called a DVD-14.)
- A disc with an embedded memory chip for storing custom usage
data and access codes. (More accurately called a chipped
DVD.)
Did I miss any?
Digital Theater Systems Digital Surround is an audio encoding format
similar to Dolby Digital. It requires a decoder, either in the player
or in an external receiver. See 3.6.2 for technical
details. Some people claim that because of its lower compression
level DTS sounds better than Dolby Digital. Others claim there is
no meaningfully perceptible difference, especially at the typical
data rate of 768 kbps, which is 60% more than Dolby Digital. Because
of the many variances in production, mixing, decoding, and reference
levels, it's almost impossible to accurately compare the two formats
(DTS usually produces a higher volume level, causing it to sound
better in casual comparisons).
DTS originally did all encoding in house, but as of October 1999
DTS encoders are available for purchase. DTS titles are generally
considered to be specialty items intended for audio enthusiasts.
Most DTS are also be available in a Dolby Digital-only version.
DTS is an optional format on DVD. Contrary to uninformed claims,
the DVD specification has included an ID code for DTS since 1996
(before the spec was even finalized). Because DTS was slow in releasing
encoders and test discs, players made before mid 1998 (and many
since) ignore DTS tracks. A few demo discs were created in 1997
by embedding DTS data into a PCM track (the same technique used
with CDs and laserdiscs), and these are the only DTS DVD discs that
work on all players. New DTS-compatible players arrived in mid 1998,
but theatrical DTS discs using the proper DTS audio stream ID did
not appear until January 7, 1999 (they were originally scheduled
to arrive in time for Christmas 1997). Mulan, a direct-to-video
animation (not the Disney movie) with DTS soundtrack appeared in
November 1998. DTS-compatible players carry an official "DTS Digital
Out" logo.
Dolby Digital or PCM audio are required on 525/60 (NTSC) discs,
and since both PCM and DTS together don't usually leave enough room
for quality video encoding of a full-length movie, essentially every
disc with a DTS soundtrack also carries a Dolby Digital soundtrack.
This means that all DTS discs will work in all DVD players, but
a DTS-compatible player and a DTS decoder are required to play the
DTS soundtrack. DTS audio CDs work on all DVD players, since the
DTS data is encapsulated into standard PCM tracks that are passed
untouched to the digital audio output. DTS discs often carry a Dolby
Digital 2.0 track in Dolby Surround format instead of a full Dolby
Digital 5.1 track.
You are probably trying to play an NTSC disc in a PAL player, but
your PAL TV is not able to handle the signal. If your player has
a switch or on-screen setting to select the output format for NTSC
discs, choosing PAL (60-Hz) may solve the problem. See section 1.19 for more information.
Or you may have connected one of the component outputs (Y, R-Y,
or B-Y) of your DVD player to the composite input of your TV. See
section 3.2 for hookup details.
Many DVD's are labeled as having widescreen (16:9) format video
on one side and standard (4:3) on the other. If you think both sides
are the same, you're probably seeing uncompressed 16:9 on the widescreen
side. It seems to be 4:3 pan & scan, but if you look carefully
you'll discover that the picture is horizontally compressed. The
problem is that your player has been set for a widescreen TV. See
1.22 for details.
There have been numerous reports of "lip sync" problems, where
the audio lags slightly behind the video, and even reports of the
audio coming before the video. Perception of a sync problem is highly
subjective--some people are bothered by it while others can't discern
it at all. Problems have been reported on a variety of players (notably
the Pioneer 414 and 717 models, possibly all Pioneer models, some
Sony models including the 500 series and the PS2, new Toshiba models
including the 3109, and some PC decoder cards). Certain discs are
also more problematic (notably Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels;
Lost In Space; TRON; The Parent Trap; and Austin Powers).
The cause of the sync problem is a complex interaction of as many
as four factors
- Improper sync in audio/video encoding or DVD-Video formatting.
- Poor sync during film production or editing (especially post-dubbing
or looping).
- Loose sync tolerances in the player.
- Delay in the external decoder/receiver.
Factor 1 or 2 usually must be present in order for factor 3 or
4 to become apparent. Some discs with severe sync problems have
been reissued after being re-encoded to fix the problem. In some
cases, the sync problem in players can be fixed by pausing or stopping
playback and then restarting, or by turning the player off, waiting
a few seconds, then turning it back on.
A good way to test your player is to simultaneously listen to the
analog and digital outputs (play the digital output through your
stereo and the analog output through your TV). If the audio echoes
or sounds hollow, then the player is delaying the signal and is
thus the main cause of the sync problem.
Unfortunately, there is no simple answer and no simple fix. More
complaints from customers should motivate manufacturers to take
the problem more seriously and correct it in future players or with
firmware upgrades. Pioneer originally stated that altering the audio-visual
synchronization of their players "to compensate for the software
quality would dramatically compromise the picture performance."
Since then Pioneer has fixed the problem on its new players. If
you have an older model, check with Pioneer about an upgrade.
For many more details, see Michael D's Pioneer Audio Sync
page.
You are seeing the effects of Macrovision copy protection (see
1.11), probably because you are running your DVD player through
your VCR or VCR/TV combo (see 3.2.1).
Some DVD movies contain hidden features, often called "Easter eggs."
These are extra screens or video clips hidden in the disc by the
developers. For example, Dark City includes scenes from Lost in
Space and the Twin Peaks movie buried in the biography pages of
William Hurt and Keifer Sutherland. There's also an amusing "Shell
Beach" game entwined throughout the menus. On Mallrats, perhaps
indicating that DVD has already become too postmodern for its own
good, there's a hidden clip of the director telling you to stop
looking for Easter eggs and do something useful.
It's more fun to search for hidden features on your own, but if
you need some help, the best list is at DVD
Review.
The black bars are part of the letterbox process (see 3.5), and in many cases you can't get rid of them. If you set
the display option in your player to pan & scan (sometimes called
fullscreen or 4:3) instead of letterbox, it won't do you much good
since no DVD movies have been released with this feature enabled.
If you set the player to 16:9 widescreen output it will make the
bars smaller, but you will get a tall, stretched picture unless
you have a widescreen TV.
In some cases, there may be both a fullscreen and a letterbox version
of the movie on the same disc, with a variety of ways to get to
the fullscreen version (usually only one works, so you may have
to try all three):
- Check the other side of the disc (if it's two-sided)
- Look for a fullscreen choice in the main menu
- Use the "aspect" button on the remote control
DVD was designed to make movies look as good as possible on TV.
Since most movies are wider than most TVs, letterboxing preserves
the format of the theatrical presentation. (Nobody seems to complain
that the top and bottom of the picture are cut off in theaters.)
DVD is ready for TVs of the future, which are widescreen. For these
and other reasons, many movies on DVD are only available in widescreen
format.
About two thirds of widescreen movies are filmed at 1.85 ("flat")
aspect ratio or less. In this case, the actual size of the image
on your TV is the same for a letterbox version and a full-frame
version, unless the pan & scan technique is used to zoom in
(which cuts off part of the picture). In other words, the picture
is the same size, with extra areas visible at the top and
bottom in the fullscreen version. In more other words, letterboxing
covers over the part of the picture that was also covered in the
theater, or it allows the entire widescreen picture to be visible
for movies wider than 1.85, in which case the letterboxed picture
is smaller and has less detail than a pan & scan version would.
If there's not a fullscreen version of the movie on the disc, one
solution is to use a DVD player with a zoom feature to enlarge the
picture enough to fill the screen. This will cut off the sides of
the picture, but in many cases it's a similar effect to the pan
and scan process. Just think of it as "home pan and scan."
For a detailed explanation of why most movie fans prefer
letterboxing, see the Letterbox/Widescreen
Advocacy Page. For an explanation of anamorphic widescreen and
links to more information and examples on other Web sites, see 3.5.
The best solution to this entire mess might be the FlikFX Digital Recomposition System,
"the greatest advance in entertainment in 57 years."
Since DVDs are read by a laser, they are resistantto a pointto
fingerprints, dust, smudges, and scratches (see 1.15 for more info). However, surface contaminants and scratches
can cause data errors. On a video player, the effect of data errors
ranges from minor video artifacts to frame skipping to complete
unplayability. So it's a good idea to take care of your discs. In
general treat them the same way as you would a CD.
Your player can't be harmed by a scratched or dirty disc, unless
there are globs of nasty substances on it that might actually hit
the lens. Still, it's best to keep your discs clean, which will
also keep the inside of your player clean. Never attempt to play
a cracked disc, as it could shatter and damage the player. It doesn't
hurt to leave the disc in the player (even if it's paused and still
spinning), but leaving it running unattended for days on end might
not be a good idea.
In general, there's no need to clean the lens on your player, since
the air moved by the rotating disc keeps it clean. However, if you
commonly use a lens cleaning disc in your CD player, you may want
to do the same with your DVD player. I recommend only using a cleaning
disc designed for DVD players, since there are minor differences
in lens positioning.
There is no need for periodic alignment of the pickup head. Sometimes
the laser can drift out of alignment, especially after rough handling
of the player, but this is not a regular maintenance item.
Care and feeding of DVDs
Handle only at the hub or outer edge. Don't touch the shiny surface
with your popcorn-greasy fingers.
Store in a protective case when not in use. Do not bend the disc
when taking it out of the case, and be careful not to scratch the
disc when placing it in the case or in the player tray.
Make certain the disc is properly seated in the player tray before
you close it.
Keep away from radiators/heaters, hot equipment surfaces, direct
sunlight (near a window or in a car during hot weather), pets, small
children, and other destructive forces. Magnetic fields have no
effect on DVDs. The DVD specification recommends that discs be stored
at a temperature between -20 to 50 °C (-4 to 122 °F) with less than
15 °C (27 °F) variation per hour, at relative humidity of 5% to
90%.
Coloring the outside edge of a DVD with a green marker (or any
other color) makes no difference in video or audio quality. Data
is read based on pit interference at 1/4 of the laser wavelength,
a distance of less than 165 nanometers. A bit of dye that on average
is more than 3 million times farther away is not going to affect
anything.
Cleaning and repairing DVDs
If you notice problems when playing a disc, you may be able to
correct them with a simple cleaning.
- Do not use strong cleaners, abrasives, solvents, or acids.
- With a soft, lint-free cloth, wipe gently in only a radial direction
(a straight line between the hub and the rim). Since the data
is arranged circularly on the disc, the micro scratches you create
when cleaning the disc (or the nasty gouge you make with the dirt
you didn't see on your cleaning cloth) will cross more error correction
blocks and be less likely to cause unrecoverable errors).
- Don't use canned or compressed air, which can be very cold and
may thermally stress the disc.
- For stubborn dirt or gummy adhesive, use water, water with mild
soap, or isopropyl alcohol. As a last resort, try peanut oil.
Let it sit for about a minute before wiping it off.
- There are commercial products that clean discs and provide some
protection from dust, fingerprints, and scratches. Cleaning products
labeled for use on CDs work as well as those that say they are
for DVDs.
If you continue to have problems after cleaning the disc, you may
need to attempt to repair one or more scratches. Sometimes even
hairline scratches can cause errors if they just happen to cover
an entire ECC block. Examine the disc, keeping in mind that the
laser reads from the bottom. There are essentially two methods of
repairing scratches: 1) fill or coat the scratch with an optical
material; 2) polish down the scratch. There are many commercial
products that do one or both of these, or you may wish to buy polishing
compounds or toothpaste and do it yourself. The trick is to polish
out the scratch without causing new ones. A mess of small polishing
scratches can cause more damage than a big scratch. As with cleaning,
polish only in the radial direction.
Libraries, rental shops, and other venues that need to clean a
lot discs may want to invest in a commercial polishing machine that
can restore a disc to pristine condition after an amazing amount
of abuse. Keep in mind that the data layer on a DVD is only half
as deep as on a CD, so a DVD can only be re-polished about half
as many times.
A progressive-scan DVD player converts the interlaced (480i) video
from DVD into progressive (480p) format for connection to a progressive
display (31.5 kHz or higher). Progressive players work with all
standard DVD titles, but look best with film source. The result
is a significant increase in perceived vertical resolution, for
a more detailed and film-like picture.
There's enormous confusion about whether DVD video is progressive
or interlaced. Here's the one true answer: Progressive-source video (such as from film) is usually
encoded on DVD as interlaced field pairs that can be re-interleaved
by a progressive player to recreate the original progressive video.
See 3.8 for further explanation of interlaced and progressive scanning.
You must use a progressive-scan display in order to get the full
benefit of a progressive-scan player. However, all progressive players
also include interlaced outputs, so you can buy one to use with
a standard TV until you upgrade to a progressive TV. (You may have
to use a switch on the back of the player to set it to interlaced
output.)
Toshiba developed the first progressive-scan player (SD5109, $800)
in mid 1998, but didn't release it until fall of 1999 because of
copy protection concerns. Panasonic also released a progressive-scan
player (DVD-H1000, $3000) in fall of 1999. Many manufacturers have
released progressive models since then. It's also possible to buy
an external line multiplier to convert the output of a standard
DVD player to progressive scanning. All DVD computers are progressive
players, since the video is displayed on a progressive monitor,
but quality varies. (See 4.1 and 2.12.)
Converting interlaced DVD video to progressive video involves much
more than putting film frames back together. There are essentially
two ways to convert from interlaced to progressive:
1- Re-interleaving (also called weave). If the original
video is from a progressive source, such as film, the two fields
can be recombined into a single frame.
2- Line doubling (also called bob). If the original
video is from an interlaced source, simply combining two fields
will cause motion artifacts (the effect is reminiscent of a zipper),
so each line of a single field is repeated twice to form a frame.
Better line doublers use interpolation to produce new lines
that are a combination of the lines above and below. The term line
doubler is vague, since cheap line doublers only bob, while expensive
line doublers (those that contain digital signal processors) can
also weave.
(3- There's actually a third way, called field-adaptive de-interlacing,
which examines individual pixels across three or more fields and
selectively weaves or bobs regions of the picture as appropriate.
Most systems that do this well cost $10,000 and up, so it will be
a while before we see it in consumer DVD players.)
(4- And there's also a fourth way, called motion-adaptive
de-interlacing, which examines MPEG-2 motion vectors or does massive
image processing to identify moving objects in order to selectively
weave or bob regions of the picture as appropriate. Most systems
that do this well cost $50,000 and up (aside from the cool but defunct
Chromatic Mpact2 chip).
There are three common kinds of de-interlacing systems:
1- Integrated. This is usually best, where the de-interlacer
is integrated with the MPEG-2 decoder so that it can read MPEG-2
flags and analyze the encoded video to determine when to bob and
when to weave. Most DVD computers use this method.
2- Internal. The digital video from the MPEG-2 decoder is
passed to a separate deinterlacing chip. The disadvantage is that
MPEG-2 flags and motion vectors may no longer available to help
the de-interlacer determine the original format and cadence. (Some
internal chips receive the repeat_first_field and top_field_first
flags passed from the decoder, but not the progressive_scan flag.)
3- External. Analog video from the DVD player is passed to
a separate de-interlacer (line multiplier) or to a display with
a built-in de-interlacer. In this case, the video quality is slightly
degraded from being converted to analog, back to digital, and often
back again to analog. However, for high-end projection systems,
a separate line multiplier (which scales the video and interpolates
to a variety of scanning rates) may achieve the best results.
Most progressive DVD players use an internal Genesis gmVLX1A de-interlacing
chip. The Princeton PVD-5000 uses a Sigma Designs decoder with integrated
de-interlacing. The JVC XV-D723GD uses a custom decoder with integrated
de-interlacing. Toshiba's "Super Digital Progressive" players and
the Panasonic HD-1000 use 4:4:4 chroma oversampling, which provides
a slight quality boost from DVD's native 4:2:0 format. Add-on internal
de-interlacers such as the Cinematrix and MSB
Progressive Plus are available to convert existing players to
progressive-scan output. Faroudja, Silicon Image (DVDO), and Videon (Omega) line multipliers are
examples of external de-interlacers.
A progressive DVD player has to determine whether the video should
be line-doubled or re-interleaved. When re-interleaving film-source
video, the player also has to deal with the difference between film
frame rate (24 Hz) and TV frame rate (30 Hz). Since the 2-3 pulldown
trick can't be used to spread film frames across video fields, there
are worse motion artifacts than with interleaved video. However,
the increase in resolvable resolution more than makes up for it.
Advanced progressive players such as the Princeton PVD-5000 and
DVD computers can get around the problem by displaying at multiples
of 24 Hz such as 72 Hz, 96 Hz, and so on.
A progressive player also has to deal with problems such as video
that doesn't have clean cadence (as when it's edited after being
converted to interlaced video, when bad fields are removed during
encoding, when the video is speed-shifted to match the audio track,
and so on). Another problem is that many DVDs are encoded with incorrect
MPEG-2 flags, so the re-interleaver has to recognize and deal with
pathological cases. In some instances it's practically impossible
to determine if a sequence is 30-frame interlaced video or 30-frame
progressive video. For example, the documentary on Apollo 13
is interlaced video encoded as if it were progressive. Other examples
of improper encoding are Titanic, Austin Powers, Fargo,
More Tales of the City, the Galaxy Quest theatrical
trailer, and The Big Lebowski making-of featurette.
One problem is that many TVs with progressive input don't allow
the aspect ratio to be changed -- they assume all progressive-scan
input is anamorphic. When a non-anamorphic (4:3) picture is sent
to these TVs they distort it by stretching it out! Before you buy
a DTV, make sure that it allows aspect ratio adjustment on progressive
input. Or get a player with an aspect ratio control option
that "windowboxes" 4:3 video into a 16:9 rectangle by squeezing
it horizontally and adding black bars on the side. Because of the
added scaling step this may reduce picture quality, but at least
it gets around the problem.
Just as early DVD computers did a poor job of progressive-scan
display of DVDs, the first generation of progressive consumer players
are also a bit disappointing. But as techniques improve, and as
DVD producers become more aware of the steps they must take to ensure
good progressive display, and as more progressive displays appear
in homes, the experience will undoubtedly improve, bringing home
theaters closer to real theaters.
For more on progressive video and DVD, see part
5 and player
ratings in the excellent DVD
Benchmark series at Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity.
The DVD specification is complex and open to interpretation. DVD-Video
title authoring is also very complex. As with any new technology,
there are compatibility problems. The DVD-Video standard has not
changed substantially since it was finalized in 1996, but many players
don't properly support it. Discs have become more complex as authoring
tools improve, so recent discs often uncover engineering flaws in
players. Some discs behave strangely or won't play at all in certain
players. In some cases, manufacturers can fix the problem with an
upgrade to the player (see 1.47). In other cases, disc producers need to re-author the title
to correct an authoring problem or to work around a player defect.
Problems can also occur because of damaged or defective discs or
because of a defective player.
If you have problems playing a disc, try the following:
- Check the list below to see if it's a reported problem. Also
check the list of problem discs in DVD Review's Film Vault and at
InterActual's tech support page.
Try a newsgroup search at Deja.
- Try playing the disc a few more times. If you don't get the
exact same problem every time, then it's probably a defective
or damaged disc. Make sure the disc isn't dirty or scratched (see
1.39).
- Try the disc in a different player. (Visit a friend or a nearby
store that sells players.) The problem is usually the player,
not the disc. If the disc plays properly in a different player,
contact the manufacturer of your player for a firmware upgrade.
Or, if you bought the player recently, you may wish to return
it for a different model.
- Try a different copy of the disc. If the problem doesn't recur,
it indicates that your first copy was probably damaged or defective.
If more than one copy of the disc has problems in more than one
player, then it may be a misauthored disc. Contact the distributor
or the studio about getting a corrected disc.
For other DVD and home theater problems, try Doc DVD, or DVD Digest's Tech Support Zone. If you
have a Samsung 709, see the Samsung 709 FAQ. For troubleshooting
DVD on computers, see 4.6. The Dell Inspiron 7000 DVD Movie
List has Inspiron-specific problems.
Below are problems reported by readers of this FAQ. The FAQ author
has not verified these claims and takes no responsibility for their
accuracy. Please report other confirmed problems.
| Title |
Player |
Problem |
Solution |
| various Polygram titles |
early Toshiba and Magnavox models |
won't load or freezes |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| various Central Park Media (anime) titles |
similar problems as The Matrix |
| any all-region title |
many JVC models |
rejects disc |
|
| RCE titles (see 1.10) |
Fisher DVDS-1000, Sanyo Model DVD5100 |
world map and "only plays on non-modified players"
message |
contact tech Sanyo/Fisher support for workaround |
| The Abyss, SE |
early Toshiba models |
disc 2 won't load or freezes |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| many cheap players |
repeats scenes |
player doesn't properly handle seamless branching,
get upgrade from manufacturer |
| Apex AD-600A |
scenes play twice |
check with Apex for upgrade |
| AI (PAL region 2) |
Wharfdale 750 |
won't play |
|
| Akira SE |
Pioneer DV-37, DV-737, DV-525 |
freezes in several places |
fast forward to skip trouble spots |
| Aliens 20th Anniversary Edition |
Pioneer DV-S737 |
picture degrades after layer change |
|
| American Beauty (Awards Edition) |
Toshiba SD-3108, Philips DVD805 |
won't load |
upgrade from manufacturer service center (Toshiba
firmware 3.30 or newer) |
| American Pie |
Philips 940 |
freezes at layer change (1:17:09) |
|
| Any Given Sunday |
Pioneer Elite DVL90 |
won't load |
upgrade from Pioneer service center |
| Arlington Road |
see Cruel Intentions |
| Armageddon |
Panasonic A115-U and A120-U |
won't load |
unplug player with disc inserted, plug in, turn
on |
| Avenger's TV series (A&E) |
Toshiba SD-3108 |
locks up player |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| Philips 930, 935 |
won't load |
check with Philips for firmware upgrade |
| Back to the Future Trilogy (region 4) |
various players |
"anecdote" subpictures don't play properly |
|
| Bats |
Apex AD 600A |
wont' load |
check with Apex for upgrade |
| Big Trouble in Little China Special Edition |
Panasonic SC-DK3 |
won't load |
unplug player with disc inserted, plug in, turn
on |
| The Blair Witch Project |
some Toshiba players |
doesn't play properly |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| Cruel Intentions |
some JVC and Yamaha |
error in first release messes up parental controls,
causing other discs to not play |
reset
the player or get the corrected version of the disc or
set parental country code to AD with password of 8888 |
| Deep Blue Sea |
similar problems as The Matrix |
| Dinosaur |
many players (JVC-XV501BK, Philips DVD781 CH,
Pioneer DV-737/ DV-37/ DV-09/ DVL-919/ DV-525/ DVL-90/ KV-301C,
Sony 7700, Panasonic A300, Toshiba SD-3109, RCA 5220, Denon
DVD 2500, Magnavox DVD502AT Toshiba 2109/3109, JVC XV-D2000/XV-D701
Oritron DVD600/DVD100, Sylvania DVL100A, and others) |
won't load, ejects disc, freezes, skips, slow
menus, won't pause/forward/rewind, sound cuts out |
authoring problem -- contact Disney for a replacement
(also see Disney's The Kid below) |
| Disney's The Kid |
many players (Apex 600AD, Philips 711, Pioneer
DV-737, RCA, and others) |
skips, ejects disc, freezes, blue lines on screen |
authoring problem -- contact Disney for a replacement;
(solution on Philips player: put disc in drawer, do not close
drawer, press "1" on remote to jump to chapter 1) |
| Dragon's Lair |
Toshiba SD-2109/3109 (before mid 1999) |
various |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| most Samsung, Aiwa |
various |
check with Samsung (800-726-7864) or Aiwa for
firmware upgrade |
| Enigma-2002 |
Toshiba SD-4700 |
won't play |
|
| Entrapment |
JVC, Sony 850 |
freezes |
check with JVC
for firmware upgrade |
| Sigma Hollywood Plus |
see The World Is Not Enough |
| Everything, Everything (Underworld) |
Toshiba SD3108 and SD3109 |
won't load |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| Evolution |
Many computer DVD software players |
won't play |
contact studio for new version of disc |
| Galaxy Quest |
most Samsung players |
freezes at chapter 7 |
check with Samsung (800-726-7864) for firmware
upgrade |
| Girl, Interrupted |
Apex AD-600A, Shinco 2120, Smart DVDMP3000, others |
jumps to Features menu, won't play movie |
press Resume on remote control; upgrade available
for Smart |
| Gladiator |
Toshiba SD3108/SD3109, Wharfedale DVD 750, others |
won't load |
contact studio for new version of disc |
| The Godfather Collection, bonus disc |
A few players |
various problems |
upgrade your player or get new disc from Paramount
(replacement disc works around player bugs) |
| Good Will Hunting |
Apex AD-3201 |
won't play audio commentary |
|
| Idle Hands |
see Cruel Intentions |
| In the Heat of the Night |
Pioneer Elite DVL-90 |
won't play |
|
| Independence Day |
Toshiba SD3108 and SD3109 |
won't load |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| Philips DVD805 and DVD855 |
won't load |
check for upgrade from Philips |
| many cheap players |
repeats scenes |
player doesn't properly handle seamless branching,
get upgrade from manufacturer |
| Insomnia |
Toshiba SD1700 |
stutters and freezes |
|
| The Last Broadcast |
GE 1105P |
won't load |
|
| The Last Of the Mohicans |
see The World Is Not Enough |
| Lord Peter Wimsey: The Nine Taylors |
Yamaha DVD-C900 |
disc 2 won't load or freezes in menu |
|
| Lost In Space |
Sharp |
freezes |
|
| Creative DXR3 |
freezes, audio out of sync |
check for updated
drivers |
| The Man With The Golden Gun |
a few first-generation players, many software
player |
garbled video after layer change |
might be a disc authoring error |
| The Matrix |
various players |
various problems |
details at InterActual tech support
(for GE 1105-P, serial number beginning with
940 or lower, get upgrade from GE; see Samsung 709 FAQ) |
| Mission Impossible II |
Toshiba SD-3108 |
won't load |
get upgrade from manufacturer service center |
| Mission to Mars |
Toshiba SD-3108 |
won't load |
get upgrade from manufacturer service center |
| Monsters Inc. |
Various players |
locks up near end of movie |
seems to be player flaws -- check for player upgrade;
Disney may re-author disc with a workaround |
| The Mummy |
Philips 930, 935 |
won't load |
|
| The Mummy Returns |
Zenith DVD 2200 |
Video skewed left or right on bonus material |
|
| The Patriot |
Apex AD 600A |
wont' play movie |
check with Apex for upgrade (pressing Resume may
work) |
| JVC XV-511BK |
won't load |
check with JVC for upgrade |
| The Perfect Storm |
Toshiba SD-3108 |
won't load |
get upgrade from manufacturer service center |
| Planet of the Apes |
Toshiba SD-2109 |
PIP feature activates and locks up when the two
ape generals fight. |
|
| The Princess Bride Special Edition |
Toshiba SD-3109 |
freezes during first sword fight scene |
|
| Saving Private Ryan |
all players |
distortion (smearing, flares) in beach scene
at end of ch. 4 |
This is a deliberate camera effect in the film.
Stop returning discs. |
| Scary Movie |
Creative Encore 12x, GE 1105P |
crashes in FBI warning |
try to skip past FBI warning; check for bug fix
from Creative |
| The Simpsons; The Complete Second Season |
Yamaha DVD-C900 |
some special features on disc 4 cause player to
crash |
|
| The Sixth Sense |
Sigma Hollywood Plus |
MMSYSTEM275 error |
wait for a software update from Sigma |
| Sleepy Hollow |
some Toshiba players |
doesn't play properly |
upgrade available from Toshiba service centers |
| Snow White |
Windows 2000 and Windows XP |
doesn't play movie |
fix
available from Microsoft |
| Space Ace |
see Dragon's Lair |
| Stargate SE |
Magnavox 400AT |
freezes in director's commentary |
|
| Stuart Little |
see Girl Interrupted |
| The Three Kings |
LG DVD-2310P |
won't play extras |
|
| Thomas the Tank Engine |
see Girl Interrupted |
| Tomorrow Never Dies |
Sharp 600U
Bush DVD2000 |
locks up player
won't load |
|
| Universal Soldier |
Wharfedale 750 |
picture breakup after ch. 30 |
might be a problem with the disc |
| Wild Wild West |
Samsung DVD 709; Philips 930, 935; GE 1105P |
won't load |
check with Samsung (800-726-7864), Philips, or
GE for firmware upgrade |
| The World Is Not Enough |
Sigma Hollywood Plus |
MMSYSTEM275 error |
Wait for a software update from Sigma. Might be
related to trying to play in wrong region. |
| The World Is Not Enough (region 2) |
Philips 750 |
stutters and freezes |
presumably a flaw in the player; plays region
1 version ok |
| You've Got Mail |
various players |
various problems |
details at InterActual tech support |
DVD includes parental management features for blocking playback
and for multiple versions of a movie on a single disc. Players (including
software players on PCs) can be set to a specific parental level
using the onscreen settings. If a disc with a rating above that
level is put in the player, it won't play. In some cases, different
programs on the disc have different ratings. The level setting can
be protected with a password.
A disc can also be designed so that it plays a different version
of the movie depending on the parental level that has been set in
the player. By taking advantage of the seamless branching feature
of DVD, objectionable scenes are automatically skipped over or replaced
during playback. This requires that the disc be carefully authored
with alternate scenes and branch points that don't cause interruptions
or discontinuities in the soundtrack. There is no standard way to
identify which discs have multi-rated content.
Unfortunately, very few multi-rating discs have been produced.
Hollywood studios are not convinced that there is a big enough demand
to justify the extra work involved (shooting extra footage, recording
extra audio, editing new sequences, creating branch points, synchronizing
the soundtrack across jumps, submitting new versions for MPAA rating,
dealing with players that don't properly implement parental branching,
having video store chains refuse to carry discs with unrated content,
and much more). If this feature is important to you, let the studios
know. A list of studio addresses is available at DVD File, and there's
a Studio and Manufacturer Feedback area at Home Theater Forum. You might also
want to visit the Viewer
Freedom site.
Multi-ratings discs include Kalifornia, Crash, Damage, Embrace
of the Vampire, Poison Ivy, Species II. In most cases these
discs provide "un-cut" or unrated versions that are more intense
than the original theatrical release. Discs that use multi-story
branching (not always seamless) for a director's cut or special
edition version include Dark Star, Stargate SE, The Abyss, Independence
Day, and Terminator 2 SE (2000 release). Also see http://www.multipathmovies.com/.
Another option is to use a software player on a computer that can
read a "play list" telling it where to skip scenes or mute the audio.
Play lists can be created for the thousands of DVD movies that have
been produced without parental control features. There was a shareware
Cine-bit DVD Player that did this, but it has been withdrawn apparently
because of legal threats from Nissim, who seem determined to stifle the very
market they claim to support. A Canadian company, Select Viewing, is releasing software
for customized DVD playback on Windows PCs. A few similar projects
are under development.
Yet another option is TVGuardian
or Curse Free TV, a device
that attaches between the DVD player and the TV to filter out profanity
and vulgar language. The box reads the closed caption text and automatically
mutes the audio and provides substitute captions for objectionable
words. (Note that current versions of these devices don't work with
digital audio connections.)
There's actually a euphemism in the DVD industry, where "multi-angle
titles" --spoken with the right inflection-- means adult titles.
However, apart from hundreds of X-rated discs, not very many DVDs
have multiple angles, since it takes extra work and limits playing
time (a segment with two angles uses up twice as much space on the
disc).
Short Cinema Journal vol. 1 was one of the first to use camera
angles, in the animated "Big Story," which is also available on
the DVD Demystified sample disc. Ultimate DVD
(Gold or Platinum) is another sample disc with examples of angles.
King
Crimson: Deja Vroom has excellent angles, allowing you to
focus on any of the musicians. Other multi-angle music discs include
Dave Matthews Band: Listener Supported, Metallica
Cunning Stunts, Sarah McLachlan Mirrorball. Some movies, such
as Detroit Rock City (KISS video), Ghostbusters SE, Mallrats,
Suicide Kings, Terminator 2 SE, and Tomorrow Never Dies SE
use multiple angles in supplements. Some discs, especially those
from Buena Vista, use the angle feature to show credits in the selected
language (usually with the angle button locked out).
You can get an incomplete list of multi-angle discs by doing an
extended search
at DVD File or a power search
at DVD Express. To weed out the adult titles at DVD Express, select
all entries in the category list (click top entry, Shift-click bottom
entry) then deselect Adult (Ctrl-click).
Labels and adhesive strips are a bad idea since they can unbalance
the disc and cause errors, or even damage a player, especially if
they peel off while the disc is spinning. Pressure-sensitive adhesives
break down over time, so it's possible for labels to come loose
after a few years. Libraries and DVD rental outlets often want to
label discs or attach magnetic strips for security, but it's best
not to use them at all. If you must, use a ring-shaped "donut" label
that goes around the center of the disc. As long as the circular
label doesn't interfere with the player clamping onto the hub, it
should be ok. If you have to use a non-circular sticker, place it
as close to the center as possible to minimize unbalancing. Placing
a second sticker straight across from the center will also help.
Writing with a marker in the clear (not reflective) area at the
hub is better than using a sticker, although there's not much room
to write. Write only in the area inside a 44-mm diameter. Writing
anywhere else on the disc is risky, since the ink could possibly
eat away the protective coating and damage the data layer underneath.
In most cases a better alternative is a security case that can
only be opened with special equipment at the register or checkout
counter. Barcodes, stickers, and security strips can be placed on
the case without endangering discs (or players). This is especially
good for double-sided discs, which have no space for stickers.
Full-size round labels designed to go on recordable DVDs may work,
but have been known to cause problems. A better (but more expensive)
solution is to use an inkjet disc printer (IMT,
Odixion, Primera, Rimage, Trace Affex) and printable-surface discs.
Closed Captions (CC) are a standardized method of encoding text
into an NTSC television signal. The text can be displayed by a TV
with a built-in decoder or by a separate decoder. All TVs larger
than 13 inches sold in the US since 1993 have Closed Caption decoders.
Closed Captions can be carried on DVD, videotape, broadcast TV,
cable TV, and so on.
Even though the terms caption and subtitle have similar
definitions, captions commonly refer to on-screen text specifically
designed for hearing impaired viewers, while subtitles are
straight transcriptions or translations of the dialogue. Captions
are usually positioned below the person who is speaking, and they
include descriptions of sounds and music. Closed captions
are not visible until the viewer activates them. Open captions
are always visible, such as subtitles on foreign videotapes.
Closed Captions on DVDs are carried in the MPEG-2 video stream
and are automatically sent to the TV. You can't turn them on or
off from the DVD player. Subtitles, on the other hand, are DVD subpictures,
which are full-screen graphical overlays (see 3.4 for technical details). One of up to 32 subpicture tracks
can be turned on to show text or graphics on top of the video. Subpictures
can also be used to create captions. To differentiate from NTSC
Closed Captions and from subtitles, captions created as subpictures
are usually called "captions for the hearing impaired."
If this is all too confusing, just follow this advice: To see Closed
Captions, use the CC button on the TV remote. To see subtitles or
captions for the hearing impaired, use the subtitle button on the
DVD remote or use the onscreen menu provided by the disc. Don't
turn both on at once or they'll end up on top of each other. Keep
in mind that not all DVDs have Closed Captions or subtitles. Also,
some DVD players do not reproduce Closed Captions at all.
See DVD File's A
Guide to DVD Subtitles and Captioning, Gary Robson's Caption FAQ, and Joe Clark's
DVD Accessibility
for more about Closed Captions. Note that DVD does not support PAL
Teletext, the much-improved European equivalent of Closed Captions.
Some non-U.S. discs from Warner, MGM, and Disney are marked with
a distribution zone number. "D1" identifies a UK-only release. These
often have English-only soundtracks with BBFC censoring. "D2" and
"D3" identify European DVDs that are not sold in the UK and Ireland.
These often contain uncut or less cut versions of films. "D4" identifies
DVDs that are distributed throughout all of Europe (region 2) and
Australia/New Zealand (region 4).
DVD players are simple computers. Each one has a software program
that controls how it plays discs. Since the software is stored on
a chip, it's called firmware. Some players have flaws in their programming
that cause problems playing certain DVDs. In order to correct the
flaws, the player must be upgraded with a replacement firmware chip.
This usually has to be done in a factory service center, although
some players can be upgraded simply by inserting a CD. See 1.41
for more on compatibility problems.
There are a few DVDs designed specifically for testing and optimizing
video and audio playback. There are also some that demonstrate special
features of DVD.
- AVIA Guide to Home Theater, Ovation
Software (extensive video and audio test patterns and setup
tutorials)
- Video Essentials, Joe
Kane Productions (the original system optimization disc, from
the master)
- Ultimate DVD Platinum, Henninger
Interactive (examples of many DVD features, plus test and
demo material)
- DVD Demystified
demo disc (examples of almost every DVD feature, plus demo
material)
Here are a few movies that work especially well for demonstrating
DVD's video and audio quality.
- Dinosaur - Direct-to-DVD digital transfer gives sharp,
clear images; good bass on footsteps and fights
- The Eagles: Hell Freezes Over - outstanding 5.1-channel
music (DTS only, Dolby Digital tracks are 2-channel)
- The Fifth Element - excellent video, especially in beginning
desert scenes; stellar audio as well
- Gladiator - stunning surround audio with brilliantly
mixed orchestration
- O Brother, Where Art Thou - Beautiful color and incredible
detail (check out facial stubble); well-rendered shadows
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (Ultimate Edition) - great
video for shadows and reds; highly dimensional audio
- Toy Story 2 - Perfect all-digital transfer results in
sharp, rich images; sound effects are nicely staged
- U-571 - earthshaking bass, great subwoofer demo
Films on Disc has a list of ISF DVD citations
-- examples of the best of the craft.
Sensormatic and Checkpoint are two point-of-sale security systems.
They refer to the little metal tags that are inserted into DVD packaging
to set off an alarm if you go through the sensors at the store entrance
without having the tags deactivated during checkout. The tags are
placed in the packages at the replication plant so that it doesn't
have to be done at the store. This is called source tagging.
There is one single DVD-Video standard. However, within the DVD-Video
format there is a great deal of flexibility in the way discs can
work. Different studios have come up with brand names for their
particular implementations of advanced features. There's nothing
extraordinary about any particular variation, other than a studio
spending a lot of time and effort making it work well and promoting
it. These kinds of advanced DVDs should play on most players but
may reveal more player bugs than standard discs (see 1.41).
Superbit DVDs, from Columbia TriStar, use a high data rate
for the video to improve picture quality. Additional language tracks
and other extras are left off the disc to make room for more video
data and for a DTS audio track. In most cases the difference is
subtle, but it does improve the experience on high-end players and
progressive-scan displays. See superbitdvd.com for marketing fluff.
Infinifilm DVDs, from New Line, let you watch a movie with
pop-ups that direct you to extra content such as an interview, behind-the-scenes-footage,
or historical information. See infinifilm.com for more hype.
Most DVD players allow you to lock out discs above a certain rating.
The rating level is protected by a password so that children (or
spouses) can't change it. If you don't know the password you won't
be able to play some discs. You might be able to clear the password
by resetting the player (see the user manual) or unplugging it for
a few days. Otherwise you'll have to call the customer service number
of the manufacturer and see if they can help you. Make sure you
speak in a deep voice so they don't think you are kid trying to
hack his parents' player.
Eventually. DVD recorders are available (see 1.14), but it will take a while before the size of the market
drives costs down to VCR levels. DVD has many advantages over VCRs,
such as no rewinding, quick access to any part of a recording, and
fundamentally lower technology cost for hardware and disc production.
Some projections show DVD recorder sales passing VCR sales in 2005.
By 2010 or so, VHS may be as dead as vinyl records are today.
Yes. Some CD-ROM drive manufacturers plan to cease CD-ROM drive
production after a few years in favor of DVD-ROM drives. Because
DVD-ROM drives can read CD-ROMs, there is a compatible forward migration
path.
No. DVD uses a smaller wavelength of laser to allow smaller pits
in tracks that are closer together. The DVD laser must also focus
more tightly and at a different level. In fact, a disc made on a
current CD-R writer may not be readable by a DVD-ROM drive (see
2.4.3). It's unlikely there will be "upgrades" to convert CD-R
drives to DVD-R, since this would probably cost more than purchasing
a new DVD-R drive.
This is actually many questions with many answers, covered in the
following sections.
[Note the differentiation between DVD (general
case) and DVD-ROM (computer data).]
Yes. All DVD players and drives will read audio CDs (Red Book).
This is not actually required by the DVD spec, but so far all manufacturers
have made their DVD hardware read CDs.
On the other hand, you can't play a DVD in a CD player. (The pits
are smaller, the tracks are closer together, the data layer is a
different distance from the surface, the modulation is different,
the error correction coding is new, etc.) Also, you can't put CD
audio data onto a DVD and have it play in DVD players. (Red Book
audio frames are different than DVD data sectors.)
Yes. All DVD-ROM drives will read CD-ROMs (Yellow Book). Software
on a CD-ROM will run fine in a DVD-ROM system.
However, DVD-ROMs are not readable by CD-ROM drives.
Sometimes. The problem is that most CD-Rs (Orange Book Part II)
are "invisible" to DVD laser wavelength because the dye used to
make the blank CD-R doesn't reflect the beam. Some first-generation
DVD-ROM drives and many DVD players can't read CD-Rs. The formulation
of dye used by different CD-R manufacturers also affects readability.
That is, some brands of CD-R discs have better reflectivity at DVD
laser wavelength, but even these don't reliably work in all players.
The common solution is for the DVD player or drive to use two lasers
at different wavelengths: one for reading DVDs and the other for
reading CDs and CD-Rs. Variations on the theme include Sony's "dual
discrete optical pickup" with switchable pickup assemblies with
separate optics, Sony's dual-wavelength laser (to be initially deployed
on Playstation 2), Samsung's "annular masked objective lens" with
a shared optical path, Toshiba's similar shared optical path using
an objective lens masked with a coating that's transparent only
to 650-nm light, Hitachi's switchable objective lens assembly, and
Matsushita's holographic dual-focus lens. The MultiRead logo guarantees
compatibility with CD-R and CD-RW media, but unfortunately, few
manufacturers are using it.
Bottom line: If you want a DVD player that can read CD-R discs,
look for a "dual laser" or "dual optics" feature.
An effort to develop CD-R "Type II" media compatible with both
CD and DVD wavelengths was abandoned.
DVD-ROM drives can't record on CD-R or any other media. There are
a few combination DVD-ROM/CD-RW drives that can write to CD-R and
CD-RW. Most newer recordable DVD drives (see 4.3) can also record on CD-R or CD-RW.
CD-R burners can't read or write DVD discs of any kind.
Usually. CD-Rewritable (Orange Book Part III) has a smaller reflectivity
difference, requiring new automatic-gain-control (AGC) circuitry
in CD-ROM drives and CD players. CD-RW discs can't be read by most
existing CD-ROM drives and CD players. The "MultiRead" standard
addresses this, and some DVD manufacturers have suggested they will
support it. The optical circuitry in even first-generation DVD-ROM
drives and DVD players is usually able to read CD-RW discs, since
CD-RW does not have the "invisibility" problem of CD-R (see 2.4.3).
Most newer recordable DVD drives (see 4.3) can also record on CD-R or CD-RW.
CD-RW burners can't read or write DVD discs of any kind.
Sometimes. It's not required by the DVD spec, but it's trivial
to support the Video CD (White Book) standard since any MPEG-2 decoder
can also decode MPEG-1 from a Video CD. About two thirds of DVD
players can play Video CDs. Panasonic, RCA, Samsung, and Sony models
play Video CDs. Japanese Pioneer models play Video CDs but American
models older than the DVL-909 don't. Toshiba players older than
models 2100, 3107, and 3108 don't play Video CDs.
VCD resolution is 352x288 for PAL and 352x240 for NTSC. The way
most DVD players and Video CD players deal with the difference is
to chop off the extra lines or add blank lines. When playing PAL
VCDs, the Panasonic and RCA NTSC players apparently cut 48 lines
(17%) off the bottom. The Sony NTSC players scale all 288 lines
to fit.
Because PAL VCDs are encoded for 25 fps playback of 24 fps film,
there is usually a 4% speedup. Playing time is shorter, and the
audio is shifted up in pitch unless it was digitally processed before
encoding to shift the pitch back to normal. This also happens with
PAL DVDs (see 1.19).
All DVD-ROM computers can play Video CDs (with the right software).
Standard VCD players can't play DVDs.
Note: Many Asian VCDs achieve two soundtracks by putting one language
on the left channel and another on the right. The two channels are
mixed together into babel on a stereo system unless you adjust the
balance or disconnect one input to get only one channel.
For more on Video CD, see Glenn Sanderse's Video CD FAQ
at CDPage, or Russil Wvong's
Video CD FAQ.
Not generally. Super Video CD (SVCD) is an enhancement to Video
CD that was developed by a Chinese government-backed committee of
manufacturers and researchers, partly to sidestep DVD technology
royalties and partly to create pressure for lower DVD player and
disc prices in China. The final SVCD spec was announced in September
1998, winning out over C-Cube's China Video CD (CVD) and HQ-VCD
(from the developers of the original Video CD). In terms of video
and audio quality, SVCD is in between Video CD and DVD, using a
2x CD drive to support 2.2 Mbps VBR MPEG-2 video (at 480x480 (NSTC) or 480x576
(PAL) resolution) and 2-channel MPEG-2 Layer II audio. As with DVD,
it can overlay graphics for subtitles. It's technically easy to
make a DVD-Video player compatible with SVCD, but it's being done
mostly on Asian DVD player models. The Philip's DVD170 player can
be upgraded (using a special disc) to play SVCD discs.
SVCD players can't play DVDs, since the players are based on CD
drives.
See Jukka Aho's Super
Video CD Overview and Super Video CD FAQ for more
info.
Sometimes. Since Picture CDs and Photo CDs are usually on CD-R
media, they suffer from the CD-R problem (see 2.4.3). That aside, some DVD players can play Picture CDs. Only
a few can play Photo CDs.
Most DVD-ROM drives will read Picture CDs or Photo CDs (if they
read CD-Rs) since it's trivial to support the XA and Orange Book
multisession standards. Picture CDs are designed to work with Windows.
Photo CDs require specific support from an application or an OS.
In general, no. Current DVD players do not play CD-i (Green Book)
discs. Philips once announced that it would make a DVD player that
supported CD-i, but it has yet to appear. Some people expect Philips
to create a "DVD-i" format in an attempt to breathe a little more
life into CD-i (and recover a bit more of the billion or so dollars
they invested in it). A DVD-ROM PC with a CD-i card should be able
to play CD-i discs.
There are also "CD-i movies" that use the CD-i Digital Video format
that was the precursor to Video CD. Early CD-i DV discs won't play
on DVD players or VCD players, but newer CD-i movies, which use
standard VCD format, will play on any player that can play VCDs
(see 2.4.5).
See Jorg Kennis' CD-i FAQ
for more information on CD-i.
Yes. DVD players will play music from Enhanced Music CDs (Blue
Book, CD Plus, CD Extra), and DVD-ROM drives will play music and
read data from Enhanced CDs. Older ECD formats such as mixed mode
and track zero (pregap, hidden track) should also be compatible,
but there is a problem with Microsoft and other CD/DVD-ROM drivers
skipping track zero.
Only the Pioneer DVL-9 player and Pioneer karaoke DVD models DV-K800
and DVK-1000 are known to support CD+G. Most other DVD players don't
support this mostly obsolete format. All DVD-ROM drives are able
to read the CD+G information, but special software is required to
make use of it.
Sort of. CDV, sometimes called Video Single, is actually a weird
combination of CD and laserdisc. Part of the disc contains 20 minutes
of digital audio playable on any CD or DVD player. The other part
contains 5 minutes of analog video and digital audio in laserdisc
format, playable only on a CDV-compatible laserdisc player. Pioneer's
combination DVD/laserdisc players are the only DVD players that
can play CDVs.
Standard laserdisc/CDV players can't play DVDs. (See 2.5 for more LD info.)
Not officially. MP3 is the MPEG Layer 3 audio compression format.
(MP3 is not MPEG-3, which doesn't exist.) The DVD-Video spec allows
only Layer 2 for MPEG audio (MP2). However, MP3 can be played any
computer with a DVD-ROM drive, and many DVD players (particularly
those manufactured in Asia) can play MP3 CDs. However, oddly enough,
most of the players that can play MP3s from a CD can't play MP3s
from a DVD.
Yes. Pacific Microsonics' HDCD
(high-definition compatible digital) is an encoding process that
enhances audio CDs so that they play normally in standard CD and
DVD players (and allegedly sound better than normal CDs) yet produce
an extra 4 bits of precision (20 bits instead of 16) when played
on CD and DVD players equipped with HDCD decoders.
No. Standard DVD players will not play laserdiscs, and you can't
play a DVD disc on any standard laserdisc player. (Laserdisc uses
analog video, DVD uses digital video; they are very different formats.)
Pioneer used to produce combo players that played laserdiscs and
DVDs (and also CDVs and audio CDs), but these models have been discontinued.
When this question was first entered in the FAQ in 1996, before
DVD was even available, people wondered if DVD would replace laserdisc.
Some argued it never would -- that DVD would fail and it's adherents
would come groveling back to laserdisc. After DVD was released,
it soon became clear that it had doomed laserdisc to quick obscurity.
Pioneer Entertainment, the long-time champion of laserdisc, abandoned
it in June of 1999. This was sooner than even Pioneer thought possible,
(in September 1998, Pioneer's president Kaneo Ito said the company
expected laserdisc products to be in the market for another one-and-a-half
to two years).
Laserdisc still fills niches in education and training, but is
fading even there. Existing players and discs will be around for
a long time, and a few new discs are still being produced. There
were once over 9,000 laserdisc titles in the US and a total of over
35,000 titles worldwide that could be played on over 7 million laserdisc
players. It took DVD several years to reach this level, and there
are still rare titles available on laserdisc but not on DVD. One
bright point is that laserdiscs can now be had at bargain prices.
- Features: DVD has the same basic features as CLV LD (scan, pause,
search) and CAV LD (freeze, slow) and adds branching, multiple
camera angles, parental control, video menus, interactivity, etc.,
although some of these features are not available on all discs.
- Capacity: Single-layer DVD holds over 2 hours, dual-layer holds
over 4 hours. CLV LD holds one hour per side, CAV holds half an
hour. A CAV laserdisc can hold 104,000 still images. DVD can hold
thousands of still pictures accompanied by hundreds of hours of
audio and text.
- Convenience: An entire movie fits on one side of a DVD, so there's
no need to flip the disc or wait for the player to do it. DVDs
are smaller and easier to handle. DVD players can be portable,
similar to CD players. Discs can be easily and cheaply sent through
the mail. On the other hand, laserdiscs have larger covers for
better art and text.
- Noise: Most LD players make a whirring noise that can be heard
during quiet segments of a movie. Most DVD players are as quiet
as CD players.
- Audio: LD can have better quality on Dolby Surround soundtracks
stored in uncompressed PCM format. DVD has better quality on Dolby
Digital or music only (PCM). LD has 2 audio tracks: analog and
digital. DVD has up to 8 audio tracks. LD uses PCM audio sampled
with 16 bits at 44.1 kHz. DVD LPCM audio can use 16, 20, or 24
bit samples at 48 or 96 kHz (although PCM is not used with most
movies). LD has surround audio in Dolby Surround, Dolby Digital
(AC-3), and DTS formats. 5.1-channel surround sound is available
by using one channel of the analog track for AC-3 or both channels
of the digital track for DTS. DVD uses the same Dolby Digital
surround sound, usually at a higher data rate of 448 kbps, and
can optionally include DTS (at data rates up to 1536 kbps compared
to LD's 1411 kbps, but in practice DTS data rates are often 768
kbps). DVD players convert Dolby Digital to Dolby Surround. The
downmixing, combined with the effects of compression, often results
in lower-quality sound than from LD Dolby Surround tracks.
- Video: DVD usually has better video. LD suffers from degradation
inherent in analog storage and in the composite NTSC or PAL video
signal. DVD uses digital video, and even though it's heavily compressed,
most professionals agree that when properly and carefully encoded
it's virtually indistinguishable from studio masters. This doesn't
mean that the video quality of DVD is always better than LD. Only
that it can be better. Also keep in mind that the average television
is of insufficient quality to show much difference between LD
and DVD. Home theater systems or HDTVs are needed to take full
advantage of the improved quality.
- Resolution: In numerical terms DVD has 345,600 pixels (720x480),
which is 1.3 times LD's approximately 272,160 pixels (567x480).
Widescreen DVD has 1.7 times the pixels of letterboxed LD (or
1.3 times anamorphic LD). As for lines of horizontal resolution,
DVD has about 500 while LD has about 425 (more info in 3.4.1).
In analog output signal terms, typical luma frequency response
maintains full amplitude to between 5.0 and 5.5 MHz. This is below
the 6.75 MHz native frequency of the MPEG-2 digital signal. Chroma
frequency response is one-half that of luma. Laserdisc frequency
response usually begins to fall off at 3 MHz. (All figures are
for NTSC, not PAL.)
- Legacy titles: There are some movies on laserdisc that will
probably never appear on DVD.
- Availability: DVD players and discs are available for purchase
and rental in thousands of outlets and on the Internet. LD players
and discs are becoming hard to find.
- Price: Low-cost DVD players are cheaper than the cheapest LD
player. Most movies on DVD cost less than on LD.
- Restrictions: For those outside the US, regional coding (see
1.10) is a definite drawback of DVD. For some people Macrovision
copy protection (see 1.11) is an annoyance. Laserdisc has no copy protection and
does not have regional differences other than PAL vs. NTSC.
For more laserdisc info, see Leopold's FAQ at <www.cs.tut.fi/~leopold/Ld/FAQ/index.html>,
and Bob Niland's FAQs and overview at <www.frii.com/~rjn/laser/> (overview
reprinted from Widescreen Review magazine).
It's not likely. DVD circuitry is completely different, the pickup
laser is a different wavelength, the tracking control is more precise,
etc. No hardware upgrades have been announced, and in any case they
would probably be more expensive than buying a DVD player to put
next to the laserdisc player.
Short answers: Partially. No.
First, some quick definitions: HDTV (high-definition TV) encompasses
both analog and digital televisions that have a 16:9 aspect ratio
and approximately 5 times the resolution of standard TV (double
vertical, double horizontal, wider aspect). DTV (digital TV) applies
to digital broadcasts in general and to the U.S. ATSC standard in
specific. The ATSC standard includes both standard-definition (SD)
and high-definition (HD) digital formats. The notation H/DTV is
often used to specifically refer to high-definition digital TV.
In December of 1996 the FCC approved the U.S. DTV standard. HDTVs
became available in late 1998, but they are very expensive and won't
become widespread for many years. DVDs are not HD, but they look
great on HDTVs. Over half of the 2 million DTV sets sold in the
U.S. in 2002 did not have tuners, indicating that their owners got
them for watching DVDs.
DVD-Video does not directly support HDTV. No digital HDTV standards
were finalized when DVD was developed. In order to be compatible
with existing televisions, DVD's MPEG-2 video resolutions and frame
rates are closely tied to NTSC and PAL/SECAM video formats (see
1.19). DVD does use the same 16:9 aspect ratio of HDTV and the
Dolby Digital audio format of U.S. DTV.
HDTV in the US is part of the ATSC DTV format. The resolution and
frame rates of DTV in the US generally correspond to the ATSC recommendations
for SD (640x480 and 704x480 at 24p, 30p, 60p, 60i) and HD (1280x720
at 24p, 20p, and 60p; 1920x1080 at 24p, 30p and 60i). (24p means
24 progressive frames/sec, 60i means 60 interlaced fields/sec [30
frames/sec].) The current DVD-Video spec covers all of SD except
60p. It's expected that future DVD players will output digital video
signals from existing discs in SDTV formats. The HD formats are
2.7 and 6 times the resolution of DVD, and the 60p version is twice
the frame rate. The ITU-R is working on BT.709 HDTV standards of
1125/60 (1920x1035/30) (same as SMPTE 240M, similar to Japan's analog
MUSE HDTV) and 1250/50 (1920x1152/25) which may be used in Europe.
The latter is 5.3 times the resolution of DVD's 720x576/25 format.
HD maximum data rate is usually 19.4 Mbps, almost twice the maximum
DVD-Video data rate. In other words, DVD-Video does not currently
support HDTV video content.
HDTV will not make DVD obsolete. Those who postpone purchasing
a DVD player because of HDTV are in for a long wait. HDTV became
available in late 1998 at very high prices (about $5000 and up).
It will take many years before even a small percentage of homes
have HDTV sets. The CEA expects 10 percent of U.S. households to have
HDTV in 2004, 20 percent by 2005, and 30 percent by 2006.
HDTV sets include analog video connectors (composite, s-video,
and component) that work with all DVD players and other existing
video equipment such as VCRs. Existing DVD players and discs will
work perfectly with HDTV sets and provide a much better picture
than any other prerecorded consumer video format, especially when
using a progressive-scan player. Since the cheapest route to HDTV
reception will be HDTV converters for existing TV sets, broadcast
HDTV for many viewers will look no better than DVD.
HDTV displays support digital connections such as HDMI (DVI) and
IEEE 1394/FireWire, although standardization is not finished. Digital
connections for audio and video provide the best possible reproduction
of DVDs, especially in widescreen mode. DVD players will soon have
digital outputs, since the DVD Forum finalized specifications for
supporting 1394 and HDMI in 2002. When the DVD stream recording
(SR) format is finalized, DVD-SR players may be usable as "transports"
that output any kind of A/V data (even formats developed after the
player was built) to different sorts of external displays or converters.
The interesting thing many people don't realize is that DTV is
happening soonest, fastest, and cheapest on PCs. A year before any
consumer DTV sets came out you could buy a DVD PC with a 34" VGA
monitor and get gorgeous progressive-scan movies for under $3000.
The quality of a good DVD PC connected to a data-grade video projector
can beat a $30,000 line-doubler system. (See NetTV, BroadbandMagic, and
Digital Connection for product examples.
Video projectors are available from Barco, Dwin,
Electrohome, Faroudja, InFocus, Projectavision, Runco, Sharp, Sony, Vidikron, and others.)
Eventually the DVD-Video format will be upgraded to an "HD-DVD"
format. See 2.12 and 6.5.
There are two Divxes. The first was a pay-per-view version of DVD.
The second (spelled DivX), is a video encoding format.
The new DivX
In March 2000, a DVD redistribution technology called DivX;-) appeared.
(Yes, the smiley face was originally part of the name, which was
a take-off on the original Divx format. The perpetrators should
be drawn and quartered for the stupid joke, which has caused untold
confusion.) DivX was originally a simple hack of Microsoft's MPEG-4
video codec, combined with MP3 audio, allowing decrypted video from
a DVD to be re-encoded for downloading and playing in Windows Media Player.
Work on DivX evolved through Project
Mayo and a version originally called DivX Deux into an open-source
initiative known as OpenDivX, based on the MPEG-4
standard. Out of all this came DivXNetworks, a company that
has turned DivX into an extensive video encoding and delivery
system. There's also an open-source variation called 3ivx.
The original Divx
Depending on whom you ask, Divx (Digital Video Express, first known
as ZoomTV) was either an insidious evil scheme for greedy studios
to control what you see in your own living room or an innovative
approach to video rental that would have offered cheap discs you
could get almost anywhere and keep for later viewings.
Developed by Circuit City and a Hollywood law firm, Divx was supported
by Disney (Buena Vista), Twentieth Century Fox, Paramount, Universal,
MGM, and DreamWorks SKG, all of which also released discs in "open
DVD" format, since the Divx agreement was non-exclusive. Harman/Kardon,
JVC, Kenwood, Matsushita (Panasonic), Pioneer, Thomson (RCA/Proscan/GE),
and Zenith announced Divx players, though some never came to market.
(Divx models are Panasonic X410, Proscan PS8680Z, RCA RC5230Z and
RC5231Z, and Zenith DVX2100.) The studios and hardware makers supporting
Divx were given incentives in the form of guaranteed licensing payments
totaling over $110 million. Divx discs were manufactured by Nimbus,
Panasonic, and Pioneer. Circuit City lost over $114 million (after
tax writeoffs) on Divx.
Divx was a pay-per-viewing-period variation of DVD. Divx discs
sold for $4.50. Once inserted into a Divx player the disc would
play normally (allowing the viewer to pause, rewind, even put in
another disc before finishing the first disc) for the next 48 hours,
after which the "owner" had to pay $3.25 to unlock it for another
48 hours. A Divx DVD player, which cost about $100 more than a regular
player, had to be hooked up to a phone line so it could call an
800 number for about 20 seconds during the night once each month
(or after playing 10 or so discs) to upload billing information.
Most Divx discs could be converted to DivxSilver status by paying
an additional fee (usually $20) to allow unlimited plays on a single
account (as of Dec 1998, 85% of Divx discs were convertible). Unlimited-playback
DivxGold discs were announced but never produced. Divx players can
also play regular DVD discs, but Divx discs do not play in standard
DVD players. Divx discs are serialized (with a barcode in the standard
Burst Cutting Area) and in addition to normal DVD copy protection
(see 1.11) they employ watermarking of the video,
modified channel modulation, and triple DES encryption (three 56-bit
keys) of serial communications. Divx technology never worked on
PCs, which undoubtedly contributed to its demise. Because of the
DES encryption, Divx technology may not have been allowed outside
the U.S.
Divx was originally announced for summer 1998 release. Limited
trials began June 8, 1998 in San Francisco, CA and Richmond, VA.
The only available player was from Zenith (which at the time was
in Chapter 11 bankruptcy), and the promised 150 movies had dwindled
to 14. The limited nationwide rollout (with one Zenith player model
and 150 movies in 190 stores) began on September 25, 1998. By the
end of 1998 about 87,000 Divx players (from four models available)
and 535,000 Divx discs were sold (from about 300 titles available).
The company apparently counted the five discs bundled with each
player, which means 100,000 additional discs were sold. By March
1999, 420 Divx titles were available (compared to over 3,500 open
DVD titles). All things considered, Divx players were selling well
and titles were being produced with impressive speed.
On June 16, 1999, less than a year after initial product trials,
Circuit City withdrew its support and Divx announced that it was
closing down. Divx did not confuse or delay development of the DVD
market nearly as much as many people predicted (including yours
truly). In fact, it probably helped by stimulating Internet rental
companies to provide better services and prices, by encouraging
manufacturers to offer more free discs with player purchases, and
by motivating studios to develop rental programs.
When it closed down, the company offered $100 rebate coupons to
all owners of Divx players. This made the players a good deal, since
they can play open DVDs just as well as other low-end players that
cost more. On July 7th, 2001, Divx players dialed into the central
billing computer, which decommissioned them. (Divx players not connected
to phone lines have expired their playback allowance.) Divx discs
are no longer playable in any players.
For more information see the Divx
Owner's Association.
Advantages of Divx:
- Viewing could be delayed, unlike rentals.
- Discs need not be returned. No late fees.
- You could watch the movie again for a small fee. Initial cost
of "owning" a disc was reduced.
- Discs could be unlocked for unlimited viewing (Divx Silver),
an inexpensive way to preview before deciding to purchase.
- The disc is new; no damage from previous renters.
- The "rental" market was opened up to other retailers, including
mail order.
- Studios got more control over the use of their content.
- You received special offers from studios in your Divx mailbox.
- Divx players (with better quality and features than comparable
players) were a steal after Divx went out of business.
Disadvantages of Divx :
- Higher player cost (about $100 more at first, about $50 later).
- Although discs did not have to be returned, the viewer still
had to go to the effort of purchasing the disc. Cable/satellite
pay per view is more convenient.
- Higher cost than for regular DVD rental ($3 to $7 vs. $2 to
$4). There were few obstacles to the company raising prices later,
since it had a monopoly.
- Casual quick viewing (looking for a name in the credits, playing
a favorite scene, watching supplements) required paying a fee.
- Most Divx titles were pan & scan (see 3.5) without extras such as foreign language tracks, subtitles,
biographies, trailers, and commentaries.
- The player had to be hooked to your phone line, possibly requiring
a new jack in your living room or a phone extension cable strung
across it. (Players required a connection once a month or so,
so you could periodically connect it to a phone line.)
- Divx couldn't be used in mobile environments, such as a van
or RV, unless you took it out and connected it to a phone line
about once a month.
- The Divx central computer collected information about your viewing
habits, as do cable/satellite pay-per-view services and large
rental chains. (According to Divx, the law did not allow them
to use the information for resale and marketing.)
- Divx players included a "mailbox" for companies to send you
unsolicited offers (i.e., spam).
- Those who didn't lock out their Divx player could receive unexpected
bills when their kids or visitors played Divx discs.
- Divx discs wouldn't play in regular DVD players or on PCs with
DVD-ROM drives. Some uninformed consumers bought Divx discs only
to find they wouldn't play in their non-Divx player.
- Unlocked Silver discs would only work in players on the same
account. Playback in a friend's Divx player would incur a charge.
(Gold discs, which were never released, would have played without
charge in all Divx players.)
- There was no market for used Divx discs.
- Divx discs are unplayable after June 2001.
- Divx players were never available outside the U.S. and Canada.
Why in the world would you want to degrade DVD's beautiful digital
picture by copying it to analog tape? Especially since you lose
the interactive menus and other nice features.
If you really want to copy to VHS, hook the audio/video outputs
of the DVD player to the audio/video inputs of your VCR, then record
the disc to tape. You'll discover that most of the time the resulting
tape is garbled and unwatchable. This is because of the Macrovision
feature designed to prevent you from doing this. See 1.11.
Not for a long time. HD-DVD "technology demonstrations" being made
by various companies do not mean that HD-DVD is around the corner
(the demonstrations mean only that companies are busy jockeying
for technology and patent positions in developing the future DVD
format). Consider that U.S. HDTV was anticipated to be available
in 1989, yet was not finalized until 1996, and did not appear until
1998. And has it made your current TV obsolete yet?
HD-DVD (HD stands for both high-density and high-definition) may
be available in 2004 at the very earliest, though 2006 is more likely.
It will use blue or violet lasers to read smaller pits, increasing
data capacity to around 20 GB per layer. MPEG-2 Progressive Profile--or
perhaps another format such as H.263--will probably be used to encode
the video. All ATSC and DVB formats will be supported, possibly
with the addition of 1080p24. HD-DVD players will play current DVD
discs and will make them look even better (with progressive-scan
video and picture processing), but new HD-DVD discs won't be playable
in older DVD players (unless one side is HD and the other standard
DVD).
See 6.5 for more on the future of DVD.
Ironically, computers will support HDTV before settop players do,
since 2x DVD-ROM drives coupled with appropriate playback and display
hardware meet the 19 Mbps data rate needed for HDTV. This has led
to various "720p DVD" projects, which use the existing DVD format
to store video in 1280x720 resolution at 24 progressive frames per
second. It's possible that 720p DVDs can be made compatible with
existing players (which would only play the 480-line line data).
Note: The term HDVD has already
been taken for "high-density volumetric display."
Some have speculated that a "double-headed" player reading both
sides of the disc at the same time could double the data rate or
provide an enhancement stream for applications such as HDTV. This
is currently impossible since the track spirals go in opposite directions
(unless all four layers are used). The DVD spec would have to be
changed to allow reverse spirals on layer 0. Even then, keeping
both sides in sync, especially with MPEG-2's variable bit rate,
would require independently tracking heads, precise track and pit
spacing, and a larger, more sophisticated track buffer. Another
option would be to use two heads to read both layers of one side
simultaneously. This is technically feasible but has no advantage
over reading one layer twice as fast, which is simpler and cheaper.
See 2.9 for more information about HDTV and
DVD.
Very little, as predicted in this FAQ. Constellation 3D ran out of money in mid 2002.
The various reports of fluorescent multilayer disc (FMD) causing
the early death of DVD were wildly exaggerated and not founded in
reality.
Fluorescent multilayer technology, which can be used in cards or
discs, aims a laser at fluorescent dye, causing it to emit light.
Since it doesn't depend on reflected laser light, it's possible
to create many data layers (C3D prototyped 50 layers in its lab).
It can use the same 650 nm laser as DVD, so FMD drives could be
made to read DVDs. In June 2000, C3D announced a program to
make FMDs with 25 GB per side that would be readable by DVD drives
with a "minor and inexpensive modification." C3D later said players
would be available by mid 2001. FMD was very cool technology, but
it was new, with no track record, developed by one small company.
DVD is based on decades of optical storage technology development
by dozens of companies. The monumental task of changing entire production
infrastructures over to a new format was too much for C3D, even
with tens of millions of dollars and some large partners.
MPEG-4 is a video encoding standard designed primarily for low-data
rate streaming video, although it's actually more efficient than
MPEG-2 at DVD and HDTV data rates. MPEG-4 also provides for advanced
multimedia with media objects, but most implementations only
support simple video (Simple Visual Profile).
DVD uses MPEG-2 video encoding (see 3.4 for details). Standard DVD players don't recognize the MPEG-4
video format. MPEG-4 files can be stored on DVD-ROM for use on computers.
For example, Divx;-) uses MPEG-4 (see 4.8).
It's possible that MPEG-4 will be used in a future, high-definition
version of DVD. It's also possible that a similar format such as
H.263 will be used for the next generation of DVD. In any case,
it will probably not appear before 2004 at the earliest.
For more about MPEG, see Tristan's MPEG.org site and the MPEG home page.
WebDVD is the simple concept of combining DVD content with Internet
technology. It combines the best of DVD (fast access to high-quality
video, audio, and data) with the best of the Internet (interactivity,
dynamic updates, and communication). In general, WebDVD refers to
enhancing a DVD with HTML pages and links, or enhancing a Web site
with content from a local DVD drive. WebDVD is not a trademarked
term of AOL-Warner, Microsoft, or any other company. Variations
on the WebDVD concept are known as iDVD, eDVD, Connected DVD, and
so on. It's not a new idea --it's been done with CD-ROM for years--
but the differences with DVD are that the quality of the audio and
video are finally better than TV, and the discs can be played in
low-cost settop players. Almost all WebDVD implementations are currently
for PCs, but new players such as Nuon-based models are adding WebDVD
features.
Most major authoring systems (see 5.4) include rudimentary tools for adding HTML enhancements to
DVD. For fancier WebDVD development there are a variety of tools;
see 4.9.
For more on WebDVD, see Phil DeLancie's EMedia article.
Good examples of WebDVD sites are Mars:
The Red Planet, Stargaze, and DVD Demystified. The authors of these
sites (Ralph LaBarge and Jim Taylor) encourage you to copy their
code as a starting place for your own WebDVD creations.
Nuon was a specialized "media processor" chip, designed by VM Labs, that was powerful enough to play DVDs
and video games. The chip was originally intended for video game
consoles, but was hitched to DVD's wagon when the game market prospects
dried up and the DVD market exploded. Some DVD players from Samsung,
Thomson (RCA), and Toshiba were built on Nuon technology. The extra
processing power in a Nuon player enabled special features such
as graphical overlays, digital zoom, and live thumbnails. Some DVD
movies were produced with added content designed specifically for
the Nuon platform. As of the beginning of 2002 there were four Nuon-enhanced
DVD movies: The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai (Special Edition),
Bedazzled, Dr. Doolittle 2, and Planet of the Apes.
In December 2001 VM Labs filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and in
March 2002 the company's assets were purchased by Genesis Microchip. A new division, Nuon Semiconductor, was formed to market Nuon
chips under the Aries name. On July 24, 2002, Genesis laid off the
entire Nuon division.
Video outputs
Most DVD players have the following video output connections, which
can carry an NTSC, PAL, or SECAM signal.
- Composite video (CVBS). Standard yellow RCA video plug. Combines
all three video signals into one.
- S-video (Y/C). 4-pin round plug. Separates brightness signal
(Y) from two color signals (C).
- European players combine both of these signals, and others,
into a 21-pin rectangular SCART connector.
Some players may have additional video connections:
- Component interlaced analog video (EIA 770.1). Keeps all three
video signals separate.
- Y'PbPr format: 3 RCA or BNC connectors.
- RGB (or RGBS or RGBHV) format: SCART connector or 3, 4, or 5
RCA or BNC connectors.
- Component progressive analog video. Keeps all three video signals
separate.
- Y'PbPr format: 3 RCA connectors.
- RGB (or RGBS or RGBHV) format: SCART connector or 3, 4, or 5
RCA or BNC connectors.
- RF video. For connecting the TV antenna input on channel 3 or
4.
- Screw-on, 75-ohm, F-type connector. May require an adapter for
TVs that have 300-ohm, two-screw, antenna wire connectors.
Most of the DVD players with component video outputs use YUV (Y'PbPr),
which is incompatible with RGB equipment. European players with
SCART connectors have RGBS outputs. YUV to RGB transcoders are rumored
to be available for $200-$300, but seem hard to track down. A $700
converter is available from avscience, and $900 converter, the CVC 100,
is available from Extron. Converters
are also available from Altinex,
Kramer, Monster Cable, and others. For progressive
scan you need a converter that can handle 31.5 kHz signals. Converters
from s-video are also an option (Markertek Video Supply, 800-522-2025).
Note: The correct term for analog color-difference output is Y'Pb'Pr',
not Y'Cb'Cr' (which is digital, not analog). To simplify things,
this FAQ sometimes uses the term YUV in the generic sense to refer
to analog color difference signals.
No consumer DVD players have yet been announced with digital video
outputs, but digital output will soon be available using HDMI or IEEE 1394
(FireWire) connectors. There are specialty players from Function Communications, Theta Digital, and Vigatec with SDI (serial digital interface)
output, but they connect only to high-end or production equipment.
Audio outputs
Most DVD players have the following audio output connections.
- Analog stereo audio. May have Dolby Surround encoding, depending
on the disc.
- Two RCA connectors, red and white.
- Digital audio. 1 to 5.1 channels. Raw digital audio in PCM,
MLP, Dolby Digital (AC-3), DTS, or MPEG-2 format. Requires an
amplifier/receiver with a built-in decoder (or a separate external
decoder).
- S/P DIF coax format: RCA connector. (IEC-958 Type II)
- Toslink format: square optical connector. (EIAJ CP-340 and EIAJ
CP-1201)
Some players may have additional audio connections:
- Multichannel analog audio. Requires a multichannel-ready or
"Dolby Digital ready" amplifier/receiver with 6 inputs.
- Six RCA connectors or one DB-25 connectors.
- AC-3 RF audio. Only on combination LD/DVD players. Only carries
audio from AC-3 laserdiscs.
- One RCA connector.
- High-resolution digital audio.
- 1394 (FireWire): rectangular connector. Requires a receiver
with 1394 audio input.
Some players and receivers support only S/P DIF or only Toslink.
If your player and receiver don't match, you'll need a converter
such as the Audio Authority 977 Midiman C02, COP 1, or POF.
Some players can output 96/24 PCM audio using a non-standard variation
of IEC-958 running at 6.2 MHz (6.144 Mbps) instead of the normal
limit of 3.1 MHz. Note: The CSS license
does not allow digital PCM output of CSS-protected material at 96
kHz. The player must downsample to 48 kHz. The Pioneer Elite
DV-47Ai is the only DVD player (as of Sep 2002) with DTCP-protected
1394 output for full, multichannel 96/24 and 192/24 PCM.
It depends on your audio/video system and your DVD player. Most
DVD players have 2 or 3 video hookup options and 3 audio hookup
options. Choose the output format with the best quality (indicated
below) that is supported by your video and audio systems. See 3.1 for output connector details.
On many TVs you will need to switch the TV to auxiliary input (line
input). You might need to tune it to channel 0 to make this work.
If you want to hook multiple devices (DVD player, VCR, cable/satellite
box, WebTV, etc.) to a single TV, you need one of the following:
- a TV with multiple inputs
- a manual audio/video switchbox (~$30 at electronics suppliers
such as Comtrad)
- an A/V receiver (to switch between video sources via remote
control). If you plan on getting an A/V receiver, make sure it
can handle the video format you want to use (component or s-video).
Video hookup (pick one from the list)
- S-video (very good quality): Almost all players have
s-video output. S-video looks much better than composite video
and is only slightly inferior to component video. Hook an s-video
cable from the player to the display (or to an A/V receiver that
can switch s-video). The round, 4-pin connector may be labeled
Y/C, s-video, or S-VHS.
- Composite video (ok quality): All DVD players have standard
RCA (Cinch) baseband video connectors. Hook a standard video cable
from the player to the display (or to an A/V receiver ). The connectors
are usually yellow and may be labeled video, CVBS, composite,
or baseband.
- Component video (best quality): Some U.S. and Japanese
players have interlaced component YUV (Y'Pb'Pr') video output.
Connectors may be labeled YUV, color difference, YPbPr, or Y/B-Y/R-Y,
and may be colored green/blue/red. (Some players incorrectly label
the output as YCbCr.) Some players have RGB component video output
via a 21-pin SCART connector or 3 RCA or BNC connectors labeled
R/G/B. Hook cables from the three video outputs of the player
to the three video inputs of the display, or hook a SCART cable
from the player to the display.
Note: There is no standardization on the output interface format
(voltage and setup). Players apparently use SMPTE 253M (286 mV sync, 0% luma setup with 700 mV peak, +/-300 mV color
excursion), Betacam (286 mV sync, 7.5%
luma setup with 714 mV peak, +/-350 mV color excursion),
M-II (300 mV sync, 7.5% luma setup with 700 mV peak, +/-324.5 mV color
excursion), or non-standard variations. Note that outputs
with zero IRE setup can provide a wider range of luma values for
a slightly better picture. For equipment with RGB input, a YUV
converter is usually needed. See section 3.1.
- Progressive video (very best quality): A few players
have progressive-scan YUV (Y'Pb'Pr') or RGB (European players
only) component video output. Hook decent-quality cables from
the three video outputs of the player to the three video inputs
of a progressive-scan line multiplier or a progressive-scan TV.
Toshiba's version is called ColorStream PRO. Progressive video
preserves the progressive nature of most movies, providing a film-like,
flicker-free image with improved vertical resolution and smoother
motion. DVD computers can also produce progressive video from
DVD. In this case, use a 15-pin computer video cable to connect
the VGA output of the PC to the VGA input of a monitor or projector.
If the projector only has RGB or YPbPr inputs, you'll need a converter
such as the Audio Authority 9A60.
See 1.40, 2.12, and 4.1 for more information on progressive video.
- RF video (worst quality): You should use this connection
only if you have an old TV that has only a screw-on antenna input.
Most DVD players don't have RF output, so you will probably need
to buy an RF modulator (~$30 at Radio
Shack or Comtrad). (See warning below about using
a VCR as an RF modulator.) If the player has built-in RF output
it will include audio, although it may only be mono. Connect a
coax cable from the yellow video output of the player to the input
of the modulator. If you are not hooking the player up to a separate
stereo system, then connect a coax cable from the left audio output
of the player to the audio input of the modulator. (If you have
a stereo modulator, connect another cable for the right channel.)
Connect a coax antenna cable from the modulator to the TV. You
may need a 300 ohm to 75 ohm adapter (to switch between a two-wire
antenna connection and a threaded coax connection). Tune the TV
to channel 3 or 4 and set the switch on the modulator or the back
of the player to match. If you also want to hook up a VCR,
connect an antenna cable from the output of the VCR to the antenna
input of the modulator.
Warning: If you connect your
DVD player to a VCR and then to your TV (or to a combination TV/VCR),
you will probably have problems with discs that enable the player's
Macrovision circuit. See 3.2.1.
Warning: Some video projectors don't
recognize the 4.43 NTSC signal from NTSC discs in PAL players (see
1.19). They see the 60Hz scanning frequency and switch to NSTC
even though the color subcarrier is in PAL format.
Note: Most DVD players support widescreen signaling, which tells
a widescreen display what the aspect ratio is so that it can automatically
adjust. One standard (ITU-R BT.1119, used mostly in Europe) includes
information in a video scanline. Another standard, for Y/C connectors,
adds a 5V DC signal to the chroma line to designate a widescreen
signal. Unfortunately, some switchers and amps throw away the DC
component instead of passing it on to the TV.
For more information on conversions between formats, see the amazing
Notes on Video Conversion
from the Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ.
Audio hookup (pick one from the list)
Note: All DVD players have a built-in 2-channel Dolby Digital
(AC-3) decoder. Some can also decode MPEG audio or DTS audio.
The decoder translates multichannel audio into 2-channel PCM
audio. This goes to the digital output and also converted to
analog for standard audio output. Some players have a built-in
multichannel Dolby Digital decoder, but it's only useful if
you have an audio system with multichannel analog inputs. See
3.6.3 for more explanation.
- Analog audio (2-channel stereo/surround) (ok quality):
All DVD players include two RCA connectors for stereo output.
Any disc with multichannel audio is automatically decoded and
downmixed to Dolby Surround output for connection to a regular
stereo system or a Dolby Surround/Pro Logic system. Connect two
audio cables between the player and a receiver, amplifier, or
TV. Connectors may be labeled audio or left/right; left is usually
white, right is usually red. If your TV has only one audio input,
connect the left channel from the DVD player.
- Digital audio (best quality): Almost all DVD players
have digital audio outputs. The same output can carry Dolby Digital
(AC-3), PCM audio (including PCM from CDs), MLP audio (from DVD-Audio
discs), DTS, and MPEG-2 audio (PAL/SECAM players only). For PCM,
a digital receiver or an outboard DAC is required. For all other
formats, the appropriate decoder is required in the receiver/amplifier
or as a separate audio processor. For example, to play a disc
with a Dolby Digital soundtrack using a digital audio connection,
the receiver has to have the Dolby Digital feature. DTS discs
require a player with the "DTS Digital Out" mark (older players
don't recognize DTS tracks), however, all DVD players can play
DTS CDs if a DTS decoder is connected to the digital output (PCM
signal). Some DVD players have coax connectors (SP/DIF), some
have fiber-optic connectors (Toslink), and many have both. There
are endless arguments over which of these is better. Coax seems
to have more advocates, since it's inherently simpler. Optical
cable is not affected by electromagnetic interference, but it's
more fragile and can't curve tightly. Suffice it to say that since
the signal is digital, a quality cable of either type will provide
similar results. Hook a 75-ohm coax cable or a fiber-optic cable
between the player and the receiver/processor. (You might need
a converter, see 3.1.)
Some players provide separate connectors for Dolby Digital/DTS/MPEG
and PCM. On others, you may need to select the desired output
format using the player setup menu or a switch on the back of
the player. If you try to feed Dolby Digital or DTS to digital
receiver that doesn't recognize it, you'll get no audio.
Note: Make sure you use a quality cable; a cheap RCA patch
cable may cause the audio to sound poor or not work at all.
Note: Connecting to the AC-3/RF (laserdisc) input will
not work unless your receiver/decoder can autoswitch, since DVD
digital audio is not in RF format (see below).
- Component analog audio (excellent quality): Some players
provide 6-channel analog output from the internal Dolby Digital
or DTS decoder. A few provide 7-channel output from 6.1 tracks.
The digital-to-analog conversion quality in the player may be
better or worse than in an external decoder. A receiver/amplifier
with 6 or 7 inputs (or more than one amplifier) is required; this
type of unit is often called "Dolby Digital ready" or "AC-3 ready."
Unfortunately, in many cases you won't be able to adjust the volume
of individual channels or perform bass management. Hook 6 (or
7) audio cables to the RCA connectors on the player and to the
matching connectors on the receiver/amplifier. Some receivers
require an adapter cable with a DB-25 connector on one end and
RCA connectors on the other.
Note: Until there is a digital connection standard, the
only way to get multichannel PCM output from DVD-Audio players
will be with analog connections or proprietary connections. If
you plan to get a DVD-Audio player, you'll need a receiver with
analog multichannel inputs.
- RF digital audio (laserdisc only): Combination LD/DVD
players include AC-3 RF output for digital audio from laserdiscs.
Hook a coax cable to the AC-3 RF input of the receiver/processor.
Note: digital audio from DVDs does not come out of the RF output,
it comes out of the optical/coax outputs. Analog audio from LDs
will come out the stereo connectors, so three separate audio hookups
are required to cover all variations.
It's not a good idea to route the video from your DVD player through
your VCR. Most movies use Macrovision protection (see 1.11), which affects VCRs and causes problems such as a repeated
darkening and lightening of the picture. If your TV doesn't have
a direct video input, you may need a separate RF converter (see
3.2). Or better yet, get a new TV with s-video
inputs.
You may also have problems with a TV/VCR combo, since many of them
route the video input through the VCR circuitry. The only solution
is to get a box to strip Macrovision (see 1.11).
The number one cause of bad video is a poorly adjusted TV. The
high fidelity of DVD video demands much more from the display. Turn
the sharpness and brightness down. See 1.3 for
more information. For technical details of TV calibration, see Anthony
Haukap's FAQ:
How To Adjust a TV.
If you get audio hum or noisy video, it's probably caused by interference
or a ground loop. Try a shorter cable. Make sure the cable is adequately
shielded. Try turning off all equipment except the pieces you are
testing. Try moving things farther apart. Try plugging into a different
circuit. Wrap your entire house in tinfoil. Make sure all equipment
is plugged into the same outlet. For more on ground loops, see <www.hut.fi/Misc/Electronics/docs/groundloop/>.
More information for repair technicians is available at Shophelper.
There are many variations on the DVD theme. There are two physical
sizes: 12 cm (4.7 inches) and 8 cm (3.1 inches), both 1.2 mm thick,
made of two 0.6mm substrates glued together. These are the same
form factors as CD. A DVD disc can be single-sided or double-sided.
Each side can have one or two layers of data. The amount of video
a disc can hold depends on how much audio accompanies it and how
heavily the video and audio are compressed. The oft-quoted figure
of 133 minutes is apocryphal: a DVD with only one audio track easily
holds over 160 minutes, and a single layer can actually hold up
to 9 hours of video and audio if it's compressed to VHS quality.
At a rough average rate of 4.7 Mbps (3.5 Mbps for video, 1.2 Mbps
for three 5.1-channel soundtracks), a single-layer DVD can hold
a little over two hours. A two-hour movie with two soundtracks can
average 5.2 Mbps (with 4 Mbps for video). A dual-layer disc can
hold a two-hour movie at an average of 9.5 Mbps (close to the 10.08
Mbps limit).
A DVD-Video disc containing mostly audio can play for 13 hours
(24 hours with dual layers) using 48/16 PCM (slightly better than
CD quality). It can play 160 hours of audio (or a whopping 295 hours
with dual layers) using Dolby Digital 64 kbps compression of monophonic
audio, which is perfect for audio books.
Capacities of DVD:
For reference, a CD-ROM holds about 650 megabytes, which is 0.64
gigabytes or 0.68 billion bytes. In the list below, SS/DS means
single-/double-sided, SL/DL/ML means single-/dual-/mixed-layer (mixed
means single layer on one side, double layer on the other side),
gig means gigabytes (2^30), BB means billions of bytes (10^9). See
note about giga vs. billion in section 7.2.
| DVD-5 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
4.37 gig (4.70 BB) of data, over 2 hours of video |
| DVD-9 (12 cm, SS/DL) |
7.95 gig (8.54 BB), about 4 hours |
| DVD-10 (12 cm, DS/SL) |
8.74 gig (9.40 BB), about 4.5 hours |
| DVD-14 (12 cm, DS/ML) |
12.32 gig (13.24 BB), about 6.5 hours |
| DVD-18 (12 cm, DS/DL) |
15.90 gig (17.08 BB), over 8 hours |
| DVD-1 (8 cm, SS/SL) |
1.36 gig (1.46 BB), about half an hour |
| DVD-2 (8 cm, SS/DL) |
2.47 gig (2.66 BB), about 1.3 hours |
| DVD-3 (8 cm, DS/SL) |
2.72 gig (2.92 BB), about 1.4 hours |
| DVD-4 (8 cm, DS/DL) |
4.95 gig (5.32 BB), about 2.5 hours |
| DVD-R 1.0 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
3.68 gig (3.95 BB) |
| DVD-R 2.0 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
4.37 gig (4.70 BB); 8.75 gig for rare DS discs |
| DVD-RW 2.0 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
4.37 gig (4.70 BB); 8.75 gig for rare DS discs |
| DVD-RAM 1.0 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
2.40 gig (2.58 BB) |
| DVD-RAM 1.0 (12 cm, DS/SL) |
4.80 gig (5.16 BB) |
| DVD-RAM 2.0 (12 cm, SS/SL) |
4.37 gig (4.70 BB) |
| DVD-RAM 2.0 (12 cm, DS/SL) |
8.75 gig (9.40 BB) |
| DVD-RAM 2.0 (8 cm, SS/SL) |
1.36 gig (1.46 BB) |
| DVD-RAM 2.0 (8 cm, DS/SL) |
2.47 gig (2.65 BB) |
| CD-ROM (12 cm, SS/SL) |
0.635 gig (0.650 BB) |
| CD-ROM (8 cm, SS/SL) |
0.180 gig (0.194 BB) |
| DDCD-ROM (12 cm, SS/SL) |
1.270 gig (1.364 BB) |
| DDCD-ROM (8 cm, SS/SL) |
0.360 gig (0.387 BB) |
Tip: It takes about two gigabytes to store one hour of average
video.
The increase in capacity from CD-ROM is due to: 1) smaller pit
length (~2.08x), 2) tighter tracks (~2.16x), 3) slightly larger
data area (~1.02x), 4) more efficient channel bit modulation (~1.06x),
5) more efficient error correction (~1.32x), 6) less sector overhead
(~1.06x). Total increase for a single layer is about 7 times a standard
CD-ROM. There's a slightly different explanation at <www.mpeg.org/MPEG/DVD/General/Gain.html>.
The capacity of a dual-layer disc is slightly less than double
that of a single-layer disc. The laser has to read "through" the
outer layer to the inner layer (a distance of 20 to 70 microns).
To reduce inter-layer crosstalk, the minimum pit length of both
layers is increased from 0.4 um to 0.44 um. To compensate, the reference
scanning velocity is slightly faster -- 3.84 m/s, as opposed to
3.49 m/s for single layer discs. Longer pits, spaced farther apart,
are easier to read correctly and are less susceptible to jitter.
The increased length means fewer pits per revolution, which results
in reduced capacity per layer.
Note: Older versions of Windows that
use FAT16 instead of UDF, FAT32, or NTFS to read a DVD may run into
problems with the 4 gigabyte volume size limit. FAT16 also has a
2 gigabyte file size limit, while FAT32 has a 4 gigabyte file size
limit. (NTFS has a 2 terabyte limit, so we're ok there for a while.)
See 4.3 for details of writable DVD. More info
on disc specifications and manufacturing can be found at Disctronics,
Cinram. Panasonic, Technicolor,
and other disc replicator sites.
The first commercial DVD-18 title, The Stand, was released
in October 1999. It will still take a while for these super-size
discs to become common. A DVD-18 requires a completely different
way of creating two layers. A single-sided, dual-layer disc (DVD-9)
is produced by putting one data layer on each substrate and gluing
the halves together with transparent adhesive so that the pickup
laser can read both layers from one side. But in order to get four
layers, each substrate needs to hold two. This requires stamping
a second data layer on top of the first, a much more complicated
prospect. Even after new equipment is developed and installed in
production lines, the yield (number of usable discs compared to
bad discs) will be quite low until the process is fine tuned.
WAMO and others continue to announce progress with DVD-18 processes,
but given how long it took for production of dual-layer, single-sided
discs to become practical, it will take even longer before the yields
of DS/DL discs can meet the replication demands of mainstream movie
distribution, especially since low yields mean higher replication
costs. In the interim we'll see DVD-14s (two layers on one side,
one layer on the other side), since they're a little easier to produce.
(My prediction in this FAQ, as of December 1998, was that we wouldn't
see commercial DVD-18 discs until fall 1999, in spite of many rumors
that they would appear sooner.)
DVD-Video is an application of DVD-ROM. DVD-Video is also an application
of MPEG-2. This means the DVD format defines subsets of these standards
to be applied in practice as DVD-Video. DVD-ROM can contain any
desired digital information, but DVD-Video is limited to certain
data types designed for television reproduction.
A disc has one track (stream) of MPEG-2 constant bit rate (CBR)
or variable bit rate (VBR) compressed digital video. A restricted
version of MPEG-2 Main Profile at Main Level (MP@ML) is used. SP@ML
is also supported. MPEG-1 CBR and VBR video is also allowed. 525/60
(NTSC, 29.97 interlaced frames/sec) and 625/50 (PAL, 25 interlaced
frames/sec) video display systems are expressly supported. Coded
frame rates of 24 fps progressive from film, 25 fps interlaced from
PAL video, and 29.97 fps interlaced from NTSC video are typical.
MPEG-2 progressive_sequence is not allowed, but interlaced sequences
can contain progressive pictures and progressive macroblocks. In
the case of 24 fps source, the encoder embeds MPEG-2 repeat_first_field
flags into the video stream to make the decoder either perform 2-3
pulldown for 60Hz (59.94) displays or 2-2 pulldown (with resulting
4% speedup) for 50Hz displays. In other words, the player doesn't
really "know" what the encoded rate is, it simply follows the MPEG-2
encoder's instructions to produce the predetermined display rate
of 25 fps or 29.97 fps. (Very few players convert from PAL to NTSC
or NTSC to PAL. See 1.19.)
Because film transfers for NTSC and PAL usually use the same coded
picture rate (24 fps) but PAL resolution is higher, the PAL version
takes more space on the disc. Raw increase before encoding is 20%
(576/480), but the final result is closer to 15%, depending on encoder
efficiency. This translates to a loss of 600 to 700 megabytes on
PAL discs compared to NTSC discs.
It's interesting to note that even interlaced source video is often
encoded as progressive-structured MPEG pictures, with interlaced
field-encoded macroblocks used only when needed for motion. A computer
can mostly ignore the repeat_first_field flags and re-interleave
(weave) the video fields back into full-resolution progressive
frames, which works especially well at 72 Hz refresh rate (3x24).
Computers can improve the quality of interlaced source by doubling
the lines in fields (bobbing) and displaying them as progressive
frames at twice the normal rate. Most film source is encoded progressive
(the inverse telecine process in the encoder removes duplicate 2-3
pulldown fields from videotape source); most video sources are encoded
interlaced. These may be mixed on the same disc, such as an interlaced
logo followed by a progressive movie.
See 3.8 for an explanation of progressive and
interlaced scanning. See 1.40 for progressive-scan players. See the MPEG page <http://www.mpeg.org/> for more information
on MPEG-2 video.
Picture dimensions are max 720x480 (for 525/60 NTSC display) or
720x576 (for 625/50 PAL/SECAM display). Pictures are subsampled
from 4:2:2 ITU-R BT.601 down to 4:2:0, allocating an average of
12 bits/pixel in Y'CbCr format. (Color depth is 24 bits, since color
samples are shared across 4 pixels.) DVD pixels are not square.
The uncompressed source is 124.416 Mbps for video source (720x480x12x30
or 720x576x12x25), or either 99.533 or 119.439 Mbps for film source
(720x480x12x24 or 720x576x12x24). In analog output terms, lines
of horizontal resolution is usually around 500, but can go up to
540 (see 3.4.1). Typical luma frequency response maintains full amplitude
to between 5.0 and 5.5 MHz. This is below the 6.75 MHz native frequency
of the MPEG-2 digital signal (in other words, most players fall
short of reproducing the full quality of DVD). Chroma frequency
response is half that of luma.
Allowable picture resolutions are:
MPEG-2, 525/60 (NTSC): 720x480, 704x480, 352x480
MPEG-2, 625/50 (PAL): 720x576, 704x576, 352x576
MPEG-1, 525/60 (NTSC): 352x240
MPEG-1, 625/50 (PAL): 352x288
Different players use different numbers of bits for the video digital-to-analog
converter. Current best-quality players use 10 bits. This has nothing
to do with the MPEG decoding process, since each original component
signal is limited to 8 bits per sample. More bits in the player
provide more "headroom" and more signal levels during digital-to-analog
conversion, which can help produce a better picture.
Maximum video bit rate is 9.8 Mbps. The "average" video bit rate
is 3.5 but depends entirely on the length, quality, amount of audio,
etc. This is a 36:1 reduction from uncompressed 124 Mbps video source
(or a 28:1 reduction from 100 Mbps film source). Raw channel data
is read off the disc at a constant 26.16 Mbps. After 8/16 demodulation
it's down to 13.08 Mbps. After error correction the user data stream
goes into the track buffer at a constant 11.08 Mbps. The track buffer
feeds system stream data out at a variable rate of up to 10.08 Mbps.
After system overhead, the maximum rate of combined elementary streams
(audio + video + subpicture) is 10.08. MPEG-1 video rate is limited
to 1.856 Mbps with a typical rate of 1.15 Mbps.
Still frames (encoded as MPEG-2 I-frames) are supported and can
be displayed for a specific amount of time or indefinitely. These
are generally used for menus. Still frames can be accompanied by
audio.
A disc also can have up to 32 subpicture streams that overlay the
video for subtitles, captions for the hard of hearing, captions
for children, karaoke, menus, simple animation, etc. These are full-screen,
run-length-encoded bitmaps with two bits per pixel, giving four
color values and four transparency values. For each group of subpictures,
four colors are selected from a palette of 16 (from the YCbCr gamut),
and four contrast values are selected out of 16 levels from transparent
to opaque. Subpicture display command sequences can be used to create
effects such as scroll, move, color/highlight, and fade. The maximum
subpicture data rate is 3.36 Mbps, with a maximum size per frame
of 53220 bytes.
In addition to subtitles in subpicture streams, DVD also supports
NTSC Closed Captions. Closed Caption text is stored in the video
stream as MPEG-2 user data (in packet headers) and is regenerated
by the player as a line-21 analog waveform in the video signal,
which then must be decoded by a Closed Caption decoder in the television.
Although the DVD-Video spec mentions NTSC only, there is no technical
reason PAL/SECAM DVD players could not be made to output the Closed
Caption text in World System Teletext (WST) format; the only trick
is to deal with frame rate differences. Unfortunate note: DVD Closed
Caption MPEG-2 storage format is slightly different than the ATSC
format. See 1.45 for more about Closed Captions.
Everyone gets confused by the term "lines of horizontal resolution,"
also known as LoHR or TVL. It's a carryover from analog video, it's
poorly understood, it's inconsistently measured and reported by
manufacturers, but we're stuck with it until all video is digital
and we can just report resolution in pixels.
Technically, lines of horizontal resolution refers to visually
resolvable vertical lines per picture height. In other words,
it's measured by counting the number of vertical black and white
lines that can be distinguished an area that is as wide as the picture
is high. The idea is to make the measurement independent of the
aspect ratio. Lines of horizontal resolution applies both to television
displays and to signal formats such as that produced by a DVD player.
Most TVs have ludicrously high numbers listed for their horizontal
resolution.
Since DVD has 720 horizontal pixels (on both NTSC and PAL discs),
the horizontal resolution can be calculated by dividing 720 by 1.33
(for a 4:3 aspect ratio) to get 540 lines. On a 1.78 (16:9) display,
you get 405 lines. In practice, most DVD players provide about 500
lines instead of 540 because of filtering and low-quality digital-to-analog
converters. VHS has about 230 (172 widescreen) lines, broadcast
TV has about 330 (248 widescreen), and laserdisc has about 425 (318
widescreen).
Don't confuse lines of horizontal resolution (resolution along
the x axis) with scan lines (resolution along the y axis). DVD produces
480 scan lines of active picture for NTSC and 576 for PAL. The NTSC
standard has 525 total scan lines, but only 480 to 483 or so are
visible. (The extra lines are black. They contain sync pulses and
other information, such as the Closed Captions that are encoded
into line # 21). PAL has 625 total scan lines, but only about 576
to 580 are visible. Since all video formats (VHS, LD, broadcast,
etc.) have the same number of scan lines, it's the horizontal resolution
that makes the big difference in picture quality.
For more information, see Allan Jayne's TV and Video Resolution Explained.
Video can be stored on a DVD in 4:3 format (standard TV shape)
or 16:9 (widescreen). The width-to-height ratio of standard televisions
is 4 to 3; in other words, 1.33 times wider than high. New widescreen
televisions, specifically those designed for HDTV, have a ratio
of 16 to 9; that is, 1.78 times wider than high.
DVD is specially designed to support widescreen displays. Widescreen
16:9 video, such as from a 16:9 video camera, can be stored on the
disc in anamorphic form, meaning the picture is squeezed
horizontally to fit the standard 4:3 rectangle, then unsqueezed
during playback.
Things get more complicated when film is transferred to video,
since most movies today have an aspect ratio of 1.66, 1.85 ("flat"),
or 2.40 ("scope"). Since these don't match 1.33 or 1.78 TV shapes,
two processes are employed to make various movie pegs fit TV holes:
Letterbox (often abbreviated to LBX) means the video is
presented in its theatrical aspect ratio, which is wider than standard
or widescreen TV. Black bars, called mattes, are used to
cover the gaps at the top and bottom. A 1.85 movie that has been
letterboxed for 1.33 display has thinner mattes than a 2.4 movie
letterboxed to 1.33 (28% of display height vs. 44%), although the
former are about the same thickness as those of a 2.4 movie letterboxed
to 1.78 (26% of display height). The mattes used to letterbox a
1.85 movie for 1.78 display are so thin (2%) that they're hidden
by the overscan of most widescreen TVs. Some movies, especially
animated features and European films, have an aspect ratio of 1.66,
which can be letterboxed for 1.33 display or sideboxed (or
windowboxed) for 1.78 display.
Pan & scan means the thinner TV "window" is panned and
zoomed across the wider movie picture, chopping off the sides. However,
most movies today are shot soft matte, which means a full
1.33 aspect film frame is used. (The cinematographer has two sets
of frame marks in her viewfinder, one for 1.33 and one for 1.85,
so she can allow for both formats.) The top and bottom are masked
off in the theater, but when the film is transferred to video the
full 1.33 frame can be used in the pan & scan process. Pan &
scan is primarily used for 1.33 formatting, not for 1.78 formatting,
since widescreen fans prefer that letterboxing be used to preserve
the theatrical effect.
For more details and nice visual aids see Leopold's How Film Is Transferred to
Video page. A list of movie aspect ratios is at The Widescreen Movie Center.
Once the video is formatted to full-frame or widescreen form, it's
encoded and stored on DVD discs. DVD players have four playback
modes, one for 4:3 video and three for 16:9 video:
- full frame (4:3 video for 4:3 display)
- auto letterbox (16:9 anamorphic video for 4:3 display)
- auto pan & scan (16:9 anamorphic video for 4:3 display)
- widescreen (16:9 anamorphic video for 16:9 display)
Video stored in 4:3 format is not changed by the player. It will
appear normally on a standard 4:3 display. Widescreen systems will
either enlarge it or add black bars to the sides. 4:3 video may
have been formatted with letterboxing or pan & scan before being
transferred to DVD. All formatting done to the video prior to it
being stored on the disc is transparent to the player. It merely
reproduces it as a standard 4:3 TV picture. Video that is letterboxed
before being encoded can be flagged so that the player will tell
a widescreen TV to automatically expand the picture. Unfortunately,
some discs (such as Fargo) do not flag the video properly. And worse,
some players ignore the flags.
The beauty of anamorphosis is that less of the picture is wasted
on letterbox mattes. DVD has a frame size designed for 1.33 display,
so the video still has to be made to fit, but because it's only
squeezed horizontally, 33% more pixels (25% of the total pixels
in a video frame) are used to store active picture instead of black.
Anamorphic video is best displayed on widescreen equipment, which
stretches the video back out to its original width. Alternatively,
many new 4:3 TV's can reduce the vertical scan area to restore the
proper aspect ratio without losing resolution (an automatic trigger
signal is sent to European TVs on SCART pin 8). Even though almost
all computers have 4:3 monitors, they have higher resolution than
TVs so they can display the full widescreen picture in a window
(854x480 pixels or bigger for NTSC; 1024x576 or bigger for PAL).
Anamorphic video can be converted by the player for display on
standard 4:3 TVs in letterbox or pan & scan form. If anamorphic
video is shown unchanged on a standard 4:3 display, people will
look tall and skinny as if they have been on a crash diet. The setup
options of DVD players allow the viewer to indicate whether they
have a 16:9 or 4:3 TV. In the case of a 4:3 TV, a second option
lets the viewer indicate a preference for how the player will reformat
anamorphic video. The two options are detailed below.
For automatic letterbox mode, the player generates black bars at
the top and the bottom of the picture (60 lines each for NTSC, 72
for PAL). This leaves 3/4 of the height remaining, creating a shorter
but wider rectangle (1.78:1). In order to fit this shorter rectangle,
the anamorphic picture is squeezed vertically using a letterbox
filter that combines every 4 lines into 3, reducing the vertical
resolution from 480 scan lines to 360. (If the video was already
letterboxed to fit the 1.78 aspect, then the mattes generated by
the player will extend the mattes in the video.) The vertical squeezing
exactly compensates for the original horizontal squeezing so that
the movie is shown in its full width. Some players have better letterbox
filters than others, using weighted averaging to combine lines (scaling
4 lines into 3 or merging the boundary lines) rather than simply
dropping one out of every four lines. Widescreen video can be letterboxed
to 4:3 on expensive studio equipment before it's stored on the disc,
or it can be stored in anamorphic form and letterboxed to 4:3 in
the player. If you compare the two, the letterbox mattes will be
identical but the picture quality of the studio version may be slightly
better. (See 1.38 for more about letterboxing.)
For automatic pan & scan mode, the anamorphic video is unsqueezed
to 16:9 and the sides are cropped off so that a portion of the image
is shown at full height on a 4:3 screen by following a center
of interest offset that's encoded in the video stream according
to the preferences of the people who transferred the film to video.
The pan & scan "window" is 75% of the full width, which reduces
the horizontal pixels from 720 to 540. The pan & scan window
can only travel laterally. This does not duplicate a true pan &
scan process in which the window can also travel up and down and
zoom in and out. Auto pan & scan has three strikes against it:
1) it doesn't provide the same artistic control as studio pan &
scan, 2) there is a loss of detail when the picture is scaled up,
and 3) equipment for recording picture shift information is not
widely available. Therefore, no anamorphic movies have been released
with auto pan & scan enabled, although a few discs use the pan
& scan feature in menus so that the same menu video can be used
in both widescreen and 4:3 mode. In order to present a quality full-screen
picture to the vast majority of TV viewers, yet still provide the
best experience for widescreen owners, some DVD producers choose
to put two versions on a single disc: 4:3 studio pan & scan
and 16:9 anamorphic.
Playback of widescreen material can be restricted by the producer
of the disc. Programs can be marked for the following display modes:
- 4:3 full frame
- 4:3 LB (for sending letterbox expand signal to widescreen TV)
- 16:9 LB only (player not allowed to pan & scan on 4:3 TV)
- 16:9 PS only (player not allowed to letterbox on 4:3 TV)
- 16:9 LB or PS (viewer can select pan & scan or letterbox on
4:3 TV)
You can usually tell if a disc contains anamorphic video if the
packaging says "enhanced for 16:9 widescreen" or something similar.
If all it says is "widescreen," it may be letterboxed to 4:3, not
16:9. Widescreen Review has a list of anamorphic
DVD titles.
Additional explanations of how anamorphic video works can be found
at Greg Lovern's What's
an Anamorphic DVD? page, Bill Hunt's Ultimate Guide to Anamorphic
Widescreen DVD, David Lockwood's What
Shape Image?, and Dan Ramer's What
the Heck Is Anamorphic?. More information can be found at the
Anamorphic
Widescreen Support Page and the Letterbox/Widescreen Advocacy Page. You
might also be interested in Guy Wright's The
Widescreen Scam. See 1.38 for further discussion of letterboxing.
Anamorphosis causes no problems with line doublers and other video
scalers, which simply duplicate the scan lines before they are stretched
out by the widescreen display.
For anamorphic video, the pixels are fatter. Different pixel aspect
ratios (none of them square) are used for each aspect ratio and
resolution. 720-pixel and 704-pixel sizes have the same aspect ratio
because the first includes overscan. Note that "conventional" values
of 1.0950 and 0.9157 are for height/width (and are tweaked to match
scanning rates). The table below uses less-confusing width/height
values (y/x * h/w).
720x480 720x576
704x480 704x576 352x480 352x576
4:3 0.909 1.091 1.818 2.182
16:9 1.212 1.455 2.424 2.909 For gory details of video resolution and pixel aspect
ratios see Jukka Aho's Quick
Guide to Digital Video Resolution and Aspect Ratio Conversions.
There are two home-entertainment flavors of DVD: DVD-Video and
DVD-Audio. Each supports high-definition multichannel audio. DVD-Audio
includes higher-quality PCM audio.
LPCM is mandatory in DVD-Audio discs, with up to 6 channels at
sample rates of 48/96/192 kHz (also 44.1/88.2/176.4 kHz) and sample
sizes of 16/20/24 bits. This allows theoretical frequency response
of up to 96 kHz and dynamic range of up to 144 dB. Multichannel
PCM is downmixable by the player, although at 192 and 176.4 kHz
only two channels are available. Sampling rates and sizes can vary
for different channels by using a predefined set of groups. The
maximum data rate is 9.6 Mbps.
The WG4 decided to include lossless compression (it's about time!),
and on August 5, 1998 approved Meridian's MLP (Meridian Lossless
Packing) scheme, already licensed by Dolby. MLP removes redundancy
from the signal to achieve a compression ratio of about 2:1 while
allowing the PCM signal to be completely recreated by the MLP decoder
(required in all DVD-Audio players). MLP allows playing times of
about 74 to 135 minutes of 6-channel 96kHz/24-bit audio on a single
layer (compared to 45 minutes without packing). Two-channel 192kHz/24-bit
playing times are about 120 to 140 minutes (compared to 67 minutes
without packing).
Other audio formats of DVD-Video (Dolby Digital, MPEG audio, and
DTS, described below) are optional on DVD-Audio discs, although
Dolby Digital is required for audio content that has associated
video. A subset of DVD-Video features (no angles, no seamless branching,
etc.) is allowed. It's expected that shortly after DVD-Audio players
appear, new universal DVD players will also support all DVD-Audio
features.
DVD-Audio includes specialized downmixing features for PCM channels.
Unlike DVD-Video, where the decoder controls mixing from 6 channels
down to 2, DVD-Audio includes coefficent tables to control mixdown
and avoid volume buildup from channel aggregation. Up to 16 tables
can be defined by each Audio Title Set (album), and each track can
be identified with a table. Coefficients range from 0dB to 60dB.
This feature goes by the horribly contrived name of SMART (system-managed
audio resource technique). (Dolby Digital, supported in both DVD-Audio
and DVD-Video, also includes downmixing information that can be
set at encode time.)
DVD-Audio allows up to 99 still images per track (at typical compression
levels, about 20 images fit into the 2 MB buffer in the player),
with a set of limited transitions (cut in/out, fade in/out, dissolve,
and wipe). Unlike with DVD-Video, the user can move at will through
the slides without interrupting the audio as it plays. On-screen
displays can be used for synchronized lyrics and navigation menus.
A special simplified navigation mode can be used on players without
a video display.
Sony and Philips are promoting SACD, a competing DVD-based format
using Direct Stream Digital (DSD) encoding with sampling rates of
up to 100 kHz. DSD is based on the pulse-density modulation (PDM)
technique that uses single bits to represent the incremental rise
or fall of the audio waveform. This supposedly improves quality
by removing the brick wall filters required for PCM encoding. It
also makes downsampling more accurate and efficient. DSD provides
frequency response from DC to over 100 kHz with a dynamic range
of over 120 dB. DSD includes a lossless encoding technique that
produces approximately 2:1 data reduction by predicting each sample
and then run-length encoding the error signal. Maximum data rate
is 2.8 Mbps.
SACD includes a physical watermarking feature. Pit signal processing
(PSP) modulates the width of pits on the disc to store a digital
watermark (data is stored in the pit length). The optical pickup
must contain additional circuitry to read the PSP watermark, which
is then compared to information on the disc to make sure it's legitimate.
Because of the requirement for new watermarking circuitry, SACD
discs are not playable in existing DVD-ROM drives.
SACD includes text and still graphics, but no video. Sony says
the format is aimed at audiophiles and is not intended to replace
the audio CD format.
See 1.12 for more general info on DVD-Audio
and SACD.
The following details are for audio tracks on DVD-Video. Some DVD
manufacturers such as Pioneer are developing audio-only players
using the DVD-Video format. Some DVD-Video discs contain mostly
audio with only video still frames.
A DVD-Video disc can have up to 8 audio tracks (streams) associated
with a video track (an angle). Each audio track can be in one of
three formats:
- Dolby Digital (formerly AC-3): 1 to 5.1 channels
- MPEG-2 audio: 1 to 5.1 or 7.1 channels
- PCM: 1 to 8 channels.
Two additional optional formats are provided: DTS and SDDS. Both
require external decoders and are not supported by all players.
The ".1" refers to a low-frequency effects (LFE) channel that connects
to a subwoofer. This channel carries an emphasized bass audio signal.
Linear PCM is uncompressed (lossless) digital
audio, the same format used on CDs and most studio masters. It can
be sampled at 48 or 96 kHz with 16, 20, or 24 bits/sample. (Audio
CD is limited to 44.1 kHz at 16 bits.) There can be from 1 to 8
channels. The maximum bit rate is 6.144 Mbps, which limits sample
rates and bit sizes when there are 5 or more channels. It's generally
felt that the 120 dB dynamic range of 20 bits combined with a frequency
response of around 22,000 Hz from 48 kHz sampling is adequate for
high-fidelity sound reproduction. However, additional bits and higher
sampling rates are useful in audiophile applications, studio work,
noise shaping, advanced digital processing, and three-dimensional
sound field reproduction. DVD players are required to support all
the variations of LPCM, but some of them may subsample 96 kHz down
to 48 kHz, and some may not use all 20 or 24 bits. The signal provided
on the digital output for external digital-to-analog converters
may be limited to less than 96 kHz and less than 24 bits.
Dolby Digital is multi-channel digital audio,
using lossy AC-3 coding technology from original PCM with a sample
rate of 48 kHz at up to 24 bits. The bitrate is 64 kbps to 448 kbps,
with 384 or 448 being the normal rate for 5.1 channels and 192 being
the typical rate for stereo (with or without surround encoding).
(Most Dolby Digital decoders support up to 640 kbps.) The channel
combinations are (front/surround): 1/0, 1+1/0 (dual mono), 2/0,
3/0, 2/1, 3/1, 2/2, and 3/2. The LFE channel is optional with all
8 combinations. For details see ATSC document A/52 <http://www.atsc.org/>. Dolby Digital is the
format used for audio tracks on almost all DVDs.
MPEG audio is multi-channel digital audio, using
lossy compression from original PCM format with sample rate of 48
kHz at 16 or 20 bits. Both MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 formats are supported.
The variable bit rate is 32 kbps to 912 kbps, with 384 being the
normal average rate. MPEG-1 is limited to 384 kbps. Channel combinations
are (front/surround): 1/0, 2/0, 2/1, 2/2, 3/0, 3/1, 3/2, and 5/2.
The LFE channel is optional with all combinations. The 7.1 channel
format adds left-center and right-center channels, but will probably
be rare for home use. MPEG-2 surround channels are in an extension
stream matrixed onto the MPEG-1 stereo channels, which makes MPEG-2
audio backwards compatible with MPEG-1 hardware (an MPEG-1 system
will only see the two stereo channels.) MPEG Layer 3 (MP3) and MPEG-2
AAC (aka NBC or unmatrix) are not supported by the DVD-Video standard.
DTS (Digital Theater Systems) Digital Surround
is an optional multi-channel (5.1) digital audio format, using lossy
compression from PCM at 48 kHz at up to 24 bits. The data rate is
from 64 kbps to 1536 kbps, with typical rates of 754.5 and 1509.25
for 5.1 channels and 377 or 754 for 2 channels. (The DTS Coherent
Acoustics format supports up to 4096 kbps variable data rate for
lossless compression, but this isn't supported by DVD. DVD also
does not allow sampling rates other than 48 kHz.). Channel combinations
are (front/surround): 1/0, 2/0, 3/0, 2/1, 2/2, 3/2. The LFE channel
is optional with all combinations. DTS ES support 6.1 channels in
two ways: 1) a Dolby Surround EX compatible matrixed rear center
channel, 2) a discrete 7th channel. DTS also has a 7.1-channel mode
(8 discrete channels), but no DVDs have used it yet. The 7-channel
and 8-channel modes require a new decoder. The DVD standard includes
an audio stream format reserved for DTS, but many older players
ignore it. The DTS format used on DVDs is different from the one
used in theaters (Audio Processing Technology's apt-X, an ADPCM
coder, not a psychoacoustic coder). All DVD players can play DTS
audio CDs, since the standard PCM stream holds the DTS code. See
1.32 for general DTS information. For more info visit <http://www.dtstech.com/> and read Adam Barratt's
article.
SDDS (Sony Dynamic Digital Sound) is an optional
multi-channel (5.1 or 7.1) digital audio format, compressed from
PCM at 48 kHz. The data rate can go up to 1280 kbps. SDDS is a theatrical
film soundtrack format based on the ATRAC compression format that
is also used by Minidisc. Sony has not announced any plans to support
SDDS on DVD.
THX (Tomlinson Holman Experiment) is not an audio
format. It's a certification and quality control program that applies
to sound systems and acoustics in theaters, home equipment, and
digital mastering processes. The LucasFilm THX Digital Mastering
program uses a patented process to track video quality through the
multiple video generations needed to make a final format disc or
tape, setup of video monitors to ensure that the filmmaker is seeing
a precise rendition of what is on tape before approval of the master,
and other steps along the way. THX-certified "4.0" amplifiers enhance
Dolby Pro Logic: crossover sends bass from front channels to subwoofer;
re-equalization on front channels (compensates for high-frequency
boost in theater mix designed for speakers behind the screen); timbre
matching on rear channels; decorrelation of rear channels; bass
curve that emphasizes low frequencies. THX-certified "5.1" amplifiers
enhance Dolby Digital and improve on 4.0: rear speakers are now
full range, so crossover sends bass from both front and rear to
subwoofer; decorrelation is turned on automatically when rear channels
have the same audio, but not during split-surround effects, which
don't need to be decorrelated. More info at Home
THX Program Overview.
Discs containing 525/60 video (NTSC) must use PCM or Dolby Digital
on at least one track. Discs containing 625/50 video (PAL/SECAM)
must use PCM or MPEG audio or Dolby Digital on at least one track.
Additional tracks may be in any format. A few first-generation players,
such as those made by Matsushita, can't output MPEG-2 audio to external
decoders.
The original spec required either MPEG audio or PCM on 625/50 discs.
There was a brief scuffle led by Philips when early discs came out
with only two-channel MPEG and multichannel Dolby Digital, but the
DVD Forum clarified in May 1997 that only stereo MPEG audio was
mandatory for 625/50 discs. In December 1997 the lack of MPEG-2
encoders (and decoders) was a big enough problem that the spec was
revised to allow Dolby Digital audio tracks to be used on 625/50
discs without MPEG audio tracks.
Because of the 4% speedup from 24 fps film to 25 fps PAL display,
the audio must be adjusted to match. Unless the audio is digitally
processed to shift the pitch back to normal it will be slightly
high (about one half of a semitone).
For stereo output (analog or digital), all players have a built-in
2-channel Dolby Digital decoder that downmixes from 5.1 channels
(if present on the disc) to Dolby Surround stereo (i.e., 5 channels
are phase matrixed into 2 channels to be decoded to 4 by an external
Dolby Pro Logic processor). PAL players also have an MPEG or MPEG-2
decoder. Both Dolby Digital and MPEG-2 support 2-channel Dolby Surround
as the source in cases where the disc producer can't or doesn't
want to remix the original onto discrete channels. This means that
a DVD labeled as having Dolby Digital sound may only use the L/R
channels for surround or "plain" stereo. Even movies with old monophonic
soundtracks may use Dolby Digital -- but only 1 or 2 channels. Sony
players can optionally downmix to non-surround stereo. If surround
audio is important to you, you will hear significantly better results
from multichannel discs if you have a Dolby Digital system.
The new Dolby Digital Surround EX (DD-SEX?) format, which adds
a rear center channel, is compatible with DVD discs and players,
and with existing Dolby Digital decoders. The new DTS Digital Surround
ES (DTS-ES) format, which likewise adds a rear center channel, works
fine with existing DTS decoders and with DTS-compatible DVD players.
However, for full use of both new formats you need a new decoder
to extract the rear center channel, which is phase matrixed into
the two standard rear channels in the same way Dolby Surround is
matrixed into standard stereo channels. Without a new decoder, you'll
get the same 5.1-channel audio you get now. Because the additional
rear channel isn't a full-bandwidth discrete channel, it's appropriate
to call the new formats "5.2-channel" digital surround.
The Dolby Digital downmix process does not usually include the
LFE channel and may compress the dynamic range in order to improve
dialog audibility and keep the sound from becoming "muddy" on average
home audio systems. This can result in reduced sound quality on
high-end audio systems. The dynamic range compression (DRC)
feature, often called midnight mode, reduces the difference
between loud and soft sounds so that you can turn the volume down
to avoid disturbing others yet still hear the detail of quiet passages.
Some players have the option to turn off DRC. The downmix is auditioned
when the disc is prepared, and if the result is not acceptable the
audio may be tweaked or a separate L/R Dolby Surround track may
be added. Experience has shown that minor tweaking is sometimes
required to make the dialog more audible within the limited dynamic
range of a home stereo system, but that a separate track is not
usually necessary.
Dolby Digital also includes a feature called dialog normalization,
which could more accurately be called volume standardization. DN
is designed to keep the sound level the same when switching between
different sources. This will become more important as additional
Dolby Digital sources (digital satellite, DTV, etc) become common.
Each Dolby Digital track contains loudness information so that the
receiver can automatically adjust the volume, turning it down, for
example, on a loud commercial. (Of course the commercial makers
can cheat and set an artificially low DN level, causing your receiver
to turn up the volume during the commercial!) Turning DN on or off
on your receiver has no effect on dynamic range or sound quality,
its effect is no different than turning the volume control up or
down.
All five DVD-Video audio formats support karaoke mode, which has
two channels for stereo (L and R) plus an optional guide melody
channel (M) and two optional vocal channels (V1 and V2).
A DVD-5 with only one surround stereo audio stream (at 192 kbps)
can hold over 55 hours of audio. A DVD-18 can hold over 200 hours.
Many people complain that the audio level from DVD players is too
low. In truth the audio level is too high on everything else. Movie
soundtracks are extremely dynamic, ranging from near silence to
intense explosions. In order to support an increased dynamic range
and hit peaks (near the 2V RMS limit) without distortion, the average
sound volume must be lower. This is why the line level from DVD
players is lower than from almost all other sources. So far, unlike
on CDs and LDs, the level is much more consistent between discs.
If the change in volume when switching between DVD and other audio
sources is annoying, you can adjust the output signal level on some
players, or the input signal level on some receivers, but other
than that, there's not much you can do.
For more information about multichannel surround sound, see Bobby
Owsinski's FAQ at <www.surroundassociates.com/fqmain.html>.
Almost every DVD contains audio in Dolby Digital format.
DTS is an optional audio format that can be added to a disc
in addition to Dolby Digital audio. Dolby Digital and DTS can store
mono, stereo, and multichannel audio (usually 5.1 channels).
Every DVD player in the world has an internal Dolby Digital decoder.
The built-in 2-channel decoder turns Dolby Digital into standard
analog stereo audio, which can be fed to almost any type of audio
equipment (receiver, TV, boombox, etc.) using a pair of stereo audio
cables. See 3.2 for more information.
There's a standard audio mixing technique, called Dolby Surround,
that "piggybacks" a rear channel and a center channel onto a 2-channel
signal. A Dolby Surround signal can be played on any stereo system
(or even a mono system), in which case the rear- and center-channel
sounds remain mixed in with the left and right channels. When a
Dolby Surround signal is played on a multichannel audio system that
knows how to handle it, the extra channels are extracted to feed
center speakers and rear speakers. The original technique of decoding
Dolby Surround, called simply Dolby Surround, extracts only
the rear channel. The improved decoding technique, Dolby Pro
Logic, also extracts the center channel. Then there's a brand
new decoding technology, Dolby Pro Logic II, that extracts
both the center channel and the rear channel and also processes
the signals to create more of a 3D audio environment. Dolby Surround
is independent of the storage or transmission format. In other words,
a 2-channel Dolby Surround signal can be analog audio, broadcast
TV audio, digital PCM audio, Dolby Digital, DTS, MP3, audio on a
VHS tape, etc.
Unlike Dolby Surround, Dolby Digital encodes each channel independently.
Dolby Digital can carry up to 5 channels (left, center, right, left
surround, right surround) plus an omnidirectional low-frequency
channel. The built-in, 2-channel Dolby Digital decoder in every
DVD player handles multichannel audio by downmixing it to
two channels using Dolby Surround (see 3.6.2). This allows the analog stereo outputs to be connected
to just about anything, including TVs and receivers with Dolby Pro
Logic capability. Most DVD players also output the downmixed 2-channel
Dolby Surround signal in digital PCM format, which can be connected
to a digital audio receiver, most of which do Dolby Pro Logic decoding.
Most DVD players also output the "raw" Dolby Digital signal for
connection to a receiver with a built-in Dolby Digital decoder.
Some DVD players have built-in multichannel decoders to provide
6 (or 7) analog audio outputs to feed a receiver or amplifier with
multichannel analog inputs. See 3.1 for more info.
DTS is handled differently. Many DVD players have a DTS Digital
Out feature (also called DTS pass-through), which sends the
raw DTS signal to an external receiver with a DTS decoder. A few
players have a built-in 2-channel DTS decoder that downmixes to
Dolby Surround, just like a 2-channel Dolby Digital decoder. Some
players have a built-in multichannel DTS decoder with 6 (or 7) analog
outputs. Some DVD players don't recognize DTS tracks at all (see
1.32).
If you have a POS (plain old stereo), a Dolby Surround receiver,
or a Dolby Pro Logic receiver, you don't need anything special in
the DVD player. Any model will connect to your system. If you have
a Dolby Digital receiver, then you need a player with Dolby Digital
out (all but the cheapest players have this). If your receiver can
also do DTS, you should get a player with DTS Digital Out. The only
reason to get a player with 6-channel Dolby Digital or DTS decoder
output is if you want use multichannel analog connections to the
receiver (see the component analog section of 3.2).
DVD-Video players (and software DVD-Video navigators) support a
command set that provides rudimentary interactivity. The main feature
is menus, which are present on almost all discs to allow content
selection and feature control. Each menu has a still-frame graphic
and up to 36 highlightable, rectangular "buttons" (only 12 if widescreen,
letterbox, and pan & scan modes are used). Remote control units
have four arrow keys for selecting onscreen buttons, plus numeric
keys, select key, menu key, and return key. Additional remote functions
may include freeze, step, slow, fast, scan, next, previous, audio
select, subtitle select, camera angle select, play mode select,
search to program, search to part of title (chapter), search to
time, and search to camera angle. Any of these features can be disabled
by the producer of the disc. This is called "user operation control"
(UOP). It's commonly used to lock you into the copyright warning
or movie previews at the beginning of the disc, or to keep you from
changing audio or subtitle tracks during the movie.
Additional features of the command set include simple math (add,
subtract, multiply, divide, modulo, random), bitwise and, bitwise
or, bitwise xor, plus comparisons (equal, greater than, etc.), and
register loading, moving, and swapping. There are 24 system registers
for information such as language code, audio and subpicture settings,
and parental level. There are 16 general registers for command use.
A countdown timer is also provided. Commands can branch or jump
to other commands. Commands can also control player settings, jump
to different parts of the disc, and control presentation of audio,
video, subpicture, camera angles, etc.
DVD-V content is broken into "titles" (movies or albums), and "parts
of titles" (chapters or songs). Titles are made up of "cells" linked
together by one or more "program chains" (PGC). A PGC can be one
of three types: sequential play, random play (may repeat), or shuffle
play (random order but no repeats). Individual cells may be used
by more than one PGC, which is how parental management and seamless
branching are accomplished: different PGCs define different sequences
through mostly the same material.
Additional material for camera angles and seamless branching is
interleaved together in small chunks. The player jumps from chunk
to chunk, skipping over unused angles or branches, to stitch together
the seamless video. Since angles are stored separately, they have
no direct effect on the bitrate but they do affect the playing time.
Adding 1 camera angle for a program roughly doubles the amount of
space needed (and cuts the playing time in half). Examples of branching
(seamless and non-seamless) include Kalifornia, Dark Star, and Stargate
SE.
There are basically two ways to display video: interlaced scan
or progressive scan. Progressive scan, used in computer monitors
and digital television, displays all the horizontal lines of a picture
at one time, as a single frame. Interlaced scan, used in
standard television formats NTSC, PAL, and SECAM, displays only
half of the horizontal lines at a time (the first field,
containing the odd-numbered lines, is displayed, followed by the
second field, containing the even-numbered lines). Interlacing relies
on phosphor persistence of the TV tube to blend the fields together
over time into a seemingly single picture. The advantage of interlaced
video is that a high refresh rate (50 or 60 Hz) can be achieved
with only half the bandwidth. The disadvantage is that the horizontal
resolution is essentially cut in half, and the video is often filtered
to avoid flicker (interfield twitter) and other artifacts.
It may help to understand the difference by considering how the
source images are captured. A film camera shoots 24 frames per second,
while a video camera alternately scans fields of odd and even lines
in 1/60 of a second intervals. (Unlike projected film, which shows
the entire frame in an instant, many progressive-scan displays trace
a series of lines from top to bottom, but the end result is about
the same.)
DVD is specifically designed to be displayed on interlaced-scan
displays, which covers 99.9% of the more than one billion TVs worldwide.
However, most DVD content comes from film, which is inherently progressive.
To make film content work in interlaced form, the video from each
film frame is split into two video fields 240 lines in one field,
and 240 lines in the other and encoded as separate fields in the
MPEG-2 stream. A complication is that film runs at 24 frames per
second, while TV runs at 30 frames (60 fields) per second for NTSC,
or 25 frames (50 fields) per second for PAL and SECAM. For PAL/SECAM
display, the simple solution is to show the film frames at 25 per
second, which is a 4% speedup, and to speed up the audio to match.
For NTSC display, the solution is to spread 24 frames across 60
fields by alternating the display of the first film frame for 2
video fields and the next film frame for 3 video fields. This is
called 2-3 pulldown. The sequence works as shown below, where A-D
represent film frames; A1, A2, B1, etc. represent the separation
of each film frame into two video fields; and 1-5 represent the
final video frames.
Film frames: | A | B | C | D |
Video fields: |A1 A2|B1 B2|B1 C2|C1 D2|D1 D2|
Video frames: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | For MPEG-2 encoding, repeated fields (B1 and D2) are
not actually stored twice. Instead, a flag is set to tell the decoder
to repeat the field. (The apparently inverted order of C2-C1
and D2-D1 are because of the requirement that top and bottom fields
alternate. Since the fields are from the same film frame, the order
doesn't matter.) MPEG-2 also has a flag to indicate when a frame
is progressive (that the two fields come from the same instant in
time). For film content, the progressive_frame flag should be true
for every frame. See 3.4 for more MPEG-2 details.
As you can see, there are a couple of problems inherent in 2-3
pulldown: 1) some film frames are shown for a longer period of time
than others, causing judder, or jerkiness, that shows up
especially in smooth pans; and 2) if you freeze the video on the
third or fourth video frame when there is motion in the picture
you will see two separate images combined in a flickering mess.
Most DVD players avoid the second problem by only pausing on coherent
frames or by only showing one field, although some allow you to
freeze on flicker-frames. (This is what the frame/field still option
in the player's setup menu refers to.)
Most DVD players are hooked up to interlaced TVs, so there's not
much that can be done about artifacts from film conversion. However,
see 1.40 for information about progressive DVD players.
For more on progressive video and DVD, see part
5 and player
ratings in the excellent DVD
Benchmark series at Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity.
When films are transferred to video in preparation for DVD encoding,
they are commonly run through digital processes that attempt to
clean up the picture. These processes include digital video noise
reduction (DVNR) and image enhancement. Enhancement increases contrast
(similar to the effect of the "sharpen" or "unsharp mask" filters
in PhotoShop), but can tend to overdo areas of transition between
light and dark or different colors, causing a "chiseled" look or
a ringing effect like the haloes you see around streetlights
when driving in the rain.
Video noise reduction is a good thing, when done well, since it
can remove scratches, spots, and other defects from the original
film. Enhancement, which is rarely done well, is a bad thing. The
video may look sharper and clearer to the casual observer, but fine
tonal details of the original picture are altered and lost.
Note that ringing can also be caused by the player and by the TV.
Scan velocity modulation (SVM), for example, causes ringing.
If your humble FAQ author and other long-time developers of
laserdisc had prevailed, all DVD players would support barcodes.
This would have made for really cool printed supplements and educational
discs. But the rejection of our recommendations after an all-star
meeting in August 1995 is another story for another day.
So the answer is "mostly no." A few industrial players, the Pioneer
LD-V7200, Pioneer LD-V7400,
and Philips ProDVD-170
support barcodes, including compatibility with the LaserBarCode
standard. The DVD must be authored with one_sequential_PGC titles
in order for timecode search to work. More info can be found in
the Pioneer technical
manuals.
BCA stands for burst cutting area, a zone near the hub of a DVD
reserved for a barcode that can be etched into the disc by a YAG
laser. Since barcode cutting is independent of the stamping process,
each disc can have unique data recorded on it, such as a serialized
ID. DVD readers can use the laser pickup head to read the BCA.
The BCA is used by CPRM (see 1.11) and Divx (see 2.10) to uniquely identify each disc.
Pressed discs (the kind that movies come on) last longer than you
will, anywhere from 50 to 300 years.
Expected longevity of DVD-R and DVD+R discs is anywhere from 40
to 250 years, about as long as CD-R discs.
The erasable formats (DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, and DVD+RW) have an expected
lifetime of 25 to 100 years.
There's a good discussion
of CD-R longevity and test info at Kodak. Also
see <www.ee.washington.edu/conselec/CE/kuhn/otherformats/95x9.htm>
and <www.cd-info.com/CDIC/Technology/CD-R/Media/Kodak.html>
for more info.
For comparison, magnetic media (tapes and disks) last 10 to 30
years; high-quality, acid-neutral paper can last 100 years or longer;
and archival-quality microfilm is projected to last 300 years or
more. Note that computer storage media often becomes technically
obsolete within 20 to 30 years, long before it physically deteriorates.
In other words, before the media becomes unviable it may become
difficult or impossible to find equipment that can read it.
Yes, if your computer has the right stuff. The computer operating
system or playback software must support regional codes and be licensed
to descramble copy-protected movies. If the computer has TV video
out, it must support Macrovision in order to play copy-protected
movies. You may also need software that can read the UDF file system
format used by DVDs. You don't need special drivers for Windows
or Mac OS, since the existing CD-ROM drivers work fine with DVD-ROM
drives. In addition to a DVD-ROM drive you must have extra hardware
to decode MPEG-2 video and Dolby Digital or MPEG-2 audio, or your
computer must be fast enough to handle software decoding. Good-quality
software-only playback requires a 350-MHz Pentium II or a Mac G4.
Almost all new computers with DVD-ROM drives use software decoding
instead of hardware decoding, since it's now possible on even the
cheapest new models. Hardware upgrade kits can be purchased for
existing computers (usually minimum 133 MHz Pentium or G3), starting
at $150. See <www.brouhaha.com/~eric/video/dvd>
for a list of drives and upgrade kits.
Mac OS X 10.0 (Cheetah) had no support for DVD playback when released
in March 2001, and also did not support Apple's DVD authoring applications
(iDVD and DVD Studio Pro). (More info at CNET.)
Support for DVD playback was added to version 10.1 (Puma).
If you're having problems playing movies on your computer, see
section 4.6.
Certain MPEG decoding tasks such as motion compensation, IDCT (inverse
discrete cosine transform), IVLC (inverse variable length coding),
and even subpicture decoding can be performed by additional circuitry
on a video graphics chip, improving the performance of software
decoders. This is called hardware decode acceleration, hardware
motion comp, or hardware assist. Some card makers also
call it hardware decode, even though they don't do all the decoding
in hardware. All modern graphics cards also provide hardware colorspace
conversion (YCbCr to RGB) and videoport overlay (some graphics card
makers make a big deal about this even though all their competitors'
cards have the same feature).
Microsoft Windows 98, 2000, Me, and XP include DirectShow, which provides standardized
support for DVD-Video and MPEG-2 playback. DirectShow can also be
installed in Windows 95 (it's available for download). DirectShow
creates a framework for DVD applications, but a third-party
hardware or software decoder is required (see below). Windows NT
4.0 supports DVD-ROM drives for data, but has very little support
for playing DVD-Video discs. Margi DVD-To-Go, Sigma Designs Hollywood
Plus, and the related Creative Labs Dxr3 are among the few hardware
decoders that work in NT 4.0. InterVideo WinDVD software works in
NT 4.0 (National Semiconductor DVD Express and MGI SoftDVD Max also
work in NT 4.0, but they aren't available retail.) Windows 98 and
newer can read UDF discs. Version 6.1 of Windows Media Player enables
scriptable DVD playback in an HTML page. Version 7 of Windows Media
Player dropped all DVD support. Version 8 of Windows Media Player
added a user interface for DVD playback, but no scripting. Adaptec provides a free filesystem driver,
UDF Reader, for Windows 95/98/NT. Software Architects sells Read DVD
for Windows 95.
Apple QuickTime 5
is partially ready for DVD-Video and MPEG-2 but does not yet have
full decoding or DVD-Video playback support in place. Mac OS 8.1
or newer can read UDF discs. Adaptec provides a free utility, UDF Volume
Access, that enables Mac OS 7.6 and newer to read UDF discs.
Software Architects sells UDF reading software
for Mac OS called DVD-RAM TuneUp. Intech's CD/DVD SpeedTools software allows
most any DVD drive to be used with a Mac.
Note: The QuickTime MPEG Extension
for Mac OS is for MPEG-1 only and does not play MPEG-2 DVD-Video.
Some DVD-ROM discs and a few DVD-Video discs use video encoded
using MPEG-1 instead of MPEG-2. Most recent computers have MPEG-1
hardware built in or are able to decode MPEG-1 with software.
DVD player applications (using either software or hardware decoding)
are virtual DVD players. They support most DVD-Video features (menus,
subpictures, etc.) and emulate the functionality of a DVD-Video
player remote control. Many player applications include additional
features such as bookmarks, chapter lists, and subtitle language
lists.
Microsoft Windows includes a DVD software player, but does not
include the necessary decoder. You must have a third-party software
or hardware decoder in order to play a DVD. Most PCs that come with
a DVD drive include a decoder, or you can purchase one. Decoders
for Windows XP are called DVD Power Packs.
Software decoders and DVD player applications for Microsoft Windows
PCs:
- ATI: special version of
CineMaster software for certain ATI graphics cards
- ASUS: ASUSDVD (custom
version of InterVideo WinDVD software or CyberLink PowerDVD software)
- KiSS: CoolDVD
(DirectShow [Windows 98/Me/2000/XP])
- Creative Technology:
SoftPC-DVD
- CyberLink: PowerDVD
(DirectShow [Windows 98/Me/2000/XP]; NT 4.0; available for purchase)
- ELSA: ELSAMovie, German only
- InterVideo: WinDVD
(DirectShow [Windows 98/Me/2000/XP]; NT 4.0; available for
purchase)
- Matrox: special version
of CineMaster software for certain Matrox graphics cards
- National Semiconductor:
DVD Express (DirectShow [Windows 98/Me/2000/XP]; OEM only)
- MGI: SoftDVD MAX
(DirectShow [Windows 98/Me/2000]; available for purchase) (formerly from
Zoran)
- NEC (NEC PCs only)
- Odyssey: Odyssey DVD
Player (available for purchase)
- Orion Studios: DirectDVD
(DirectShow, downloadable shareware)
- Ravisent (formerly
Quadrant International): Software CineMaster (DirectShow
[Windows 98/Me/2000/XP]; available for purchase)
- Varo Vision: VaroDVD
- Xing DVDPlayer is no longer available since the company
was purchased by Real Networks
Software decoders need at least a 350 MHz Pentium II and a DVD-ROM
drive with bus mastering DMA to play without dropped frames. Anything
slower than a 400 MHz Pentium III will benefit quite a bit from
hardware decode acceleration in the graphics card. An AGP graphics
card (rather than PCI) also improves the performance of software
decoders.
Hardware decoder cards and DVD-ROM upgrade kits for Microsoft Windows
PCs:
- Creative Technology:
PC-DVD Encore Dxr3, Sigma EM8300 chip (no DirectShow yet)
PC-DVD Encore Dxr2, C-Cube chip (DirectShow, Win2000)
- Digital Connection:
3DFusion, Mpact2 chip (DirectShow)
- Digital Voodoo:
D1 Desktop 64, Digital Voodoo chip (professional, QuickTime)
- E4 (Elecede): Cool DVD,
C-Cube chip (E4 has gone out of business)
- IBM: ThinkPad
laptops, IBM chip (DirectShow)
- LeadTek: WinFast 3D
S800, Mpact2 chip (DirectShow)
- Luxsonor: decoders in Dell PCs, C-Cube chip (DirectShow)
- Margi: DVD-to-Go,
ZV PC card for laptops (DirectShow, Win2000)
- Ravisent: Hardware
Cinemaster, C-Cube chip (DirectShow)
- Philips Electronics: PCDV632,
PCVD104 (K series come with Sigma Hollywood
card, R series come with software decoder) (DirectShow)
- Samsung: Revolution,
Samsung SD 606 6x, Sigma Hollywood Plus card (DirectShow)
- Sigma Designs: Hollywood
series, Sigma EM8300 chip (no DirectShow yet)
- STB: DVD Theater, Mpact2
chip ((DirectShow)
- Stradis: Stradis Professional
MPEG-2 Decoder, IBM chip (professional, no DirectShow)
- Toshiba: Tecra
laptops, C-Cube chip (DirectShow)
- Vela Research: CineView
Pro (professional, no DirectShow)
All but the Sigma Designs decoder (including Creative Dxr3) have
WDM drivers for DirectShow. The Sigma Designs decoder card is used
in hardware upgrade kits from Hitachi, HiVal,
Panasonic, Phillips, Sony, Toshiba, and VideoLogic. The advantage
of hardware decoders is that they don't eat up CPU processing power,
and they often produce better quality video than software decoders.
The Chromatic Mpact2 chip does 3-field analysis to produce exceptional
progressive-scan video from DVDs (unfortunately, Chromatic was bought
by ATI and the chip is no longer supported, although some of the
technology is now in ATI's Radeon). Hardware decoders use video
overlay to insert the video into the computer display. Some
use analog overlay, which takes the analog VGA signal output from
the graphics card and keys in the video, while others use video
port extension (VPE), a direct digital connection to the graphics
adapter via a cable inside the computer. Analog overlay may degrade
the quality of the VGA signal. See 4.4 for more overlay info.
Many Macintosh models come standard with DVD-ROM, DVD-RAM, or DVD-RW
drives. The included Apple software DVD player uses hardware acceleration
in the ATI graphics card. The still-unreleased QuickTime MPEG-2
decoder may use the Velocity Engine (AltiVec) portion of the PowerPC
(G4) chip for video and audio decoding. DVD-ROM upgrade kits and
decoder cards for Macintoshes are made by E4 (Elecede) (Cool DVD, C-Cube chip) [E4
has gone out of business], EZQuest
(BOA Mac DVD), Fantom
Drives (DVD Home Theater kit: DVD-ROM or DVD-RAM drive
with Wired MPEG-2 card), and Wired (Wired 4DVD, Sigma EM8300 chip
[same card as Hollywood plus]; MasonX [can't play encrypted
movies]; DVD-To-Go [out of production]; Wired has been acquired
by Media100). There's a beta version of a shareware
DVD software
player that can play unencrypted movies.
The Sigma Designs NetStream
2000 DVD decoder card supports Linux DVD playback. InterVideo
and CyberLink have also announced DVD player applications for Linux,
although the CyberLink player is only available to OEMs. In addition,
there are free software players for Linux, Unix, BeOS, and other
operating systems: MPlayer, OMS (LiViD), VideoLan, and Xine.
Computers have the potential to produce better video than settop
DVD-Video players by using progressive display and higher scan rates,
but many current systems don't look as good as a home player hooked
up to a quality TV
If you want to hook a DVD computer to a TV, the decoder card or
the VGA card must have a TV output (composite video or s-video).
Video quality is much better with s-video. Alternatively, you can
connect a scan converter to the VGA output. Scan converters are
available from ADS Technologies,
AITech, Antec, AverLogic, AVerMedia, Communications Specialties, Digital Vision, Focus Enhancements, Key Digital Systems, RGB Products, and others. Make sure the scan converter
can handle the display resolution you have chosen: 640x480, 800x600,
etc., although keep in mind that even 800x600 is beyond the ability
of a standard TV, so higher resolutions won't make the TV picture
better.
The quality of video from a PC depends on the decoder, the graphics
card, the TV encoder chip, and other factors, but will usually be
a little inferior to a good consumer DVD player. The RGB output
of the VGA card in computers is at a different frequency than standard
component RGB video, so it can't be directly connected to most RGB
video monitors. If the decoder card or the sound card has Dolby
Digital or DTS output, you can connect to your A/V receiver to get
multichannel audio.
A DVD PC connected to a progressive-scan monitor or video projector,
instead of a standard TV, usually looks much better than a consumer
player. See 2.9. Also see the Home Theater Computers
forum at AVS.
For remote control of DVD playback on your PC, check out Animax Anir Multimedia Magic, Evation IRMan, InterAct WebRemote, Multimedia Studio Miro MediaRemote,
Packard Bell RemoteMedia,
RealMagic Remote
Control, and X10 MouseRemote.
Many remotes are supported by Visual
Domain's Remote Selector software.
Usually not. DVD-ROM drives can read DVD-Audio discs, but as of
mid 2002 only the Sound Blaster
Audigy 2 card includes the software needed to play DVD-Audio on
a computer. Part of the reason for general lack of support is that
very few computers provide the high quality audio environment needed
to take advantage of DVD-Audio fidelity.
Unlike CD-ROM drives, which took years to move up to 2x, 3x, and
faster spin rates, faster DVD-ROM drives began appearing in the
first year. 1x DVD-ROM drives provide a data transfer rate of 1.321
MB/s (11.08*10^6/8/2^20) with burst transfer rates of up to 12 MB/s
or higher. The data transfer rate from a DVD-ROM disc at 1x speed
is roughly equivalent to a 9x CD-ROM drive (1x CD-ROM data transfer
rate is 150 KB/s, or 0.146 MB/s). DVD physical spin rate is about
3 times faster than CD (that is, 1x DVD spin ~ 3x CD spin), but
most DVD-ROM drives increase motor speed when reading CD-ROMs, achieving
12x or faster performance. A drive listed as "16x/40x" spins
a DVD at 16 times normal, or a CD at 40 times normal. DVD-ROM drives
are available in 2x, 4x, 4.8x, 5x, 6x, 8x, 10x, and 16x speeds,
although they usually don't achieve sustained transfer at their
full rating. The "max" in DVD and CD speed ratings means that the
listed speed only applies when reading data at the outer edge of
the disc, which moves faster. The average data rate is lower than
the max rate. Most 1x DVD-ROM drives have a seek time of 85-200
ms and access time of 90-250 ms. Newer drives have seek times as
low as 45 ms.
| DVD drive speed |
Data rate |
Equivalent CD rate |
Actual CD speed |
| 1x |
11.08 Mbps (1.32 MB/s) |
9x |
8x-18x |
| 2x |
22.16 Mbps (2.64 MB/s) |
18x |
20x-24x |
| 4x |
44.32 Mbps (5.28 MB/s) |
36x |
24x-32x |
| 5x |
55.40 Mbps (6.60 MB/s) |
45x |
24x-32x |
| 6x |
66.48 Mbps (7.93 MB/s) |
54x |
24x-32x |
| 8x |
88.64 Mbps (10.57 MB/s) |
72x |
32x-40x |
| 10x |
110.80 Mbps (13.21 MB/s) |
90x |
32x-40x |
| 16x |
177.28 Mbps (21.13 MB/s) |
144x |
32x-40x |
The bigger the cache (memory buffer) in a DVD-ROM drive, the faster
it can supply data to the computer. This is useful primarily for
data, not video. It may reduce or eliminate the pause during layer
changes, but has no effect on video quality.
Rewritable DVD drives (see 4.3) write at about half their advertised speed when the data
verification feature is turned on, which reads each block of data
after it is written. Verification is usually on by default in DVD-RAM
drives. Turning it off will speed up writing. Whether this endangers
your data is a subject of debate. Verification is off in DVD-RW
and DVD+RW drives.
In order to maintain constant linear density, typical CD-ROM and
DVD-ROM drives spin the disc more slowly when reading near the outside
where there is more physical surface in each track. (This is CLV,
constant linear velocity.) Some faster drives keep the rotational
speed constant and use a buffer to deal with the differences in
data readout speed. (This is CAV, constant angular velocity.) In
CAV drives, the data is read fastest at the outside of the disc,
which is why specifications often list "max speed."
Note: When playing movies, a fast DVD-ROM drive gains you nothing
more than possibly smoother scanning and faster searching. Speeds
above 1x do not improve video quality from DVD-Video discs. Higher
speeds only make a difference when reading computer data, such as
when playing a multimedia game or when using a database.
Connectivity is similar to that of CD-ROM drives: EIDE (ATAPI),
SCSI-2, etc. All DVD-ROM drives have audio connections for playing
audio CDs. No DVD-ROM drives have been announced with DVD audio
or video outputs (which would require internal audio/video decoding
hardware). In order to hook a DVD-ROM PC to a television and a stereo
receiver, the decoder card or the video card must have a TV video
output and an audio output. Some cards have SP/DIF outputs to connect
to digital audio receivers. If there's no video output, a TV scan
converter can be connected to the VGA output.
Almost all DVD-Video and DVD-ROM discs use the UDF bridge
format, which is a combination of the DVD MicroUDF (subset
of UDF 1.02) and ISO 9660 file systems. The OSTA
UDF file system will eventually replace the ISO 9660 system originally
designed for CD-ROMs, but the bridge format provides backwards compatibility
until more operating systems support UDF.
There are six recordable versions of DVD-ROM: DVD-R for General,
DVD-R for Authoring, DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, DVD+RW, and DVD+R. All DVD
recorders can read DVD-ROM discs, but each uses a different type
of disc for recording. DVD-R and DVD+R can record data once, like
CD-R, while DVD-RAM, DVD-RW, and DVD+RW can be rewritten thousands
of times, like CD-RW. DVD-R was first available in fall 1997. DVD-RAM
followed in summer 1998. DVD-RW came out in Japan in December 1999,
but was not available in the U.S. until spring 2001. DVD+RW became
available in fall 2001. DVD+R was released in mid 2002.
Recordable DVD was first available for use on computers only. Home
DVD video recorders (see 1.14) appeared worldwide
in 2000. This FAQ uses the terms "drive" and "video recorder" to
distinguish between recordable computer drives and home set-top
recorders.
DVD-RAM is more of a removable storage device for computers than
a video recording format, although it has become widely used in
DVD video recorders because of the flexibility it provides in editing
a recording. The other two recordable format families (DVD-R/RW
and DVD+R/RW) are essentially in competition with each other. The
market will determine which of them succeeds or if they end up coexisting
or merging.
Each writable DVD format is covered briefly below. See section
6.2.3 for hardware manufacturers. For more on writable DVD see
Dana Parker's article at <www.emediapro.net/EM1999/parker1.html>.
More information on writable DVD formats is available at industry
associations: RW Products Promotion
Initiative (RWPPI), Recordable DVD Council (RDVDC), and DVD+RW Alliance. Also DVD Writers. If you're interested in writable
DVD for data storage, visit Steve Rothman's DVD-DATA page
for FAQ and mailing list info.
Yes. A big problem is that none of the writable formats are fully
compatible with each other or even with existing drives and players.
In other words, a DVD+R/RW drive can't write a DVD-R or DVD-RW disc,
and vice versa (unless it's a combo drive that knows both formats).
As time goes by the different formats are becoming more compatible
and more intermixed. A player with the DVD Forum's DVD Multi
is guaranteed to read DVD-R, DVD-RW, and DVD-RAM discs, and a DVD
Multi recorder can record using all three formats. Some new
"Super Multi" drives can write to DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, and DVD+RW,
but not DVD-RAM.
In addition, not all players and drives can read recorded discs.
The basic problem is that recordable discs have different reflectivity
than pressed discs (the pre-recorded kind you buy in a store --
see 5), and not all players have been correctly designed to read them.
There are compatibility lists at CustomFlix, DVDMadeEasy, VCDHelp, YesVideo.com, HomeMovie.com, and Apple that indicate player
compatibility with DVD-R and DVD-RW discs. DVDplusRW.org
maintains a list of DVD+RW compatible players and drives.
(Note: test results vary depending on media quality, handling, writing
conditions, player tolerances, and so on. The indications of compatibility
in these lists are often anecdotal in nature and are only general
guidelines.) Very roughly, DVD-R and DVD+R discs work in about 85%
of existing drives and players, while DVD-RW and DVD+RW discs work
in around 65%. The situation is steadily improving. In another few
years compatibility problems will mostly be behind us, just as with
CD-R (did you even know that early CD-Rs had all kinds of compatibility
problems?).
Here is a summary of recordable DVD compatibility (for simplicity,
"doesn't write" is implied if not otherwise specified):
|
DVD unit |
DVD-R(G) unit |
DVD-R(A) unit |
DVD-RW unit |
DVD-RAM unit |
DVD+RW unit |
| DVD-ROM disc |
reads |
reads |
reads |
reads |
reads |
reads |
| DVD-R(G) disc |
routinely reads |
reads, writes |
reads |
reads, writes |
reads |
reads |
| DVD-R(A) disc |
routinely reads |
reads |
reads, writes |
reads |
reads |
reads |
| DVD-RW disc |
usually reads |
reads |
reads |
reads, writes |
usually reads |
usually reads |
| DVD-RAM disc |
rarely reads |
doesn't read |
doesn't read |
doesn't read |
reads, writes |
doesn't read |
| DVD+RW disc |
usually reads |
usually reads |
usually reads |
routinely reads |
usually reads |
reads, writes |
| DVD+R disc |
routinely reads |
routinely reads |
routinely reads |
routinely reads |
routinely reads |
reads, may write |
DVD-R uses organic dye technology, like CD-R, and is compatible
with most DVD drives and players. First-generation capacity was
3.95 billion bytes, later extended to 4.7 billion bytes. Matching
the 4.7G capacity of DVD-ROM was crucial for desktop DVD production.
In early 2000 the format was split into an "authoring" version and
a "general" version. The general version, intended for home use,
writes with a cheaper 650-nm laser, the same as DVD-RAM. DVD-R(A)
is intended for professional development and uses a 635-nm laser.
DVD-R(A) discs are not writable in DVD-R(G) recorders, and vice-versa,
but both kinds of discs are readable in most DVD players and drives.
The main differences, in addition to recording wavelength, are that
DVD-R(G) uses decrementing pre-pit addresses, a pre-stamped (version
1.0) or pre-recorded (version 1.1) control area, CPRM (see 1.11),
and allows double-sided discs. A third version for "special authoring,"
allowing protected movie content to be recorded on DVD-R media,
was considered but will probably not happen.
Pioneer released 3.95G DVD-R(A) 1.0 drives in October 1997 (about
6 months late) for $17,000. New 4.7G DVD-R(A) 1.9 drives appeared
in limited quantities in May 1999 (about 6 months late) for $5,400.
Version 2.0 drives became available in fall 2000. Version 1.9 drives
can be upgraded to 2.0 via downloaded software. (This removes the
2,500 hour recording limit.) New 2.0 [4.7G] media (with newer copy
protection features), can only be written in 2.0 drives. 1.9 media
(and old 1.0 [3.95G] media) can still be written in 2.0 drives. Version
1.0 (3.95G) discs are still available, and can be recorded in Pioneer
DVD-R(A) drives. Although 3.95G discs hold less data, they are more
compatible with existing players and drives.
Pioneer's DVR-A03 DVD-R(G) drive was released in May 2001 for under
$1000. By August it was available for under $700, and by February
2002 it was under $400. The same drive (model DVR-103) was built
into certain Apple Macs and Compaq PCs. Many companies now produce
DVD-RW drives, all of which write CD-R/RW. As of fall 2002 DVD-RW
drives are selling for under $200. Most DVD-RAM drives also write
DVD-R discs, some also write DVD-RW discs. A few new drives write
both DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW.
Pioneer released a professional DVD video recorder in 2002. It
sells for about $3000 and provides component video (YPbPr) and 1394
(DV) inputs (along with s-video and composite). It has 1-hour (10
Mbps) and 2-hour (5 Mbps) recording modes, and includes a 2-channel
Dolby Digital audio encoder.
Price for blank DVD-R(A) discs is $10 to $25 (down from the original
$50), although cheaper discs seem to have more compatibility problems.
Price for blank DVD-R(G) discs is $5 to $15. Blank media is made
by CMC Magnetics, Fuji, Hitachi Maxell, Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Pioneer,
Ricoh, Ritek, Taiyo Yuden, Sony, TDK, Verbatim, Victor, and others.
The DVD-R 1.0 format is standardized in ECMA-279. Andy Parsons
at Pioneer has written a white
paper that explains the differences between DVD-R(G) and DVD-R(A).
It's possible to submit DVD-R(A) and DVD-R(G) discs for replication,
with limitations. First, not all replicators will accept submissions
on DVD-R. Second, there can be problems with compatibility and data
loss when using DVD-R, so it's best to generate a checksum that
the replicator can verify. Third, DVD-R does not directly support
CSS, regions, and Macrovision. Support for this is being added to
DVD-R(A) with the cutting master format (CMF), which stores DDP
information in the control area, but it will take a while before
most authoring software and replicators support CMF.
DVD-RW (formerly DVD-R/W and also briefly known as DVD-ER) is a
phase-change erasable format. Developed by Pioneer based on DVD-R,
using similar track pitch, mark length, and rotation control, DVD-RW
is playable in many DVD drives and players. (Some drives and players
are confused by DVD-RW media's lower reflectivity into thinking
it's a dual-layer disc. In other cases the drive or player doesn't
recognize the disc format code and doesn't even try to read the
disc. Simple firmware upgrades can solve both problems.) DVD-RW
uses groove recording with address info on land areas for synchronization
at write time (land data is ignored during reading). Capacity is
4.7 billion bytes. DVD-RW discs can be rewritten about 1,000 times.
In December 1999, Pioneer released DVD-RW home video recorders
in Japan. The units cost 250,000 yen (about $2,500) and blank discs
cost 3,000 yen (about $30). Since the recorder used the new DVD-VR
(video recording) format, the discs wouldn't play in existing players
(the discs were physically compatible, but not logically
compatible). Recording time varies from 1 hour to 6 hours, depending
on quality. A new version of the recorder was later released that
also records on DVD-R(G) discs and can use DVD-Video format for
better compatibility with existing players. Pioneer released a third
generation of its DVD-RW recorder in Japan in June 2001 for about
198,000 yen (about $1,500). The new model may be released in the
U.S. and elsewhere around the end of 2001 or sometime in 2002. Sharp
announced a $2,200 DVD-RW recorder, and Zenith (LG) announced a
$2,000 DVD-RW recorder, but neither appeared at the end of 2000
as expected. Sharp expects to have a DVD-RW video recorder that
costs less than $1,000 by March 2002. TV
One announced a DVD-RW video recorder for July 2001 at $3,500
that can also create Video CD discs. Sony will ship a DVD-RW video
recorder in Japan in September 2001 for 220,000 yen (about $2,000).
DVD-R(G) drives released in early 2001 by Pioneer (DVR-103 and
DVR-A03, priced below $1000) are combination DVD-R/RW drives. The
drives also write CD-R and CD-RW discs. DVD-RW disc prices are around
$15-$20 (down from the original $30). Blank media is being made
by CMC Magnetics, Hitachi Maxell, Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Pioneer, Ricoh,
Ritek, Sony, Taiyo Yuden, TDK, Verbatim, Victor, and others.
There are three kinds of DVD-RW discs. All are 4.7G capacity. Version
1.0 discs, rarely found outside of Japan, have an embossed lead-in
(to prevent copying of CSS information), which causes compatibility
problems. Version 1.1 discs have a pre-recorded lead-in that improves
compatibility. Version 1.1 discs also come in a "B" version that
carries a unique ID in the BCA for use with CPRM. B-type discs are
required when copying certain kinds of protected video. (See 1.11
for more on CPRM; 3.11 for more on BCA.)
Note: The Apple SuperDrive (even with older 1.22 firmware) can
write to DVD-RW discs, but not from the iDVD application. You must
use a different software utility, such as Toast, to write to DVD-RW
discs.
DVD-RAM, with an initial storage capacity of 2.58 billion bytes,
later increased to 4.7, uses phase-change dual (PD) technology with
some magneto-optic (MO) features mixed in. DVD-RAM is the best suited
of the writable DVD formats for use in computers, because of its
defect management and zoned CLV format for rapid access. However,
it's not compatible with most drives and players (because of defect
management, reflectivity differences, and minor format differences).
A wobbled groove is used to provide clocking data, with marks written
in both the groove and the land between grooves. The grooves and
pre-embossed sector headers are molded into the disc during manufacturing.
Single-sided DVD-RAM discs come with or without cartridges. There
are two types of cartridges: type 1 is sealed, type 2 allows the
disc to be removed. Discs can only be written while in the cartridge.
Double-sided DVD-RAM discs were initially available in sealed cartridges
only, but now come in removable versions as well. Cartridge dimensions
are 124.6 mm x 135.5 mm x 8.0 mm. DVD-RAM can be rewritten more
than 100,000 times, and the discs are expected to last at least
30 years.
DVD-RAM 1.0 drives appeared in June 1998 (about 6 months late)
for $500 to $800, with blank discs at about $30 for single-sided
and $45 for double-sided. Disc prices were under $20 by August 1998,
and retail drive prices were under $250 by November 1999. The first
DVD-ROM drive to read DVD-RAM discs was released by Panasonic in
1999 (SR-8583, 5x DVD-ROM, 32x CD). Hitachi's GD-5000 drive, released
in late 1999, also reads DVD-RAM discs. Blank DVD-RAM media is manufactured
by CMC Magnetics, Hitachi Maxell, Eastman Kodak, Mitsubishi, Mitsui,
Ritek, TDK, and others.
The spec for DVD-RAM version 2.0, with a capacity of 4.7 billion
bytes per side, was published in October 1999. The first drives
appeared in June 2000 at about the same price as DVD-RAM 1.0 drives.
Single-sided discs were priced around $25, and double-sided discs
were around $30. DVD-RAM 2.0 also specifies 8-cm discs and cartridges
for portable uses such as digital camcorders. Future DVD-RAM discs
may use a contrast enhancement layer and a thermal buffer layer
to achieve higher density.
Samsung and C-Cube made a technology demonstration (not a product
announcement) in October 1999 of a DVD-RAM video recorder using
the new DVD-VR format (see DVD-RW section above for more about DVD-VR).
Panasonic demonstrated a $3,000 DVD-RAM video recorder at CES in
January 2000. It appeared in the U.S. in September for $4,000 (model
DMR-E10). At the beginning of 2001, Hitachi and Panasonic released
DVD camcorders that use small DVD-RAM discs. The instant access
and on-the-fly editing and deleting capabilities of the DVD camcorders
are impressive. Panasonic's 2nd-generation DVD-RAM video recorder
appearing in October 2001 for $1,500 also writes to DVD-R discs.
The DVD-RAM 1.0 format is standardized in ECMA-272 and ECMA-273.
Type 2 DVD-RAM cartridges allow the disc to be removed so that
it can be played in standard players or drives. (However, most players
and drives still won't be able to read the disc -- see 4.3.1.)
First break (yes, break) the locking pin by pushing on it with
a pointed object such as a ballpoint pen. Remove the locking pin.
Unlatch the cover by using a pointed object to press the indentation
on the back left corner of the cartridge. Data is recorded on the
unprinted side of the disc -- do not touch it. When you put the
bare disc back the cartridge, make sure the printed side of the
shutter and the printed side of the disc face the same direction.
Most DVD-RAM drives will not allow you to write to a bare disc.
Some will not allow you to write to a cartridge if the disc has
been removed.
DVD+RW is an erasable format based on CD-RW technology. It became
available in late 2001. DVD+RW is supported by Philips, Sony, Hewlett-Packard,
Dell, Ricoh, Yamaha, and others. It is not supported by the DVD
Forum (even though most of the DVD+RW companies are members), but
the Forum has no power to set standards. DVD+RW drives read DVD-ROMs
and CDs, and usually read DVD-Rs and DVD-RWs, but do not read or
write DVD-RAM discs. DVD+RW drives also write CD-Rs and CD-RWs.
DVD+RW discs, which hold 4.7 billion bytes per side, are readable
in many existing DVD-Video players and DVD-ROM drives. (They run
into the same reflectivity and disc format recognition problems
as DVD-RW.)
DVD+RW backers claimed in 1997 that the format would be used only
for computer data, not home video, but this was apparently a smokescreen
intended to placate the DVD Forum and competitors. The original
1.0 format, which held 3 billion bytes (2.8 gigabytes) per side
and was not compatible with any existing players and drives, was
abandoned in late 1999.
The DVD+RW format uses phase-change media with a high-frequency
wobbled groove that allows it to eliminate linking sectors. This,
plus the option of no defect management, allows DVD+RW discs to
be written in a way that is compatible with many existing DVD readers.
The DVD+RW specification allows for either CLV format for sequential
video access (read at CAV speeds by the drive) or CAV format for
random access, but CAV mode is not supported by any current hardware.
DVD+R discs can only be recorded in CLV mode. Only CLV-formatted
discs can be read in standard DVD drives and players. DVD+RW media
can be rewritten about 1,000 times (down from 100,000 times in the
original 1.0 version).
DVD+R is a write-once variation of DVD+RW, which appeared in mid
2002. It's a dye-based medium, like DVD-R, so it has similar compatibility
as DVD-R. Original DVD+RW drives did not fulfill the promise of
a simple upgrade to add DVD+R writing support, so they have to be
replaced with newer models. The original Philips DVD+RW players,
on the other hand, can be customer-upgraded to write +R discs.
Philips announced a DVD+RW home video recorder for late 2001. The
Philips recorder uses the DVD-Video format, so discs will play in
many existing players. HP announced a $600 DVD+RW drive and $16
DVD+RW discs to be available in September 2001. HP's drive reads
DVDs at 8x and CDs at 32x, and writes to DVD+RW at 2.4x, CD-R at
12x, and CD-RW at 10x. Sony announced a $600 DVD+RW/CD-RW drive
in October 2001.
DVD+RW media is being produced by CMC Magnetics, Hewlett-Packard,
MCC/Verbatim, Memorex, Mitsubishi, Optodisc, Philips, Ricoh, Ritek,
and Sony.
More DVD+RW information is at http://www.dvdrw.org/ and http://www.dvdplusrw.org/. The obsolete DVD+RW
1.0 format is standardized in ECMA-274.
Other potential competitors to recordable DVD include AS-MO (formerly
MO7), which holds 5 to 6 billion bytes, and NEC's Multimedia Video
Disc (MVDisc, formerly MMVF, Multimedia Video File), which holds
5.2 billion bytes and is targeted at home recording. ASMO drives
are expected to read DVD-ROM and compatible writable formats, but
not DVD-RAM. MVDisc is similar to DVD-RW and DVD+RW, using two bonded
0.6mm phase-change substrates, land and groove recording, and a
640nm laser, but contrary to initial reports, the drives won't be
able to read DVD-ROM or compatible discs.
There's also FMD. See 2.13. And Blu-ray. See 6.5.
The time it takes to burn a DVD depends on the speed of the recorder
and the amount of data. Playing time of the video may have little
to do with recording time, since a half hour at high data rates
can take more space than an hour at low data rates. A 2x recorder,
running at 22 Mbps, can write a full 4.7G DVD in about 30 minutes.
A 4x recorder can do it in about 15 minutes.
Note that the -R/RW format often writes a full lead-out to the
diameter required by the DVD spec, so small amounts of data (like
a very short video clip) may take the same amount of time as large
amounts.
Most DVD PCs, even those with software decoders, use video overlay
hardware to insert the video directly into the VGA signal. This
an efficient way to handle the very high bandwidth of full-motion
video. Some decoder cards, such as the Creative Labs Encore Dxr
series and the Sigma Designs Hollywood series, use a pass-through
cable that overlays the video into the analog VGA signal after it
comes out of the video display card. Video overlay uses a technique
called colorkey to selectively replace a specified pixel
color (often magenta or near-black) with video content. Anywhere
a colorkey pixel appears in the computer graphics video, it's replaced
by video from the DVD decoder. This process occurs "downstream"
from the computer's video memory, so if you try to take a screenshot
(which grabs pixels from video RAM), all you get is a solid square
of the colorkey color.
Hardware acceleration must be turned off before screen capture
will work. This makes some decoders write to standard video memory.
Utilities such as Creative Softworx, HyperSnap, and SD Capture can then grab still pictures.
Some player applications such as PowerDVD and the Windows Me player
can take screenshots if hardware acceleration is turned off.
Almost all movies are encrypted with CSS copy protection (see 1.11). Decryption keys are stored in the normally inaccessible
lead-in area of the disc. You'll usually get an error if you try
to copy the contents of an encrypted DVD to a hard drive. Although
if you have used a software player to play the movie it will have
authenticated the disc in the drive, allowing you to copy without
error, but the encryption keys will not be copied. If you try to
play the copied VOB files, the decoder will request the keys from
the DVD-ROM drive and will fail. You may get the message "Cannot
play copy-protected files".
There are thousands of answers to this question, but here are some
basic troubleshooting steps to help you track down problems such
as jerky playback, pauses, error messages, and so on.
- Get updated drivers. Driver bugs are the biggest cause of playback
problems, ranging from freezes to bogus error messages about regions.
Go to the support section on the Web sites of your equipment manufacturers
and make sure you have the latest decoder drivers as well as the
latest drivers for your graphics adapter and DVD decoder.
Apple has released numerous updates for audio drivers and the
DVD player application. Make sure you have the latest versions.
Go to the downloads page
and search for DVD.
- If you have problems loading a DVD on a Mac, hold down the Command,
Option, and I keys when inserting the disk. (This mounts the disc
using ISO 9660 instead of UDF.)
- Make sure DMA or SDT is turned on. In Windows, go into the System
Properties Device Manager, choose CD-ROM, open the CD/DVD driver
properties, choose the Settings tab, and make sure the DMA box
(for IDE drives) or the Sync Data Transfer box (for SCSI drives)
is checked. Download DVD Speed to check
the performance of your drive (if it's below 1x, you have problems).
Caution: You may run into problems
turning DMA on, especially with an AMD K6 CPU or VIA chipset.
Check for a BIOS upgrade, a drive controller upgrade, a bus mastering
driver upgrade, and a CD/DVD-ROM driver upgrade from your system
manufacturer before turning DMA on. If the drive disappears,
reboot in safe mode, uncheck DMA, and reboot again. You may have
to tell Windows to restore the registry settings from its last
registry backup.
- If you get an error about unavailable overlay surface, reduce
the display resolution or number of colors (right-click desktop,
choose Settings tab).
- Try turning off programs that are running in the background.
(In Windows, close or exit applets in the system tray -- the icons
in the lower right corner. In Mac OS, turn off AppleTalk, file
sharing, and virtual memory.)
- Allocate more memory to the Apple DVD Player.
- If you are using a SCSI DVD-ROM drive, make sure that the it's
the first or last device in the SCSI chain. If it's the last device,
make sure it's terminated.
- Reinstall the Windows bus mastering drivers. (Delete them from
the device manager and let Windows ask for original disc.)
- Bad video when connecting to a TV could be from too long a cable
or from interference or a ground loop. See 3.2.2.
More information on specific graphics cards and driver updates:
Short answer: Not if the disc is copy protected.
With a fast enough network (100 Mbps or better, with good performance
and low traffic) and a high-performance server, it's possible to
stream DVD-Video from a server to client stations. If the source
on the server is a DVD-ROM drive (or jukebox), then more than one
user simultaneously accessing the same disc will cause breaks in
the video unless the server has a fast DVD-ROM drive and a very
good caching system designed for streaming video.
A big problem is that CSS-encrypted movies (see 1.11) can't be remotely sourced because of security issues. The
CSS license does not allow decrypted video to be sent over an accessible
bus or network, so the decoder has to be on the remote PC. If the
decoder has a secure channel to perform authentication with the
drive on the server, then it's possible to stream encrypted video
over a network to be decrypted and decoded remotely. (But so far
almost no decoders can do this.)
One solution is the VideoLAN
project which runs on GNU/Linux/Unix, BeOS, Mac OS X, and other
operating systems. It includes a player with built-in CSS decryption.
Although the code is different from DeCSS, it's an unlicensed implementation
and is probably illegal in most countries (see 4.8).
An alternative approach is to decode the video at the server and
send it to individual stations via separate cables (usually RF).
The advantage is that performance is very good, but the disadvantage
is that DVD interactivity is usually limited, and every viewer connected
to a single drive/decoder must watch the same thing at the same
time.
Many companies provide support for streaming video (MPEG-1, MPEG-2,
MPEG-4, etc.) over LANs, but only from files or realtime encoders,
not from DVD-Video discs.
The Internet is a different matter. It takes over a week to download
the contents of a single-layer DVD using a 56k modem. It takes about
7 hours on a T1 line. Cable modems theoretically cut the time down
to a few hours, but if other users in the same neighborhood have
cable modems, bandwidth could drop significantly. [Jim's prediction:
the average DVD viewing household won't have sufficiently fast Internet
connections before 2007 at the earliest. Around that time there
will be a new high-definition version of DVD with double the data
rate, which will once again exceed the capacity of the typical Internet
connection.]
CSS (Content Scrambling System) is an encryption and authentication
scheme intended to prevent DVD movies from being digitally copied.
See 1.11 for details. DeCSS refers to the general process of defeating
CSS, as well as to DeCSS source code and programs.
Computer software to decrypt CSS was released to the Internet in
October 1999 (see Dana Parker's article at www.emediapro.net/news99/news111.html),
although other "ripping" methods were available before that (see
6.4.2). The difference between circumventing CSS encryption
with DeCSS and intercepting decrypted, decompressed video with a
DVD ripper is that DeCSS can be considered illegal under the DMCA
and the WIPO treaties. The DeCSS information can be used
to "guess" at master keys, such that a standard PC can generate
the entire list of 409 keys, rendering the key secrecy process useless.
In any case, there's not much appeal to being able to copy a set
of movie files (often without menus and other DVD special features)
that would take over a week to download on a 56K modem and would
fill up a 6G hard disk or a dozen CD-Rs. An alternative is to recompress
the video with a different encoding format such as DivX (see 2.10) so that it will take less space, but this often results
in significantly reduced picture quality. In spite of lower data
rates of DivX et al, the time and effort it takes to find and download
the files is not worth the bother for most movie viewers. The reality
is that most people ripping and downloading DVDs are doing it for
the challenge, not to avoid buying discs.
The supporters of DeCSS point out that it was only developed to
allow DVD movies to be played on the Linux operating system, which
had been excluded from CSS licensing because of its open-source
nature. This is specifically allowed by DMCA and WIPO laws. However,
the DeCSS.exe program posted on the Internet is a Windows application
that decrypts movie files. The lack of differentiation between the
DeCSS process in Linux and the DeCSS.exe Windows application is
hurting the cause of DeCSS backers, since DeCSS.exe can be used
in the process of copying and illegally distributing movies from
DVD. See OpenDVD.org and Tom Vogt's DeCSS central for more information on
DeCSS.
Worthy of note is that DVD piracy was around long before DeCSS.
Serious DVD pirates can copy the disc bit for bit, including the
normally unreadable lead in (this can be done with a specially modified
drive), or copy the video output from a standard DVD player, or
get a copy of the video from another source such as laserdisc, VHS,
or a camcorder smuggled into a theater. It's certainly true that
DVD piracy is a problem, but DeCSS has little to do with it.
Shortly after the appearance of DeCSS, the DVD CCA filed a lawsuit and requested
a temporary injunction in an attempt to prevent Web sites from posting
(or even linking to!) DeCSS information. The request was denied
by a California court on December 29, 1999. On January 14, 2000,
the seven top U.S. movie studios (Disney, MGM, Paramount, Sony [Columbia/TriStar],
Time Warner, Twentieth Century Fox, and Universal), backed by the
MPAA, filed lawsuits in Connecticut
and New York in a further attempt to stop the distribution of DeCSS
on Web sites in those states. On January 21, the judge for the New
York suit granted a preliminary
injunction, and on January 24, the judge for the CCA suit in
California reversed his earlier decision and likewise granted a
preliminary
injunction. In both cases, the judges ruled that the injunction
applied only to sites with DeCSS information, not to linking sites.
(Good thing, since this FAQ links to DeCSS sites!) The CCA suit
is based on misappropriation of trade secrets (somewhat shaky ground),
while the MPAA suits are based on copyright circumvention. On January
24, 16-year old Jon Johansen, the Norwegian programmer who first
distributed DeCSS, was questioned by local police who raided his
house and confiscated his computer equipment and cell phone. Johansen
says the actual cracking work was done by two anonymous programmers,
one German and one Dutch, who call themselves Masters of Reverse
Engineering (MoRE).
This all seems to be a losing battle, since the DeCSS source code
is available on a T-shirt
and was made publicly available by the DVD CCA itself in court records--oops! See Fire, Work With
Me for a facetious look at the broad issue.
A variety of multimedia development/authoring programs can be extended
to play video from a DVD, either as titles and chapters from a DVD-Video
volume, or as MPEG-2 files. In Windows, this is usually done with
ActiveX controls. On the Mac, until DVD-Video support is added to
QuickTime, the options are limited. Newer versions of the Apple
DVD Player can be controlled with AppleScript.
DVD-Video and MPEG-2 video can be played back in an HTML page in
Microsoft Internet Explorer using many different ActiveX controls
(see table). Some ActiveX controls also work in PowerPoint, Visual
Basic, and other ActiveX hosts. Netscape Navigator is out of the
game until it supports ActiveX objects. Simple MPEG-2 playback can
be done in PowerPoint using the Insert Movie feature (requires that
a DirectShow-compatible MPEG-2 decoder be installed). DVD and MPEG-2
playback can be integrated into Macromedia Director using specialized
Xtras.
| |
Price |
HTML (IE only) |
PowerPoint |
ActiveX host (VB, etc.) |
Director |
| Microsoft MSWebDVD
or MSVidWebDVD
(see MSDN overview) |
free |
yes |
yes |
yes |
no |
| Microsoft Windows Media Player
(docs in Windows
Media SDK) |
free |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
| InterActual PC
Friendly |
not available |
certain versions |
no |
no |
no |
| InterActual Player 2.0 |
$2000 and up |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes? |
| SpinWare iControl |
PE: $120, Web: $1200 and up |
Web version |
PE version |
no |
no |
| Visible Light Onstage DVD |
$500 and up |
ActiveX version |
ActiveX version |
ActiveX version |
Director version |
| Zuma ActiveDVD
(InterActual engine) |
$400 and up |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
| Sonic EDK (InterActual
engine) |
$4000 |
yes |
no |
no |
no |
| Sonic DVD
Presenter (InterActual engine) |
$40 |
no |
yes |
no |
no |
| Tabuleiro DirectMediaXtra |
$200 |
no |
no |
no |
MPEG-2/VOB files, but not DVD-Video volumes |
| LBO Xtra
DVD |
$500? |
no |
no |
no |
yes |
| Matinée Presenter |
? |
Separate presentation application.
Plays MPEG-2 files (not DVD-Video). |
Of course, if you simply treat DVD-ROM as a bigger, faster CD-ROM,
you can create projects using traditional tools (Director, Flash,
Toolbook, HyperCard, VB, HTML, etc.) and traditional media types
(CinePak, Sorenson, Indeo, Windows Media, etc. in QuickTime or AVI
format) and they'll work just fine from DVD. You can even raise
the data rate for bigger or better quality video. But it usually
won't look as good as MPEG-2.
The DVD-Video and DVD-Audio specifications (see 6.1) define how audio and video data are stored in specialized
files. The .IFO (and backup .BUP) files contain menus and other
information about the video and audio. The .VOB files (for DVD-Video)
and .AOB files (for DVD-Audio) are MPEG-2 program streams with additional
packets containing navigation and search information.
Since a .VOB file is just a specialized MPEG-2 file, most MPEG-2
decoders and players can play them. You may need to change the extension
from .VOB to .MPG. However, any special features such as angles
or branching will cause strange effects. The best way to play a
.VOB file is to use a DVD player application to play the entire
volume (or to open the VIDEO_TS.IFO file), since this will make
sure all the DVD-Video features are used properly.
Many DVDs are encrypted, which means the .VOB files won't play
when copied to your hard drive. See 4.5.
You may also run into .VRO files created by DVD video recorders
using the -VR format. In some cases you can treat the files just
like .VOB files, but in other cases they are fragmented and unplayable.
You'll need a utility such as Heuris Extractor to copy them to a hard disk
in usable format.
Windows 98 and Windows 2000 include a simple player application.
It requires that a DirectShow-compatible DVD decoder be installed
(see 4.1). During setup, Windows installs the player application if
it finds a compatible hardware decoder. You must install the player
by hand if you want to use it with a software decoder or an unrecognized
hardware decoder. Using WinZip or other utility that can extract
from cab files, extract dvdplay.exe from driver17.cab (on the original
Windows disc). This is the only file you need, but you can also
extract the help file from driver11.cab, and you can extract dvdrgn.exe
from driver17.cab if you intend to change the drive region.)
Windows Me includes a much improved player, although it still requires
a third-party DirectShow-compatible decoder. Windws ME DVD Player
is always installed, but it usually does not appear in the Start
menu. To use the player, choose Run... from the Start menu, then
enter dvdplay.
Windows XP moved DVD playback into Windows Media Player. It requires
a DVD Decoder Pack (which contains a DirectShow-compatible DVD decoder).
See Microsoft's DVD
playback support in Windows XP page for more info and links
to Decoder Packs. Microsoft also has a list of supported
software decoders for Windows XP.
DVD player software written for Windows 98 and ME does not work
in Windows XP. Most Windows 2000 software also requires an upgrade.
Check with your DVD software manufacturer or your PC manufacturer
for an upgrade, which in many cases is free. Or you may want to
buy a low-cost Windows XP DVD Decoder Pack (see 4.11).
Keep in mind that unless you are copying audio for your own personal
use from a DVD that you own, it's illegal.
Use a DVD ripping tool (see 4.8 and 6.4.2) to extract Dolby Digital or PCM (WAV) files from a DVD.
Then use a utility to convert to MP3, WMA, or other formats, or
to burn to an audio CD.
DVD production has two basic phases: development and publishing.
Development is different for DVD-ROM and DVD-Video, publishing is
essentially the same for both. Cheap, low-volume productions can
be published on recordable discs, whereas high-volume, mass-market
products such as movies must be replicated in specialized
factories.
DVD-ROM content can be developed with traditional software development
tools such as Macromedia Director, Asymetrix Toolbook, HyperCard,
Quark mTropolis, and C++. Discs, including DVD-R check discs, can
be created with UDF formatting software (see 5.3).
DVD-ROMs that take advantage of DVD-Video's MPEG-2 video and multichannel
Dolby Digital or MPEG-2 audio require video and audio encoding (see
5.3).
DVD-Video content development has three basic parts: encoding,
authoring (design, layout, and testing), and premastering
(formatting a disc image). The entire development process is sometimes
referred to as authoring. Development facilities are provided by
many service bureaus (see 5.5). If you intend
to produce numerous DVD-Video titles (or you want to set up a service
bureau), you may want to invest in encoding and authoring systems
(see 5.3 and 5.4).
Replication (including mastering) is the process of "pressing"
discs in production lines that spit out a new disc every few seconds.
Replication is done by large plants (see 5.5
for a list) that also replicate CDs. DVD replication equipment typically
costs millions of dollars. A variety of machines are used to create
a glass master, create metal stamping masters, stamp substrates
in hydraulic molds, apply reflective layers, bond substrates together,
print labels, and insert discs in packages. Most replication plants
provide "one-off" or "check disc" services, where one to a hundred
discs are made for testing before mass duplication. Unlike DVD-ROM
mastering, DVD-Video mastering may include an additional step for
CSS encryption, Macrovision, and regionalization. There is more
information on mastering and replication at Panasonic Disc Services and
Technicolor.
For projects requiring less than 50 copies, it can be cheaper use
recordable discs (see 4.3). Automated machines
can feed recordable blanks into a recorder, and even print labels
on each disc. This is called duplication, as distinguished
from replication.
Videotape, laserdisc, and CD-ROM can't be compared to DVD in a
straightforward manner. There are basically three stages of costs:
production, pre-mastering (authoring, encoding, and formatting),
and mastering/replication.
DVD video production costs are not much higher than for VHS and
similar video formats unless the extra features of such as multiple
sound tracks, camera angles, seamless branching, etc. are employed.
Authoring and pre-mastering costs are proportionately the most
expensive part of DVD. Video and audio must be encoded, menus and
control information have to be authored and encoded, it all has
to be multiplexed into a single data stream, and finally encoded
in low level format. Typical charges for compression are $50/min
for video, $20/min for audio, $6/min for subtitles, plus formatting
and testing at about $30/min. A ballpark cost for producing a Hollywood-quality
two-hour DVD movie with motion menus, multiple audio tracks, subtitles,
trailers, and a few info screens is about $20,000. Alternatively,
many facilities charge for time, at rates of around $300/hour. A
simple two-hour DVD-Video title with menus and various video clips
can cost as low as $2,000. If you want to do it yourself, authoring
and encoding systems can be purchased at prices from $50 to over
$2 million. See 5.8 for more on low-cost DVD creation.
Videotapes don't really have a mastering cost, and they run about
$2.40 for replication. CDs cost about $1,000 to master and $0.50
to replicate. Laserdiscs cost about $3,000 to master and about $8
to replicate. As of 2004, DVDs cost about $1000 to master and about
$0.75 to replicate. Double-sided or dual-layer discs cost about
$0.40 more to replicate, since all that's required is stamping data
on the second substrate (and using transparent glue for dual layers).
Double-sided, dual-layer discs (DVD-18s) are more difficult and
more expensive. (See 3.3.1.)
- Ahead
- Nero. DVD formatting software for Windows. Can make
disc image files and bootable discs. $70.
- GEAR
- GEAR Pro DVD. DVD formatting software for Windows
95/98/NT4. Writes to DVD-R, DVD-RAM, jukeboxes, and tape,
along with general UDF formatting and CD-R/RW burning features. $700.
- JVC Professional Computer Products
- DVD RomMaker. DVD formatting systems with RAID hardware.
$60,000 to $100,000.
- Philips
- DVD-ROM Disc Builder. DVD formatting software for
Windows NT. Writes to tape.
- Roxio
- Toast DVD. DVD formatting software for Mac OS. Writes
to DVD-R and tape. Can create DVD-Video discs from VOB and
IFO files. $200
- SmartDisk (acquired
MTC)
- ForDVD. DVD formatting software for Windows. Writes
to DVD-R and tape. Can create DVD-Video discs from VOB and
IFO files. $1200.
- Smart Storage
- SmartDVD Maker. DVD formatting software for Windows
NT. Writes to DVD-R and tape. Can create DVD-Video discs from
VOB and IFO files. $2500. (Discontinued
as of March 2001.)
- Software Architects
- WriteDVD Pro and WriteUDF. DVD formatting
software for Mac OS and Windows. Writes to DVD-R and DVD-RAM.
- Sonic (acquired Daikin and
Veritas DMD)
- DVD-ROM Formatter. DVD formatting software for Windows
NT/2000/XP. Writes to DVD-R and tape. Can create DVD-Video
discs from VOB and IFO files.
- Stomp (retail distributor
for certain Sonic products)
- RecordNow and MaxRecordNow MAX Platinum. CD
and DVD burning software for music, photos, and video. Windows.
$50 and $80.
- Backup MyPC and Simple Backup. Windows file
backup software for recordable DVD and CD.
- Veritas (acquired Prassi)
Note: Veritas Desktop and Mobile Division
was acquired by Sonic in November 2002. Veritas products
such as RecordNow and Drive Letter Access are now from Sonic,
distributed by Stomp.
- VOB
- InstantCD/DVD. Software tools for recording files
to CD-R/W, DVD-RAM and DVD-R/W discs from Windows. Can make
a bootable DVD. $70.
- InstantBackup. Data backup to CD-R/W, DVD-RAM and
DVD-R/W in Windows. $40.
- Young Minds
- DVD Studio and MakeDisc for DVD. DVD formatting
software for Windows NT and Unix. Writes to DVD-R.
Features to look for in DVD formatters:
- Support for UDF file system, including MicroUDF (UDF 1.02 Appendix
6.9) for DVD-Video and DVD-Audio zones.
- Support for UDF bridge format, which stores both UDF and ISO-9660
file systems on the disc.
- Ability to recognize VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS directories (containing
IFO, VOB, and AOB files) and place them contiguously at the physical
beginning of the disc for compatibility with DVD-Video players.
Placement of directory entries in first UDF file descriptor is
also needed for compatibility with certain deficient consumer
players.
- Support for long filenames in Windows (Joliet format recommended).
- Full equivalence between UDF and Joliet (ISO-9660) filenames.
(Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 98 read Joliet filenames; Mac
OS 8.1+, Windows 98, and Windows 2000 read UDF filenames. MS-DOS
and Windows 95 and earlier read ISO-9660 filenames. Mac OS 8.0
and earlier read HFS or ISO-9660 filenames.)
- Proper truncation and translation of ISO-9660 filenames to 8.3
format for discs intended for use with MS-DOS and certain other
OSes.
- Support for Mac OS file information within the UDF file system
(for use with Mac OS 8.1 and later).
- Support for Mac OS HFS file system if icons and other file information
is needed for Mac OS versions earlier than 8.1.
- Ability to create a bootable disc using the El Torito specification in
the ISO-9660 sectors.
- Brent
Beyeler
- bbMPEG. Basic MPEG-2 encoder for Windows. Free.
- Canopus
- ProCoder. Software video format converter with MPEG
encoding. Two-pass VBR. Advanced features such as NTS<->PAL
conversion, de-interlacing, 2-3 pulldown, and batch processing.
Windows. $700.
- MVR1000. Hardware real-time video capture and MPEG
encoder board for Windows. VBR and CBR. Includes Sonic DVDit
SE for DVD/VCD authoring.
- Amber. MPEG-2 hardware designed for encoding and
archiving video in MPEG format. VBR and CBR. (Panasonic MN85560
encoder chip). Windows. $2,000.
- DVRaptor RT. Hardware DV video editing with MPEG
output. Windows. $600.
- DVStorm. Hardware video editing/encoding system for
MPEG and DV. Includes Ulead DVD Workshop for DVD/VCD
authoring. Windows. $1,100.
- DVRex RT Professional. Hardware video editing/encoding
system for MPEG and DV. Includes Sonic DVDit SE for
DVD/VCD authoring. Windows. $4,400.
- Custom Technology
- Cinemacraft. MPEG-2 real-time NTSC video encoding
software for Windows NT.
- Darim
- MPEGator 2. MPEG-2 real-time encoding hardware for Windows
and Windows NT. $1,800.
- Dazzle
- Digital Video Creator II. MPEG-2 video capture/edit/encode
system with PCI card. Includes Sonic DVDit LE. Windows
98/2000. $300.
- Digital Ventures
- DVDComposer. MPEG-2 video encoding system for SGI.
VBR and CBR. (C-Cube chip). $50,000.
- Digital Vision
- BitPack. MPEG-2 video encoding workstation. Extendable
to HDTV.
- DVNR system for video pre-processing.
- Digigami
- MegaPeg. MPEG-2 video encoding software for Windows.
VBR and CBR. $500. Also available as Adobe Premiere plug-in
for Windows or PowerMac. $400.
- DreamCom (formerly Gunzameory)
- MPEGRich. Professional MPEG-2 real-time encoding
hardware. CBR and VBR. Windows NT.
- DV Studio
- Apollo Expert. MPEG-2 video encoding (and decoding)
hardware for Windows NT. $2,000.
- FlaskMPEG
- Freeware encoding software for Windows.
- Heuris
- MPEG Power Professional 1, MPEG Power Professional 2,
MPEG Power Professional DVD, MPEG Power Professional
DTV-SD, and Power Professional DTV-HD. MPEG-2 video
encoding software for Mac OS and Windows. DVD and DTV versions
include VBR encoding. $350, $1,000, $1,500 and $2,500.
- Cyclone. MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 encoding software designed
for OEMs. Mac OS and Windows NT.
- InnovaCom
- DV5100. MPEG-2 real-time hardware encoding station
for Windows NT.
Ligos
- LSX-MPEG Encoder. MPEG-2 video encoding software.
CBR and VBR. Windows. $150.
- LSX-MPEG Suite. Adobe Premiere plug-in for producing
MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 output. Includes standalone LSX-MPEG player.
Windows 9x/NT. $400.
- Media100
- iFinish RealTime MPEG Option. Editing software with
MPEG-2 video encoding add-on. Windows NT. $6,000 to $18,000.
- Microcosmos/Nanocosmos
- MPEG SoftEngine. MPEG-2 video encoding software for
Windows, Solaris, and Linux. $250 to $3500.
- Minerva
- Compressionist 110, 200, and 250. Professional
MPEG-2 real-time encoding hardware. CBR and VBR. Mac OS host
computer. $70,000. [No longer available.]
- Publisher 300. Professional MPEG-2 video and MPEG
Layer 2 audio real-time encoding hardware. CBR and VBR. Mac
OS. [No longer available.]
- Optibase
- MPEG MovieMaker 200. Professional MPEG-2 video and Dolby
Digital audio real-time encoding hardware for Windows and
Windows NT. CBR and VBR. $7,000 to $22,000.
- Philips
- DVS3110. Professional MPEG-2 video encoder for PAL
and NTSC. CBR and VBR.
- PixelTools
- Expert-DVD. MPEG-2 video encoding software. CBR and
VBR. Windows. $2,000.
- Simple-DVD. AVI-to-DVD conversion utility for Windows.
$1,5000.
- Snell & Wilcox
- Prefix CPP100, Prefix CPP200, NRS500, Kudos NRS50, and
Kudos NRS30.. Video preprocessors (noise reduction and
image enhancement).
- Sonic Solutions
- SD-1000. Professional MPEG-2 video encoding hardware.
CBR and VBR. Segment-based reencoding. Mac OS and Windows
OS. $13,000.
- DVD Fusion. Encoding/authoring plug-in for Media
100 and QuickTime video editing systems. Hardware-accelerated
version (velocity engine) encodes VBR and CBR in real time.
Mac OS. $8,000 and $12,000.
- Sony
- DVA-V1100. High-end MPEG-2 video encoding hardware.
CBR and VBR. Windows NT.
- Spruce Technologies
Note: Spruce was acquired in July 2001 by Apple. The MPX-3000
encoder will continue to be sold.
- MPX-3000. Professional MPEG-2 real-time encoding
hardware. CBR and VBR. Windows NT.
- MPEGXpress 2000 (formerly from CagEnt). Professional
MPEG-2 real-time encoding hardware. CBR and VBR. Windows NT.
- TMPGEnc
- TMPGEnc and TMPGEnc Pro. MPEG-1 and MPEG-2
software video encoders, plus multiplexing/demultiplexing,
file joining, and trimming tools. Free.
- VisionTech
- MVCast. Low-end real-time MPEG-2 video/audio encoding
hardware for Windows NT and Solaris. AVI-to-MPEG-2 conversion.
$2000.
- Vitech
- MPEG Toolbox-2. AVI to MPEG-2 VBR/CBR. MPEG-2 video
editing. Windows 95/98/NT. $250.
- Wired
- MediaPress. MPEG-2 encoding hardware (PCI). CBR and
VBR. Mac OS and Windows 95/98/NT. $2,500.
- Zapex
- ZP-200. Real-time PCI encoder for MPEG-2 video and
PCM Audio. Non-real-time encoding and VOB multiplexing from
Adobe Premiere. Windows NT.
- ZP-300. Real-time PCI Encoder for CBR/VBR MPEG-2
video, 2-channel Dolby Digital, and PCM Audio. Non-real-time
encoding and VOB multiplexing from Adobe Premiere. Windows
NT.
- Astarte
- A.Pack. Multichannel Dolby Digital audio encoding
software for Mac OS. $800.
- Digital Vision
- BitPack. Multichannel audio encoding workstation
for Dolby Digital, MPEG-2, and PCM.
- Dolby
- DP569. Multichannel Dolby Digital audio encoding
hardware.
- Kind of Loud Technologies
- SmartCode Pro/Dolby Digital. 5.1-channel encoding
software plugin for Digidesign Pro Tools. $1000.
- SmartCode Pro/DTS. 5.1-channel encoding software
plugin for Digidesign Pro Tools. $2000.
- Microcosmos
- MPEG SoftEngine/Audio. MPEG audio encoding software
for Windows/Solaris. $95/$350.
- Minerva
- Audio Compressionist. Professional Dolby Digital
real-time, 5.1-channel encoder. Windows NT.
- Minnetonka Audio Software
- SurCode for DOlby Digital. Multichannel Dolby Digital
audio encoding software. $1000.
- SurCode DVD Professional for DTS. Multichannel DTS
audio encoding software. $2000.
- Philips
- DVD3310. Professional MPEG-2 multichannel audio encoder.
- PixelTools
- Expert-Audio. MPEG Layer 2 audio encoding software.
Windows.
- Sonic Solutions
- Sonic DVD Studio. Professional real-time Dolby Digital
5.1, MPEG-2, and PCM audio encoding hardware. Mac OS.
- MLP Encoder. $9,000.
- Sonic Foundry
- Soft Encode. Dolby Digital 2-channel or 5.1-channel
audio encoding software. Windows 95/98/NT. $500 (2 channels)
or $900 (5.1 channels).
- Sony
- DVA-A1100. High-end, real-time Dolby Digital 5.1,
MPEG-2, and PCM audio encoding hardware. Windows NT.
- Spruce Technologies
Note: Spruce was acquired in July 2001 by Apple. The ACX-5100
encoder will continue to be sold.
- ACX- 5100 (formerly from CagEnt). Professional Dolby
Digital real-time, 5.1-channel encoder. Windows NT.
- ACX-2000 (formerly from CagEnt). Professional Dolby
Digital real-time, 2-channel encoder. Windows NT.
- Zapex
- ZP-100. Real-time PCI encoder for 2- or 5.1-channel
Dolby Digital and MPEG Layer 2. Windows NT.
- Alcohol Software
- Alcohol 52%. Emulate CDs and DVDs without physical
disc. Windows. $28.
- Alcohol 68%. Copy CDs and DVDs. Windows. $30.
- Alcohol 120%. Combination of Alcohol 52% and
Alcohol 68%. Windows. $50.
- ASINT
- Industrial DVD players, touchscreens, and DVD kiosk products.
- BCD Associates
- DVD controllers for custom installations.
- Cambridge Multimedia
- Touchscreens and other custom interfaces for industrial
DVD players.
- Computer Prompting & Captioning
Co.
- CPC-DVD. Closed Caption production system. DOS. $6,000.
- DCA (Doug Carson & Associates)
- MIS (Mastering Interface System). Mastering interface
system for DVD and CD. Windows NT.
- ITS (Image Transfer System). Transfer and convert
DVD and CD images.
- DVS+ (Data Verification System). Checks DVD and CD
images. Includes Interra Surveyor to check for DVD-Video
spec compliance. Can transfer between discs and tape. Windows
NT.
- INMS (Integrated Network Mastering System). Combination
of MIS, ITS, DVS+ in a system with a RAID.
- Eclipse Data Technologies
- EclipseSuite. DVD and CD premastering tools to copy
and verify images, copy tapes, etc. Windows NT.
- ImageEncoder. LBR mastering interface for CD and
DVD mastering. Windows NT.
- FAB
- FAB Subtitler DVD Edition. Subtitle generator program (text
and bitmap formats) that works with most DVD authoring systems.
Windows.
- Heuris
- Xtractor. Software to extract video and audio streams from
unencrypted DVD-Video discs and DVD-VR discs. $150.
Isomedia
- DVD DLT utilities: copy DLTs, extract images, inspect ISO/UDF/DDP
info, checksums, etc.
- Museum Technology Source
- DVD controllers for Pioneer industrial players in custom
installations.
- Novastor
- TapeCopy. Copy DLTs, inspect tape blocks.
- PixelTools
- MPEGRepair. Software to analyze, repair, insert Closed
Captions, add panscan vectors, and do other handy things to
MPEG files. Windows.
- Smart Projects
- ISOBuster. Inspect CD and DVD volumes and image files.
Free.
- SoftNI
- The DVD Subtitler. Subtitle graphics preparation
software. Windows 95/98/NT/2000.
- The Caption Encoder. Closed Caption production system.
DOS, Windows 95/98.
- The Caption Retriever. Closed Caption recovery and
decoding system. Windows 95/98/NT/2000.
- Tapedisk
- TD Raw. Reads raw data from a SCSI tape drive as
if it were a hard disk. DOS/Windows. $500.
- TD RAW NT. Version of TD Raw for Windows NT 4.0.
$750.
- Technovision
- Touchscreens and other custom interfaces for industrial
DVD players.
- Teco
- ParseMPEG ($500) and Bitrate Viewer (free).
Software to analyze MPEG streams. Windows.
Also see 5.6 for DVD emulation, verification,
and analysis tools.
- Captions, Inc. (Burbank,
CA), 818-729-9501. Captioning and subtitle services.
- European Captioning Institute (ECI) (London, UK). +44-171-323-4657.
Captioning and subtitle services.
- Captioneering (Burbank,
CA), 888-418-4782. Captioning and subtitle services.
- National Captioning Institute
(NCI) (LA 818-238-4201; NY 212-557-7011; VA 703-917-7619). Captioning
and subtitle services.
- SDI Media Group (worldwide),
+44 (0)20 7349. Subtitle services.
- Softitler (Los Angeles,
CA). Subtitle services.
- Tele-Cine (London,
UK), +44 (0) 171 208 2200. Film-to-video conversion.
- TelecineMojo (Los
Angeles, CA), 323-697-0695. Film-to-video conversion.
- Vitac (Canonsburg, PA) 888-528-4822.
Captioning services.
For more detail on the systems listed below, follow the links or
see the comparison table of selected DVD authoring systems at DVDirect.
- Apple
- DVD Studio Pro. Mid-level DVD-Video authoring
tool for Mac OS. $1,000.
- iDVD. Simple, drag-and-drop DVD-Video authoring,
bundled with Macs that have DVD-R drives.
- DVDMaestro. Windows. See Spruce, below.
- Astarte
Note: Astarte was acquired April 2000 by Apple, so their products
are generally no longer available. They resurfaced in March 2001
as iDVD and DVD Studio Pro from Apple.
- DVDirector and DVDirector Pro. Low-end and
mid-level DVD-Video authoring tools for Mac OS. Pro version
includes MediaPress hardware MPEG-2 encoder from Wired.
Millennium Bundle turnkey workstation includes DVDirector
Pro, Mac G4, and more. $5,400, $10,00, $15,000.
- DVDelight. Simple, drag-and-drop DVD-Video authoring
for Mac OS. $1,000.
- DVDExport. Software to convert Macromedia Director
presentations to DVD-Video format. Mac OS. $900.
- Authoringware
- DVD WISE. Mide-level authoring system for Windows
95/98/NT. $950.
- DVD Quickbuilder. Multiplexing software.
- Avid
- Xpress DV. Video editing software with DVD-Video
output (using Sonic AuthorScript). $1,700.
- Xpress DV Powerpack. Xpress DV with other
software, including Sonic DVDit SE. $3,000.
- Blossom Technologies
- DaViD 2000, 4000, 6000, and 10000. Turnkey Windows
NT 4.0 systems using Daikin Scenarist authoring software
and Optibase encoding hardware or Sonic Foundry audio encoding
software. $20,000 to $100,000.
- Canopus
- Amber for DVD. Amber MPEG-2 encoding hardware with
Spruce DVDVirtuoso authoring software. $3,300.
- Compact Data
- SimpleDVD. AVI-to-DVD converter for Windows. $1,500.
- Daikin (Daikin US Comtec
Laboratories)
Note: Daikin's DVD business was acquired
by Sonic in February 2001. Scenarist, ReelDVD, and ROM Formatter
are now carried by Sonic.
- DreamCom (formerly Gunzameory)
- DVDRich. Mid-level DVD-Video authoring/encoding on
Windows NT. Uses MPEGRich encoder and Daikin Scenarist or
Intec DVDAuthorQuick. $30,000.
- DV Studio
- Apollo Expert Author and Apollo Expert DVDer.
Mid-level DVD-Video authoring system for Windows NT, using
DV Studio Apollo Expert MPEG-2 encoding hardware and
Intec DVDAuthorQuick authoring software (Author
package, $4,000) or Sonic DVDit (DVDer package,
$2,500).
- Apollo Expert Archiver. MPEG-2 encoding system for
archiving video to DVD-RAM. $2,500 (DVD-RAM drive included).
- Futuretel
- Houpert Digital Audio
(HDA)
- CubeDVD-A. DVD-Audio authoring plug-in module for
Cube-Tec AudioCube digital audio workstation. Uses audio assets
mastered by NuendoCube. Windows 2000.
- InnovaCom
- DVDimpact. DVD-Video authoring aimed at multimedia
studios and corporations. Uses InnovaCom DV5100 hardware
encoding station and Daikin Scenarist NT or Intec DVDAuthorQuick
software. $47,500 and $29,000.
- Intec America
- DVDAuthorQuick. Mid-level and low-level DVD-Video
authoring software line for Windows NT. Comes in three versions:
Pro, Desktop,
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