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Shokara

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Members
Join date
15-Jan-2017
Last activity
23-Apr-2024
Posts
13

Post History

Post
#1399723
Topic
schorman's HDTV Star Wars Saga Preservation (Released)
Time

Hello. Could someone, Schorman or otherwise, please send me links to the Resilio and Google Drive folders via private message? I’d really appreciate it.

Update: I’ve been trying with great difficulty and frustration to redownload this file from MySpleen with no success. If someone would please provide me with the Google Drive folders link or similar, I’m sure a direct download would be faster and more efficient at this point.

Post
#1151102
Topic
The Terminator - Color Regrade [No Longer Available]
Time

I know this thread is kind of old, but I don’t suppose there’s any chance that this project is going to be fully rendered and made available as a Blu-ray ready .MKV file or .ISO file with the original monaural audio? I ask because not everyone has the tools and skills, myself included, to use those provided LUTs and thus be able to put together their own new Blu-ray out of it. Unless of course someone else has already done the work and already provided a finished Blu-ray ready video file? If that’s the case then is there anyone here that can point me in the right direction?

Post
#1052661
Topic
4K restoration on Star Wars
Time

imperialscum said:

CHEWBAKAspelledwrong said:

imperialscum said:

What is this crap about digital being bad? Digital medium is by far superior in terms of storage and preservation. Unlike analogue recording (film), which starts to degrade/change from the point it is being recorded, the digital recording is basically time-invariant. For example, the colour encoding of digital video is strictly defined, while in analogue film it varies based on the current conditions.

Of course, you might still want to use analogue film camera for some reason to shoot the film, but in any case you should digitalise the film as soon as it shot (in highest possible resolution).

Who here has lobbied for not preserving film elements digitally? As far as I can tell this conversation is all about capture mediums.

Still, I do not see why wouldn’t you immediately record it digitally. If you use analogue film to record a scene, by the time you transfer it to digital medium it will not be the same as it was originally recorded. Not to mention conditions of transformation process which requires projector (use different lighting during the projection and you have different results, etc.)

If you originally record it digitally, you have it completely preserved. You carve that digital recording into stone inside a cave and aliens will still be able to read it tens of thousands of years after we will destroy each other in the exact form as it was originally recorded.

The reason is that 35mm film still has inherently higher resolution than digital cinematography does. Each time we invent new video technologies with higher resolutions, 35 mm film still continues to surprise us by how much previously hidden detail was captured when we make updated digital scans and transfers of those film reels. However, digital photography and cinematography provides no such surprises. We know their respective resolutions from the get-go, and those remain constant despite whatever new resolutions come along with new technologies. Something shot in 4K will remain in 4K twenty to thirty years an so on. However, whenever we think we’ve wrung as much detail as modern technology possibly can from film, it always manages to catch us off guard.

Post
#1046507
Topic
Harmy's STAR WARS Despecialized Edition HD - V2.7 - MKV (Released)
Time

Sigh. While it is disappointing to see people trying to make some cash off of this I can’t really be surprised. I’m almost sure that bootleg Blu-rays of these are being sold at dealers’ rooms at various conventions. Heck, even after it finally came out officially on home entertainment after decades of waiting, I’m still seeing bootleg DVDs of the 1966 Batman TV series starring Adam West and Burt Ward at conventions.

Post
#1036437
Topic
Star Wars Despecialized Editions - Custom Bluray Set (Released)
Time

njvc said:

Very welcome, glad people are enjoying them.

NJVC, thank you so much. I just finished my first run test of burning your 25 GB ISOs, and they came out perfectly. I still can’t believe the process was so simple. Thank you to everyone and your helpful advice. Next week I’ll be burning your 50 GB versions. Your work is fantastic.

Post
#1035766
Topic
Star Wars Despecialized Editions - Custom Bluray Set (Released)
Time

andyw715 said:

I use the same burner on a windows 10 machine and haven’t had any problem with various brand names of blank BDs. Although I’ve only played them on my Panasonic BD player.

Burning the ISO’s is easy since its an ISO. I just use Widows to do it. Right click on your BD drive, and select Burn.

Also, may I ask which brand name blank Blu-rays you’ve used that have worked for you?

Post
#1035694
Topic
Star Wars Despecialized Editions - Custom Bluray Set (Released)
Time

andyw715 said:

Shokara said:

Ok, I’m downloading NJVC’s ISOs for the Despecialized trilogy. I know this might be a couple of questions that’ve been asked a million times before, but since this is my first time trying to burn Blu-ray discs (and with fully interactive menus), can anyone here recommend what software I should use and which brands of blank Blu-ray discs will get me the proper results? I’m using a PC with Windows 10, and I plan to watch the eventual Blu-rays on my Playstation 3, Playstation 4, and XBox One S. Also, the burner device I plan to use is the LG Ultra Slim Portable Blu-ray Writer.

This is the device. --> https://www.amazon.com/LG-Electronics-External-Optical-WP50NB40/dp/B011327QXC/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1484715297&sr=1-1&keywords=LG+Ultra+Slim+Portable+Blu-ray+Writer

I hope you guys can help me out. =]

I use the same burner on a windows 10 machine and haven’t had any problem with various brand names of blank BDs. Although I’ve only played them on my Panasonic BD player.

Burning the ISO’s is easy since its an ISO. I just use Widows to do it. Right click on your BD drive, and select Burn.

Thanks! Part of me keeps thinking that it couldn’t possibly be this simple/easy. I’ve recently been modifying (a.k.a. modding) the Mass Effect video games on PC which at times was an incredibly complex and tedious process. Coming off of that warned me to expect the worst when trying to make these Blu-rays, but the multiple posts I’m reading that state how simple it actually is when you have the correct ISOs is very encouraging. =]

By the way, just to make sure, I don’t even have to extract anything from the zipped files beforehand? The three ISOs look like three WinRAR files to me after I’ve downloaded them. All I have to do is right click on each of the three “WinRARs” and click Burn?

Post
#1035200
Topic
Star Wars Despecialized Editions - Custom Bluray Set (Released)
Time

Ok, I’m downloading NJVC’s ISOs for the Despecialized trilogy. I know this might be a couple of questions that’ve been asked a million times before, but since this is my first time trying to burn Blu-ray discs (and with fully interactive menus), can anyone here recommend what software I should use and which brands of blank Blu-ray discs will get me the proper results? I’m using a PC with Windows 10, and I plan to watch the eventual Blu-rays on my Playstation 3, Playstation 4, and XBox One S. Also, the burner device I plan to use is the LG Ultra Slim Portable Blu-ray Writer.

This is the device. --> https://www.amazon.com/LG-Electronics-External-Optical-WP50NB40/dp/B011327QXC/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1484715297&sr=1-1&keywords=LG+Ultra+Slim+Portable+Blu-ray+Writer

I hope you guys can help me out. =]