Forum - View topicRegion coding.
Goto page Previous 1, 2, 3, 4 Next |
Author | Message | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
abunai
Old Regular
Posts: 5463 Location: 露命 |
|
|||
Hey, hey! Små skridt, bassemand... I was one of those nay-saying "idiots", I'll have you know. And I still am. Apart from that little Euro-quibble, I'd like to say that this is one of the most informative threads on this forum, so far. It's so informative, in fact, that it should be made sticky - or perhaps be converted into some sort of FAQ on DVD players for the Lexicon. - abunai |
||||
Dilandau
Posts: 525 Location: Tea House |
|
|||
Well, Mr Tony K. I'd say your 'nifty little machine' looks pretty cool. IT looks impressive (not really in anything particular except the specific array of features).
Really, my only question is with the website itself...does anyone else find it odd that ALL the titles have English subs and are conveniently NTSC (last I checked R2 and R3 were PAL)? |
||||
YUGI
Posts: 173 |
|
|||
R3 most are NTSC. R2 in the europe side is PAL. Though Japan's is ntsc. Most places are changing to NTSC these days.
|
||||
Sarki-Kun
Posts: 594 Location: Spain |
|
|||
So, does this actually mean that if I buy a new videogame there, or an anime DVD, or whatever, it would work on my own DVD's reproductor/console??? Great!!
|
||||
JETBLACK87
Posts: 1073 |
|
|||
It depends on what region and video format you use. If you live in a country that uses R2 and NTSC, then yeah you can watch Japanese discs. If you live in the UK that uses R2 and Pal, then no. You have to make sure that the region(1, 2, 3...) and the video format(NTSC, PAL, and SECAM). |
||||
Sword of Whedon
Posts: 683 |
|
|||
By law (thanks to British occupation) all movies in HK have to be released with English subtitles. While HongKong uses PAL as a broadcast format, all of their videos are NTSC for the widest possible distribution. Japan is NTSC, only the European R2 is PAL Game consoles cannot play other regions without modification or at the very least a boot disk. If you bought your player in the US, it's going to be region 1 NTSC |
||||
Kazuki-san
Posts: 2251 Location: Houston, TX |
|
|||
|
||||
jfrog
Posts: 925 Location: Seattle |
|
|||
Yeah, but they probably still do it just out of habit.
|
||||
JETBLACK87
Posts: 1073 |
|
|||
Or maybe they make money off of the exportation.
|
||||
cookie
Former ANN Editor in Chief
Posts: 2460 Location: Do not contact me for support. |
|
|||
Region Encoding has nothing to do with video format. You can just as easily have R1/PAL as you would R1/NTSC. Region settings are a DVD feature to try to lock consumers into buying DVDs at higher prices, rather than importing them from overseas. Video formats are set depending on whether the country decided on 29.97 FPS or 25 FPS. There are actually a lot more sub-versions of things than just NTSC/PAL/SECAM, but the differences aren't significant enough to bother with. I'm not an expert in these matters, but I don't recall seeing ANY country switching from PAL to NTSC ever since the standards were adopted... Improvements have been made on the existing technology (certainly), but it's still basically the same format, because it's just too expensive to upgrade the infrastructure. I'm not sure if even HDTV will impact NTSC/PAL at all. |
||||
Sword of Whedon
Posts: 683 |
|
|||
For HD, the few countries that have it have all standardized on ATSC, the US standard
|
||||
Sarki-Kun
Posts: 594 Location: Spain |
|
|||
Hum...Ok, I'm from R2. And I know that all of my life I've been buying in PAL. But looks like Japan uses R2/NTSC, instead of Europe, which is R2/PAl. Is this right?
Well then, that says that my thoughts were wrong... |
||||
Sword of Whedon
Posts: 683 |
|
|||
Correct
|
||||
Tony K.
Subscriber
Moderator Posts: 11315 Location: Frisco, TX |
|
|||
OK, so I bought this with my Christmas money, and it's a great machine. It plays just about any kind of disc and I'm glad I can now watch different regioned DVDs on it as well.
However, the sound setup is kind of weird. I have an optical cable and with that, this player can now detect dual audio and DTS coding, but that's the problem. That's all it does in terms of sound. And so, I was wondering what exactly does a coaxial cable do? The outputs on the back of this thing are a little weird, but there's a port for a coaxial cable, and I was hoping if I got one and hooked it up from the player to my sound system, would it solve my Dobly Digital 5.1 and 2.0 woes? Again, the only sound I'm currently recieving is DTS and Dual Audio (without any kind of Dolby Pro Logic or anything like that). Here's a picture of the back: |
||||
Kazuki-san
Posts: 2251 Location: Houston, TX |
|
|||
Well, if you are using a fiber optic connection now, there is no reason it wouldn't be able to play 5.1. Digital Coax would do the same thing for you as the optical connection, but you can try it and see. Have you gone into the sound setting and seen if DD is enabled?
On another note, I hope you didn't pay $150 for that. Last edited by Kazuki-san on Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:38 pm; edited 1 time in total |
||||
All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group