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RoccondilRinon

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Members
Join date
11-Jun-2007
Last activity
13-Sep-2024
Posts
910
Web Site
http://roccondilrinon.wordpress.com

Post History

Post
#360553
Topic
STAR WARS: EP V &quot;REVISITED EDITION&quot;<strong>ADYWAN</strong> - <strong>12GB 1080p MP4 VERSION AVAILABLE NOW</strong>
Time

You don't need to read a lot of the thread to see that that subject has been debated at great length, and that Adywan is NOT doing it. Come to that, it's probably been mentioned since you showed up. Given the sheer number of questions you've asked that have already been answered, I'd advise you to read the thread properly before asking any more.

Post
#359358
Topic
STAR WARS: EP IV 2004 <strong>REVISITED</strong> ADYWAN *<em>1080p HD VERSION NOW IN PRODUCTION</em>
Time

An NTSC disc would only play in a player if the player was NTSC-compatible, so my information is not incorrect. It may be that PAL players tend to be NTSC-compatible as well, in which case those discs would play. What ESF said about the discs looking lousy if played on those players is wrong; they'd look no different. I explained that the 3:2 pulldown effect only affects movies. I get a similar pulldown effect when I watch PAL DVDs of US TV shows, because it's adapted from 30fps to 25.

As for your speed-corrected edition, there's probably a few here who'd be interested. 

Post
#359314
Topic
STAR WARS: EP IV 2004 <strong>REVISITED</strong> ADYWAN *<em>1080p HD VERSION NOW IN PRODUCTION</em>
Time

It's worse. The differences between NTSC and PAL are technical and resulted from different countries adopting different broadcast standards. There isn't such an incompatibility with HD video, so they imposed an artificial one. The DVD region codes and Blu-ray region codes are entirely artificial, enforced by the manufacturers and movie studios to enforce price discrimination and staggered release schedules. My country has even ruled that DVD region codes contravene fair trade laws. That, along with the byzantine DRM schemes they employ, is the reason I won't buy a Blu-ray player until the system is thoroughly hacked and it's as trivial — and as inexpensive — to deregionify and copy a Blu-ray disc as it is to do the same to a DVD at present.

Can't wait until they realise that preventing consumers from making copies and suchlike is harmless to their business, and preventing professional pirates from making copies and suchlike is impossible to do with DRM.