Wanted to know about the Differences

blahh :P

New member
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?
If you're a member there, why don't you ask it?
I suppose it works on a torrent per torrent basis. but I could be wrong.
 
that's true DVD-R is nothing. once u watch BLURAY movie u will not ever think to watch DVD-R.

Sorry one more thing what is the difference between
Untouched BD25s
Untouched BD50s

It depends on the release. You have to read the nfo. I have seen some people say untouched BD25 and then rip out the menus and all extra languages but leave the video untouched.

However some BDs are naturally BD25 and have all that stuff still intact.

Same rules apply for BD50s
 
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
 
Heay guys. M kinda new to this but i wanted to know about the difference between the following:

1. Movie 1080i
2. Movie 1080p
3. Movie 720p
4. Blueray
5. HD-DVD

I just wanted to know which would be the best to download and what would be the requirements to burn and watch them.

I normally download DVD-R but yesterday i was with my friend watching a movie, but before that it gave me an option to choose which sound would i need.(This is the first time i have seen an option of DTS sound) And when the movie started i was shocked :Owith the quality of the sound(the sound was really incredible).It was a DVD movie but had an option for DTS sound.
So i just want to know which of the following options can i use.
1. Movie 1080i
2. Movie 1080p
3. Movie 720p
4. Blueray
5. HD-DVD
and what should be the requirements do i need after downloading them. what software, CD-Drive, and what type of CD do i have to use to get these. A help would be appreciated.
 
Honestly waeldiab you dont have to grab the 45gb version to get very good quality. You should try some of the 10-15 gb 1080p mkv's out. They are very good quality and the good ones are pretty much the same as the bd25/50's.
 
Honestly waeldiab you dont have to grab the 45gb version to get very good quality. You should try some of the 10-15 gb 1080p mkv's out. They are very good quality and the good ones are pretty much the same as the bd25/50's.


i tried "10-15 gb 1080p" actually it's not the same quality it's totally different according the sound and resolution. i am a very kind person and i do like to watch movie's in high quality no matter what size it is.i have already bought my home theater system to watch movie in high resolution.
 
@Funkin'
The new Wdtv Live supports Dts. For the old model there was a project for DTS passthrough but you'd better check dedicated forums for the results.
 
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
 
First off all hd stuff is ripped from Blu-ray. So the ultimate would be to dl the actual blu-ray. For that you'd need a blu ray burner and blank disks which would cost you an arm and a leg.

here is a cutandpaste re the formats
There are two main flavors of high definition TV, 1080i (the i is for interlaced) and 720p (p for progressive). 1080i offers the most pixels, with a matrix of 1920x1080 pixels, while 720p has fewer pixels at 1280x720 pixels. However, the difference is made up with the frame rate, which is only 30 frames per second with 1080i, but is double that with 720p, at 60 frames per second. The total pixels displayed per second is actually very similar, with 720p offering 55 million pixels per second, while 1080 is slightly higher at 62 million pixels per second.

What does all that mean? It all depends on the type of TV you watch. 720p is better at showing pictures with plenty of motion, since the higher frame rate helps smooth any quick motion on the screen - this is better for sports or action movies. 1080i offers more detail, which is for movies with lots of images or panoramas.

The best of all is the 1080p option. It offers the best of both world, 60 frames per second at 1920 x 1080 pixels. The toal bandwidth is 124 million pixels per second, double that of 1080i. It can display any HDTV signal without any downconverting. 720p signals are upconverted, while 1080i signals only require some gently "de-interlacing" to work properly. 1080p is the perferred option is possible - its backwards compatible with all old formats, and is ready for upcoming high definition discs.

None of this has anything to do with audio, i know but if you're burning actual blu rays then it should have the best audio available.
cheers
 
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
 
If you have the bandwidth and storage space and see/hear the big difference, then go for the untouched BR.



i tried "10-15 gb 1080p" actually it's not the same quality it's totally different according the sound and resolution. i am a very kind person and i do like to watch movie's in high quality no matter what size it is.i have already bought my home theater system to watch movie in high resolution.
 
1. A full BluRay disk will be quite big since the video and audio is untouched. They will have a certain file structure just like a DVD(not the same structure though). They can come in .iso format or just the file folders

2. Everything with x264 in the title has been reencoded. Only download internal releases if you want good quality. That means never download scene and also stay away from some shitty internal groups like Eureka and CHD. The best reencodes are from HDBits and HDChina.

3. The only way to play back a full bluray is to either:
A) Burn to disk
B) Playback on the Popcorn Hour C-200(if you get any other all-in-one playback device you are mentally retarded)
C) Put together a HTPC with a videocard that does bitstreaming so you can get full HD audio.

4. The difference between a reencode and the full disk is that the reencode is smaller but has almost the same quality if encoded properly. Never download an encode unless it has a Source to Encode screenshot comparison so you can judge the transparency of the encode.
 
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.
 
OMG i download

Transformers.Revenge.of.the.Fallen.2009.MULTi.COMPLETE.BLURAY-HDi

size : 43.7GB from NB site

i shocked with the quality of the sound & screen resolution

really its 100% difference between DVD-R and BD-R
 
Back
Top