Posts Tagged blu ray

DRM way is driven by Avatar Blu-ray

The Unobtainium hording N’avi from James Cameron’s Avatar have defeated the Dark Knight in Blu-ray sales. Avatar sold 1.5 million copies, more than doubling the first-day tally of Chris Nolan’s second Batman flick on Blu-ray. But the record sales of Avatar opened a veritable Pandora’s box as a record number of consumers get a bitter taste of digital media’s dark side – Digital Rights Management (DRM).

So many consumers went home disappointed this week, hoping to watch a brand spankin’ new copy of Avatar in flawless HD, that Best Buy put firmware update notices online and in stores to stave off mass returns. What many in the media had been calling a glitch is no glitch at all. It’s just the cost of consuming digital media these days. One of the reasons Blu-ray won the so-called HD format war against Toshiba’s HD DVD was a promise of enhanced copy-protection security. A consequence of copy-protection for many Blu-ray player owners is having to frequently update their machines with the latest software or “firmware revision”.

Fox Home Entertainment says the Avatar Blu-ray issue has mostly been limited to older Samsung and LG players. Most of the players are not updating their cables to the latest 2M HDMI cable. But we’ve heard reports of many other models not playing back this week’s mega-release from Fox. Firmware updates are available at the manufacturer’s support websites which must be burned to a disc in order to feed it to your Blu-ray player. Alternatively, if you own a Blu-ray profile 2.0 player (or one of the dual format HD DVD/Blu-ray players like Samsung’s BD UP-5000), your player is capable of downloading the update directly from the Internet.

The biggest trouble with DRM isn’t just the recent Avatar Blu-ray release – this only highlighted the issue due to the sheer number of people buying the disc. DRM is updated every so often and many Blu-ray players need frequent firmware updates to keep pace. Otherwise, instead of a movie, you could find you’ve brought home a new coaster for the coffee table wrapped in a Blu-ray package. But you’re just as likely to get DRM’s Blu-ray disc watch-blockage from your brand new copy of Twilight: New Moon or this week’s Blu-ray release – Escape from L.A. It’s unanimous, despite being a movie icon himself, Snake Plissken does not approve of DRM!

The DRM issue strikes to the heart of your right to private property. You bought the disc, but the manufacturer has the right to encode it with something that’ll prevent its playback. What makes this DRM so pathetic is that this nonsense is designed to prevent piracy. Yet, if you were a digital media pirate you’ve already been watching Avatar for weeks. Most Blu-ray discs are already pirated and available for download via bit-torrent long before the Blu-ray release date. The pirates certainly aren’t buying the disc – and they most certainly aren’t putting up with the hassles of DRM and firmware updates.

Like FBI warnings and Interpol notices, one can only assume that DRM is designed to prevent the piracy of customers who have already paid for the product and not the actual pirates

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Cablesson launches MacKuna HDMI cable for the MAC users

High-speed HDMI cables with Ethernet

Cablesson  goes all out to bring these cables to those looking for a better HD content experience.

ARE your high-definition electronic devices giving you less than satisfactory audio and video quality? Then it’s time to get yourself the Cablesson MacKuna HDMI Cable

A HDMI cable is the final element that will maximise HD content experience, but it is often not taken into account by consumers when buying HD devices, such as LCD TVs and Blu-ray players.  With the availability of rich HD content and Blu-ray discs, it is high time that consumers get a good “wire” for a more fulfilling HD experience.

The new 3-D TV and 3-D content will need more specialised wires to view them in the best possible format. For this reason, Cablesson is offering the latest MacKuna HDMI Cable as the high-speed HDMI cable with Ethernet and cable be used by Apple MAC users or any HDMI compatible appliances.

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Samsung’s 3D Blu-ray player

Having been spotted up for sale once before, before being unceremoniously yanked from the virtual shelves a few hours later, Samsung’s 3D-capable Blu ray player, the BD-C6900, is now finally shipping.  Announced back in January at CES 2010, the BD-C6900 obviously supports Full HD 1080p content but also includes both wired and WiFi connectivity for streaming media and internet-connected widgets.

There’s also DVD upscaling to 1080p, BD-Live support and 1GB of onboard storage, together with a skinny 39mm-thick design.  DLNA support means the BD-C6900 can be used as a media-stream receiver, and there’s support for Dolby Digital TruHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

Of course, many people will be looking at the deck for its 3D capabilities, and it’s compatible both with Samsung’s own 3D HDTVs and the general Blu ray 3D standard.

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News News News News!!!! HDMI Tackles 3D TV

HDMI Licensing, LLC, the licensing entity behind the High-Definition Multimedia Interface networking technology that is commonly used to provide a secure digital connection between digital TV sets, set-top boxes and Blu-ray players, is working to ensure that television programmers will be able to deliver upcoming 3D broadcasts to new 3D-capable HDTV sets.

The organization, which licenses its technology to over 900 consumer electronics (CE) manufacturers, announced late Wednesday that it is making the 3D portion of its latest HDMI specification, version 1.4, available for free public download on its Website so that television networks and transmission vendors can get the necessary information to deliver compatible 3D pictures to new 3D sets.

Such companies haven’t traditionally been licensees of HDMI technology, and thus didn’t have access to the confidential specification that identified 3D formats. But they need to know how the 3D parts of HDMI work to ensure that early 3D broadcasts are viewable, says HDMI Licensing president Steve Venuti, which is why the organization is making the information freely available.

“I see it as a necessity because HDMI is leading the market in supporting 3D at home,” says Venuti. “These companies don’t want to pay to get the spec, but they need it to understand how 3D will work in the marketplace.”

The HDMI Consortium also plans to include multiple broadcast 3D formats in an upcoming specification, version 1.4a, to ensure that HD sets and set-tops can display networks’ nascent 3D programming.

HDMI Licensing, founded by a consortium of Hitachi, Panasonic Corporation, Philips, Sony, Thomson (RCA), Toshiba, and Silicon Image, had already addressed the growing momentum behind stereoscopic 3D technology by including 3D gaming and movie (Blu-ray) formats in HDMI version 1.4, which came out last June. But that specification didn’t include broadcast 3D formats, explains Venuti, mainly because the organization didn’t expect television networks like ESPN and pay-TV operators like DirecTV to move to launch 3D by mid-2010.

“We’ve really seen a rush of 3D devices, but when we when launched 1.4 in June, it was very unclear what formats would drive content to the home,” says Venuti. “So we mandated a game format and movie format, and said if you build a system with HDMI, you have to have them. But we left out a broadcast format, because we didn’t know where the market was going with that. Since then, broadcasters have stepped up the game quite a bit, and there’s been a lot of movement in the HDMI Consortium to match the 3D release of broadcasters.”

In fact, in December the HDMI Consortium announced that it would ease some of its licensing restrictions to allow existing late-model set-tops to deliver 3D broadcasts to new 3D HDTV sets, without having to support the mandatory movie or gaming formats in HDMI version 1.4. Specifically, it decreed that set-tops with HDMI version 1.3 could receive a firmware upgrade that would enable them to connect to a new 3D set with HDMI version 1.4 to display a number of 3D HD broadcast formats. That is how satellite operators DirecTV and BSkyB plan to deliver 3D to their existing high-end set-tops. Venuti said that Sony PS3 game consoles can support 3D in the same way.

“That’s going to enable the existing infrastructure of source devices to pump 3D content, and you’re going to need a 3d-enabled TV to view it,” says Venuti.

The HDMI movie format that will be used by new 3D Blu-ray players specifies the delivery of two full 1080-line-progressive/24 hertz (1080p/24) pictures, one for each eye, which requires a significantly higher bit rate than normal 1080p/24 video. But the “frame-compatible” broadcast formats that HDMI Licensing is currently addressing are designed to work within the existing bandwidth for HD transmission by using spatial compression to reduce the horizontal or vertical resolution of the picture. That is a compromise that networks and pay-TV operators can currently live with, as adopting “full 3D” would require doubling the bandwidth used to deliver HD to the home.

The 3D compression techniques described by HDMI Licensing as “informative formats” include Frame Packing; Field Alternative; Line Alternative; Side-by-Side (Half); Side-by-Side (Full); Left + Depth; and Left + Depth + Graphics + Graphics-depth. The organization also announced in December that it will add the “Top/Bottom” frame-compatible technique, which ESPN plans to use for its 720p 3D HD pictures, to the updated 1.4 specification.

Venuti says the HDMI version 1.4a specification, which will make the support of such broadcast formats mandatory in new 3D-enabled CE devices, should come out soon. He notes that a pay-TV operator’s set-top could support as little as a single broadcast format, such as 720p top/bottom, but that 3D sets will have to support all broadcast formats to ensure interoperability.

“We hope that will provide leadership and guidance to the broadcast world,” says Venuti. “We don’t expect it to be the way to deliver 3D content forever. But at the least, it’s a minimum way to support interoperability.”

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VIA Vinyl Envy VT1730 USB 2.0 audio controller drips connectivity

It used to be that you’d need a day-pass to a professional recording studio if you really wanted to do justice to your Human League tribute album, but these days you can do it all in your bedroom.  VIA’s latest – the VIA Envy VT1730 USB 2.0 Audio Controller – takes things to the next level, offering 8 channels of 24-bit/192kHz recording or playback with a single USB 2.0 hookup to your host computer.

In fact, VIA reckon the VT1730 is actually the first “highly-integrated single chip solution” for eight such channels.  It’ll mean you can record a band’s worth of instruments at the same time, or output to eight different speakers for a pretty impressive home cinema system.  Happily the board also supports the I2S standard for Blu-ray audio, which means 24-bit 192kHz audio tracks on such HD discs will sound as they’re meant to.

Connectivity includes six MIDI ports (three in, three out), sixteen I2S ports (eight in, eight out), three stereo S/PDIF ports (one in, two out) and of course USB 2.0.  It looks like we’ll have to wait for an external soundcard manufacturer to pick up the Vinyl Envy VT1730 before we can buy one ourselves, however; no word on when that might happen nor how much we should budget for one, either.

Press Release:

VIA Debuts World’s First USB 2.0 Audio Controller

Ideal for MIDI systems and USB soundcards, the new VIA Vinyl Envy VT1730 USB 2.0 Audio Controller brings studio-level performance to the home audio enthusiast

Taipei, Taiwan, January 14, 2010 – VIA Technologies, Inc., a leading provider of PC and prosumer audio silicon, today unveiled the VIA Vinyl Envy VT1730 USB 2.0 Audio Controller, the industry’s first highly-integrated single chip solution that leverages the broad USB 2.0 bandwidth (480 Mb/s) to deliver uncompromised audio quality.

The VIA Envy VT1730 is an 8-channel, 24-bit/192kHz audio controller specifically designed to achieve cinema-quality audio recording and playback in high fidelity USB and MIDI system applications. Whether it’s using the bandwidth capacity of USB 2.0 to simultaneously support audio streams from a guitar, bass, keyboard and microphone, or delivering true-to-life sound to multiple speakers in a home theatre set-up, the VIA Envy VT1730 offers outstanding audio performance and impressive application flexibility.

Providing a smooth interface between USB, analog and digital audio devices, the VIA Envy VT1730 is ideal for USB sound cards, headphones, audio hubs, recording consoles, and MIDI devices that require the streaming of considerable audio data between a host system and audio I/O system via the USB interface.

“Over 10 years of experience in the audio component industry and extensive knowledge of peripheral interfaces has enabled this technology breakthrough,” said Richard Brown, Vice President of Marketing, VIA Technologies, Inc. “Audio enrichment, through our successful VIA Vinyl Audio line of controllers and codecs, has long been a core element of VIA’s multimedia product focus, and the VIA Envy VT1730 further extends our reach beyond the PC into high-end audio systems.”

Notably, the VIA Envy VT1730 also supports the I²S standard enabling Blu-ray Disc™ audio content protection; solutions without this feature dramatically reduce audio quality to that of a regular CD, with a sampling rate of only 16-bit/48kHz.

For further information on the VIA Vinyl Envy VT1730, please visit the VIA website at:

http://www.via.com.tw/en/products/audio/controllers/envyusb/

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3D specification finalized

                      3d_glasses

The Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) today announced the finalization and release of the “Blu-ray 3DTM” specification. The specification, which represents the work of the leading Hollywood studios and consumer electronic and computer manufacturers, will enable the home entertainment industry to bring the 3D experience into consumers’ living rooms on Blu-ray Disc, the most capable high definition home entertainment platform.

“Throughout this year, movie goers have shown an overwhelming preference for 3D when presented with the option to see a theatrical release in either 3D or 2D,” said Victor Matsuda, chairman, BDA Global Promotions Committee. “We believe this demand for 3D content will carry over into the home now that we have, in Blu-ray Disc, a medium that can deliver a quality Full HD 3D experience to the living room.”

The “Blu-ray 3D” specification fully leverages the technical advantages of the Blu-ray Disc format to deliver unmatched picture quality as well as uniformity and compatibility across the full range of Blu-ray 3D products, both hardware and software. Notably, the specification allows every Blu-ray 3D player and movie to deliver Full HD 1080p resolution to each eye, thereby maintaining the industry leading image quality to which Blu-ray Disc viewers are accustomed. Moreover, the specification is display agnostic, meaning that Blu-ray 3D products will deliver the 3D image to any compatible 3D display, regardless of whether that display uses LCD, Plasma or other technology and regardless of what 3D technology the display uses to deliver the image to the viewer’s eyes.

“From a technological perspective, it is simply the best available platform for bringing 3D into the home,” said Benn Carr, chairman, BDA 3D Task Force. “The disc capacity and bit rates Blu-ray Disc provides enable us to deliver 3D in Full HD 1080p high definition resolution.”

The Blu-ray 3D specification is also designed to allow PS3 game consoles to play back Blu-ray 3D content in 3D. Additionally, the specification supports playback of 2D discs in forthcoming 3D players and can enable 2D playback of Blu-ray 3D discs on the large installed base of Blu-ray Disc players currently in homes around the world.

“In 2009 we saw Blu-ray firmly establish itself as the most rapidly adopted packaged media format ever introduced,” said Matsuda. “We think the broad and rapid acceptance Blu-ray Disc already enjoys with consumers will be a factor in accelerating the uptake of 3D in the home. In the meantime, existing players and libraries can continue to be fully enjoyed as consumers consider extending into 3D home entertainment.”

The Blu-ray 3D specification calls for encoding 3D video using the Multiview Video Coding (MVC) codec, an extension to the ITU-T H.264 Advanced Video Coding (AVC) codec currently supported by all Blu-ray Disc players. MPEG4-MVC compresses both left and right eye views with a typical 50% overhead compared to equivalent 2D content, and can provide full 1080p resolution backward compatibility with current 2D Blu-ray Disc players. The specification also incorporates enhanced graphic features for 3D. These features provide a new experience for users, enabling navigation using 3D graphic menus and displaying 3D subtitles positioned in 3D video.

The completed specification will be available shortly and provides individual manufacturers and content providers with the technical information and guidelines necessary to develop, announce and bring products to market pursuant to their own internal planning cycles and timetables.

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Broadcom chip supports Blu-ray and 3D

broadcom-logoBroadcom is big into many areas of the electronics industry and many of the consumer electronic products we use each day have Broadcom technology inside. Yesterday Broadcom announced a new 1080p capable media processor for mobile devices. Broadcom is now unveiling a new single-chip Blu-ray solution called the BCM7632.

The new chip is the first to offer a single die Blu-ray disc chip that supports front-end and back-end video deciding and display technologies. The chip not only supports Blu-ray playback, but also supports Netflix 2.0, Pandora, Vudu, CinemaNow and other services.

The coolest feature of the new chip is that it also supports 3D Blu-ray movies. 3D Blu-ray films will be featured by some large companies at CES next month. The catch is that the 3D Blu-ray specifications are not finalized at this point, but Broadcom says that it expects the BCM7632 to comply with the final specs.

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Wireworld – Platinum Starlight HDMI Cable

wireworldplatinumstarlightHDMI 1.4 compatible devices are right around the corner, and the new capabilities are intriguing.  3D, 4K, and Ethernet over HDMI mean that the new standard may actually be something worth looking forward to.  Wireworld is looking forward as well, with the addition of their new flagship HDMI cable.
The Platinum Starlight HDMI cable sports a huge array of exciting sounding things like the company’s new 24-conductor DNA Helix design, solid silver conductors, and molded carbon fiber connectors.  It even exceeds HDMI 1.4 specifications for Ethernet speed with a transfer rate of 21Gbits/second.  It’s priced at $1,000 for a one meter cable.

Wireworld President David Salz speaks to the need for extremely high end cables for digital transmission, saying that “Now that Blu-Ray players are the primary source for both movies and music in home theater systems, the HDMI cable connecting the player to the system has become the most important audio cable in the entire system.  The Platinum Starlight HDMI cable addresses the need to provide the highest possible audio and video fidelity in high end home theater installations.”

The cable will be available in sizes from 0.3m all the way up to 30 meters, though the latter may cost more than the system you’re hooking it up to.

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Boxee to debut on December7th

Boxee has long been the darling of the homebrew DVR crowd, turning the Apple TV into a far more capable – and less iTunes-centric – media system and brightening DIY HTPCs no end.  Now the company has announced its plans for an off-the-shelf Boxee Box, which will deliver the same sort of experience but without the need to build it youself.

boxee_box

Boxee won’t yet reveal their hardware partner, but they do expect the upcoming set-top box to be merely the first of “several living room devices” to debut with the platform in 2010.  Hardware specifications and some device mock-ups won’t be unveiled until December 7th, but we’re guessing it’ll be based around some sort of SoC with HD video playback, streaming support and both wired and wireless connectivity.

The possibility of a standalone Boxee device came up back in January, when the company asked for suggestions and feedback on what sort of hardware support users would want to see.  At the time they seemed to suggest that roughly $199 would get full Boxee support, while $299 would add in extra hardware for things like Blu ray playback.  However as yet pricing for the upcoming device is yet to be confirmed.

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Bang & Olufsen unveils BeoVision

Bang & Olufsen is a well-known maker of high-end home theater and audio gear that carry huge price tags. The company has a line of HDTVs for instance that cost many times what you can walk into your local Walmart and pick a set up for. The last time we talked about a BeoVision HDTV it was the BeoVision 10 and sold for almost $9,000.

             beovision7-55-sg

The latest offering in the BeoVision line is the BeoVision 7 55-inch HDTV, which complements the 40-inch version of the same set already available. The new 55-inch HDTV has a 120Hz refresh rate and uses the BeoSystem 3 video engine for superior signal processing.

The screen is LED backlit and has local dimming for greater contrast. Other features of the TV include an integrated Blu-ray player and a built-in sound bar with digital sound. The BeoVision 7-55 can be had with a low or a high stand that are both motorized. Availability is set for late November for $18,700 including the floor stand and center speaker.

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