Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
All BD players can offer good quality so money is the only thing I would consider. If you buy something like WDTV also then you cover almost all type of media available today
There a lot thing you have to consider in sound system. First of all it's the place you are covering. If you want to cover a big room you'll need something more powerful. Then it's the use you are interesting. If you need it only for movies an all in one system could probably cover all your needs. If you are audiophile you need something more sophisticated. And finally it's about how much money you can afford to spend.
I suggest to check home cinema dedicated forums. There you can find a lot of proposals depending on your room, money, etc.. Home cinema is an expensive hobby
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
I have wdtv and on my 50 inch samsung I usually watch the 720p version. I don't notice much of a differeance with the 1080p. I do notice a differance between the dd and dts with dts much better on my sound system
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
Wow I didn't know this before, thanks for the useful information!
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
thank you so much for your information you have been helpfull.i have another question i see different sizes of movie for example
Inglourious Basterds 2009 1080p BluRay AVC DTS-HD 'size' 41.43GB
Inglourious Basterds 2009 BluRay 1080p DTS x264 dxva-EuReKA 'size' 15.42GB
so what is the difference ?
i see 3 different sizes of blue ray movie, for example
Extract 1080p Bluray x264-CBGB size 6.64GB. is it full Bluray or not.
as i know that the Bluray is big in size.so how do i know weather which is the original one
What would be the best website which offers full blue ray movies... I found on NB site which is on blue ray section, but there is no that much.Is it Hdbits.org have good section for blue ray
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
hdbits is the best for what you are after.
full blu ray is the 41.43 bg one
all the others are x264 rips(have been re encoded to a smaller size, probably no menus etc) and may not work on your system.
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
Quote:
Originally Posted by
xJohnxSmithx
hdbits is the best for what you are after.
full blu ray is the 41.43 bg one
all the others are x264 rips(have been re encoded to a smaller size, probably no menus etc) and may not work on your system.
thank you so much :) no i know the difference :)
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
Quote:
Originally Posted by
nucks2424
I have wdtv and on my 50 inch samsung I usually watch the 720p version. I don't notice much of a differeance with the 1080p. I do notice a differance between the dd and dts with dts much better on my sound system
Does the WDTV now play DTS? Or do movies with DTS still have to be converted in able to play on it? I read that was the only drawback(and why Popcorn Hour was a better buy) of the WDTV months ago.
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
John, thanks for your clear explanation.
Waeldiab, "I just wanted to know which would be the best to download and what would be the requirements to burn and watch them."
"tv, i have full HD"
"i will buy sound system support dts sound and blue ray player"
The best you can do according to your info above is to download and burn BD5/BD9 which can be played with BR player or PS3 with either AC3/Dolby Digital or DTS depending on the encoders.
BD5 is usu. for 720p and fit in a regular DVD.
BD9 is usu. for 1080p and some cases for 720p and fit in a dual layer disc which costs about $.80 cent to $2 US Dollars in the USA.
For best PQ, there are a few options.
1) If you have a good video card with HDMI/DVI, you can connect that to your TV and download MKV format (8-15G) or full BR (20-45G).
2) If you have a 1080p monitor usu at least 23" or bigger, download MKV.
3) If you have PS3 or BR player with streaming capability, get MKV.
I currently use all 3 options but less often with option 2 since I have big screen 1080p TV. However, for those special movies I want to keep as a collection, I use BD9 and burn to DVD+R DL.
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
well, wdtv itself doesn't as far as i'm concerned
the only option is to use an amplifier to play dts movies on wdtv
Re: Wanted to know about the Differences
Related question regarding about the bluray files found on bit-hdtv. All the non ISO's where the folders are in BDMV and CERTIFICATE...are those torrents all 100% untouched? e.g. copied directly from bluray and upped on the tracker?