My DVD is in PAL region, so I can't view this DVD with my NTSC DVD player. It keeps saying check regional code. Any way around this.
Iain
pogues24 wrote:My DVD is in PAL region, so I can't view this DVD with my NTSC DVD player. It keeps saying check regional code. Any way around this.
Iain
pogues24 wrote:My DVD is in PAL region, so I can't view this DVD with my NTSC DVD player. It keeps saying check regional code. Any way around this.
Iain
DzM wrote:It's also fairly trivial to disable region code enforcement for many DVD players.
-nate- wrote:i'm wondering, though, if there isn't a distinction between the region settings of a dvd (the security codes) and PAL/NTSC formatting. PAL, as far as I know, has a setting of 25 frames per second whereas NTSC has a setting of 29.97 fps. there are other differences that i don't understand but aren't there two different problems here? one which has to do with security protection and the other which has to do with display of the image?
philipchevron wrote:-nate- wrote:i'm wondering, though, if there isn't a distinction between the region settings of a dvd (the security codes) and PAL/NTSC formatting. PAL, as far as I know, has a setting of 25 frames per second whereas NTSC has a setting of 29.97 fps. there are other differences that i don't understand but aren't there two different problems here? one which has to do with security protection and the other which has to do with display of the image?
Now that would be my question also. Anyone know?
Though many resolutions and formats are supported, most consumer DVD-Video discs use either 4:3 or anamorphic 16:9 aspect ratio MPEG-2 video, stored at a resolution of 720×480 (NTSC) or 720×576 (PAL) at 24, 30, or 60 FPS. Audio is commonly stored using the Dolby Digital (AC-3) or Digital Theater System (DTS) formats, ranging from 16-bits/48kHz to 24-bits/96kHz format with monaural to 7.1 channel "Surround Sound" presentation, and/or MPEG-1 Layer 2. Although the specifications for video and audio requirements vary by global region and television system, many DVD players support all possible formats. DVD-Video also supports features like menus, selectable subtitles, multiple camera angles, and multiple audio tracks.
DzM wrote:philipchevron wrote:-nate- wrote:i'm wondering, though, if there isn't a distinction between the region settings of a dvd (the security codes) and PAL/NTSC formatting. PAL, as far as I know, has a setting of 25 frames per second whereas NTSC has a setting of 29.97 fps. there are other differences that i don't understand but aren't there two different problems here? one which has to do with security protection and the other which has to do with display of the image?
Now that would be my question also. Anyone know?
From here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD#DVD-VideoThough many resolutions and formats are supported, most consumer DVD-Video discs use either 4:3 or anamorphic 16:9 aspect ratio MPEG-2 video, stored at a resolution of 720×480 (NTSC) or 720×576 (PAL) at 24, 30, or 60 FPS. Audio is commonly stored using the Dolby Digital (AC-3) or Digital Theater System (DTS) formats, ranging from 16-bits/48kHz to 24-bits/96kHz format with monaural to 7.1 channel "Surround Sound" presentation, and/or MPEG-1 Layer 2. Although the specifications for video and audio requirements vary by global region and television system, many DVD players support all possible formats. DVD-Video also supports features like menus, selectable subtitles, multiple camera angles, and multiple audio tracks.
Short version:
DVDs from different regions may contain encoding that is optimized for NTSC, PAL, SECAM, etc. Most DVD players on the market don't care and translate the encoded signal to whatever is appropriate for their own output (NTSC, PAL, SECAM, etc).
Remember that the video data stored on the disk doesn't know anything about NTSC, PAL, or anything else. It's just an MPEG-2 video file with resolution and frame-rate set at a level that accommodates decoding into one signal or another rather well.
DzM wrote:Short version:...
firehazard wrote:DzM wrote:Short version:...
Darn it, I was doing really well with understanding that right up till it got to the first "NTSC".
My knowledge is obviously on the same level as the video data stored on the disk. Thanks for trying, though, DzM.
DzM wrote:firehazard wrote:DzM wrote:Short version:...
Darn it, I was doing really well with understanding that right up till it got to the first "NTSC".
My knowledge is obviously on the same level as the video data stored on the disk. Thanks for trying, though, DzM.
Imagine it like this:
You have a container of colored sugar water. You want to pour it into a glass.
If you bought this container of colored sugar water in the USofA (12oz, 355ml), then the volume of liquid may be slightly different than a similar container purchased in Japan (let's say 350ml). This means that they will both nearly fill a 500ml glass (leaving some room for ice), and that the end result is that you have a nice refreshing glass of colored sugar water. The end result was not unduly influenced by the slightly different volumes present in the original containers.
To complete the analogy, let's also pretend that the USofA container is not supposed to be able to be opened in Japan, and vice-versa, and that the price difference between the two containers is that the USofA one costs double the Japanese one. Your modern DVD player set to be region free is now a handy can-opener that really could not care less where the original container came from and will happily enable you to decant into any glass standard in your region.
Yay!
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