![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
It seams unnoticed in US that there is an other way to watch HD content. I have the KISS DP600 witch you can see he http://www.kiss-technology.com/ The player is a DIVX and as an important thing .wmv9 player. The drive in it is an ordinary dvd player drive. But the player is capable of outputting HD content up to 1920 X 1080 as far as the capabilities of the TV goes. At the moment i have a back projektion TV Sony KP-44PX. So, if you download or buy the Microsoft HD wmv-format DVD's which at the moment has a showcase on the internet for test and download, then you can burn these files (or DivX/XVID files if you prefer) on an ordinary DVD-R and put it in the player an watch the full definition on a HD TV or, on a SCART or component inlet on an ordinary(like mine) CRT TV, in an to the TV fitting downscaled resolution. Even on a CRT it looks amazing, and at first i was convinced that it made my TV able to show the full definiotion.(Sceptics tell me that it is not possible)-but i can see the difference between 1920 x 1080 and lower formats even on the CRT TV via SCART cable. Avoid using composit or super video cables as they do not deliver the best quality. SCART or component. SCART with the setting "RGB". Of course HDMI on a HDTV. There are all cables in the KISS KP600 box. So this enables us to an amazing amount of posibilities. A HD DVD could be converted to HD DivX, and burned on a DVD-R. After that it can be watched in FULL HD via the Kiss Player on a HDTV. Many free or minimal pay programmes are able to convert in full 1920 X 1080 with manual selection of the bitrate. If you have a HD video recorder you can take the full HD, edit, and burn it on a DVD-R and play it in full HD format, in either DivX-XVID-MPEG4 or WMV9. The player does not by now support H264 compression, which at the moment is the most compressed video file format. Furthermore the palayer is equiped with WIFI. You can stream from Windows or MAC-personal computer any content to the player. It even goes on the internet and are able to opdate itself.(I have an Intel MAC) It also has USB2. The streaming and USB2 has some limitations though. Afyter my own investigations it will stream up to 1343 KiloBits per second. That is sufficient for ordinary DivX movies which use a default bitrate about 900 Kilobits second, but insufficient to HD homemade or Microsoft HD wmv content which stream about 10.000 kilobits/sec. For that content you have to burn a DVD-R or DVD-RW. The player has frequent updates, and you have to suffer a bit. Mabee you insert a record and the player will not read the files or displays dark screen.;-) Then you have to use the main switch butten on the player and give it a new start. Then everything will come on fine.;-) The ability of the player is magnificent in both ordinary DVD play and HD play. You just have not seen a high quality picture like this player is able to deliver. It could be a tool to free the consumers of the format tyranny!;-))) Just thought you should now, as i think that you are the most interested. The danes are just not ready for this kind of information yet!;-))) Greets jens Denmark -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
I have a WMV-HD comercial disk (To the Limit) that plays thru my P4 based
system at 1080p (I too downloaded the 'clips' from Micrsoft's 'HD media showcase' website). The disk is full double layer (8.5 G), contains both 720p and 1080p WMVs, but the feature is only 38 minutes long. So, unless you're willing to apply a lot of compression to the program, it wouldn't be possible to put a 'feature length' (120 minute) movie on a regular 4.7 G DVD-R. TTUL... John "Lyrik" wrote in message news ![]() It seams unnoticed in US that there is an other way to watch HD content. I have the KISS DP600 witch you can see he http://www.kiss-technology.com/ The player is a DIVX and as an important thing .wmv9 player. The drive in it is an ordinary dvd player drive. But the player is capable of outputting HD content up to 1920 X 1080 as far as the capabilities of the TV goes. At the moment i have a back projektion TV Sony KP-44PX. So, if you download or buy the Microsoft HD wmv-format DVD's which at the moment has a showcase on the internet for test and download, then you can burn these files (or DivX/XVID files if you prefer) on an ordinary DVD-R and put it in the player an watch the full definition on a HD TV or, on a SCART or component inlet on an ordinary(like mine) CRT TV, in an to the TV fitting downscaled resolution. Even on a CRT it looks amazing, and at first i was convinced that it made my TV able to show the full definiotion.(Sceptics tell me that it is not possible)-but i can see the difference between 1920 x 1080 and lower formats even on the CRT TV via SCART cable. Avoid using composit or super video cables as they do not deliver the best quality. SCART or component. SCART with the setting "RGB". Of course HDMI on a HDTV. There are all cables in the KISS KP600 box. So this enables us to an amazing amount of posibilities. A HD DVD could be converted to HD DivX, and burned on a DVD-R. After that it can be watched in FULL HD via the Kiss Player on a HDTV. Many free or minimal pay programmes are able to convert in full 1920 X 1080 with manual selection of the bitrate. If you have a HD video recorder you can take the full HD, edit, and burn it on a DVD-R and play it in full HD format, in either DivX-XVID-MPEG4 or WMV9. The player does not by now support H264 compression, which at the moment is the most compressed video file format. Furthermore the palayer is equiped with WIFI. You can stream from Windows or MAC-personal computer any content to the player. It even goes on the internet and are able to opdate itself.(I have an Intel MAC) It also has USB2. The streaming and USB2 has some limitations though. Afyter my own investigations it will stream up to 1343 KiloBits per second. That is sufficient for ordinary DivX movies which use a default bitrate about 900 Kilobits second, but insufficient to HD homemade or Microsoft HD wmv content which stream about 10.000 kilobits/sec. For that content you have to burn a DVD-R or DVD-RW. The player has frequent updates, and you have to suffer a bit. Mabee you insert a record and the player will not read the files or displays dark screen.;-) Then you have to use the main switch butten on the player and give it a new start. Then everything will come on fine.;-) The ability of the player is magnificent in both ordinary DVD play and HD play. You just have not seen a high quality picture like this player is able to deliver. It could be a tool to free the consumers of the format tyranny!;-))) Just thought you should now, as i think that you are the most interested. The danes are just not ready for this kind of information yet!;-))) Greets jens Denmark -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
Another thing, I checked out the 'Kiss' link and reviewed the specs. Nowhere
does it mention HDCP compatability (Hi-bandwidth Digital Copyright Protection). I don't know if this is an issue in Europe, but it sure is in the US. TTUL... John "Lyrik" wrote in message news ![]() It seams unnoticed in US that there is an other way to watch HD content. I have the KISS DP600 witch you can see he http://www.kiss-technology.com/ The player is a DIVX and as an important thing .wmv9 player. The drive in it is an ordinary dvd player drive. But the player is capable of outputting HD content up to 1920 X 1080 as far as the capabilities of the TV goes. At the moment i have a back projektion TV Sony KP-44PX. So, if you download or buy the Microsoft HD wmv-format DVD's which at the moment has a showcase on the internet for test and download, then you can burn these files (or DivX/XVID files if you prefer) on an ordinary DVD-R and put it in the player an watch the full definition on a HD TV or, on a SCART or component inlet on an ordinary(like mine) CRT TV, in an to the TV fitting downscaled resolution. Even on a CRT it looks amazing, and at first i was convinced that it made my TV able to show the full definiotion.(Sceptics tell me that it is not possible)-but i can see the difference between 1920 x 1080 and lower formats even on the CRT TV via SCART cable. Avoid using composit or super video cables as they do not deliver the best quality. SCART or component. SCART with the setting "RGB". Of course HDMI on a HDTV. There are all cables in the KISS KP600 box. So this enables us to an amazing amount of posibilities. A HD DVD could be converted to HD DivX, and burned on a DVD-R. After that it can be watched in FULL HD via the Kiss Player on a HDTV. Many free or minimal pay programmes are able to convert in full 1920 X 1080 with manual selection of the bitrate. If you have a HD video recorder you can take the full HD, edit, and burn it on a DVD-R and play it in full HD format, in either DivX-XVID-MPEG4 or WMV9. The player does not by now support H264 compression, which at the moment is the most compressed video file format. Furthermore the palayer is equiped with WIFI. You can stream from Windows or MAC-personal computer any content to the player. It even goes on the internet and are able to opdate itself.(I have an Intel MAC) It also has USB2. The streaming and USB2 has some limitations though. Afyter my own investigations it will stream up to 1343 KiloBits per second. That is sufficient for ordinary DivX movies which use a default bitrate about 900 Kilobits second, but insufficient to HD homemade or Microsoft HD wmv content which stream about 10.000 kilobits/sec. For that content you have to burn a DVD-R or DVD-RW. The player has frequent updates, and you have to suffer a bit. Mabee you insert a record and the player will not read the files or displays dark screen.;-) Then you have to use the main switch butten on the player and give it a new start. Then everything will come on fine.;-) The ability of the player is magnificent in both ordinary DVD play and HD play. You just have not seen a high quality picture like this player is able to deliver. It could be a tool to free the consumers of the format tyranny!;-))) Just thought you should now, as i think that you are the most interested. The danes are just not ready for this kind of information yet!;-))) Greets jens Denmark -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 08 Feb 2007 06:54:23 -0800, SoCalCommie wrote:
Another thing, I checked out the 'Kiss' link and reviewed the specs. Nowhere does it mention HDCP compatability (Hi-bandwidth Digital Copyright Protection). I don't know if this is an issue in Europe, but it sure is in the US. And it only supports PAL/Secam. That's not used in the US.:-) -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
No, according to the specs http://www.kiss-technology.com/?p=600en&v=users ,
it supports PAL / NTSC. TTUL... John "Wes Newell" wrote in message news:[email protected] On Thu, 08 Feb 2007 06:54:23 -0800, SoCalCommie wrote: Another thing, I checked out the 'Kiss' link and reviewed the specs. Nowhere does it mention HDCP compatability (Hi-bandwidth Digital Copyright Protection). I don't know if this is an issue in Europe, but it sure is in the US. And it only supports PAL/Secam. That's not used in the US.:-) -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Feb 8, 9:46 am, "SoCalCommie" wrote:
I have a WMV-HD comercial disk (To the Limit) that plays thru my P4 based system at 1080p (I too downloaded the 'clips' from Micrsoft's 'HD media showcase' website). The disk is full double layer (8.5 G), contains both 720p and 1080p WMVs, but the feature is only 38 minutes long. So, unless you're willing to apply a lot of compression to the program, it wouldn't be possible to put a 'feature length' (120 minute) movie on a regular 4.7 G DVD-R. TTUL... John "Lyrik" wrote in message news
It seams unnoticed in US that there is an other way to watch HD content. I have the KISS DP600 witch you can see he http://www.kiss-technology.com/ The player is a DIVX and as an important thing .wmv9 player. The drive in it is an ordinary dvd player drive. But the player is capable of outputting HD content up to 1920 X 1080 as far as the capabilities of the TV goes. At the moment i have a back projektion TV Sony KP-44PX. So, if you download or buy the Microsoft HD wmv-format DVD's which at the moment has a showcase on the internet for test and download, then you can burn these files (or DivX/XVID files if you prefer) on an ordinary DVD-R and put it in the player an watch the full definition on a HD TV or, on a SCART or component inlet on an ordinary(like mine) CRT TV, in an to the TV fitting downscaled resolution. Even on a CRT it looks amazing, and at first i was convinced that it made my TV able to show the full definiotion.(Sceptics tell me that it is not possible)-but i can see the difference between 1920 x 1080 and lower formats even on the CRT TV via SCART cable. Avoid using composit or super video cables as they do not deliver the best quality. SCART or component. SCART with the setting "RGB". Of course HDMI on a HDTV. There are all cables in the KISS KP600 box. So this enables us to an amazing amount of posibilities. A HD DVD could be converted to HD DivX, and burned on a DVD-R. After that it can be watched in FULL HD via the Kiss Player on a HDTV. Many free or minimal pay programmes are able to convert in full 1920 X 1080 with manual selection of the bitrate. If you have a HD video recorder you can take the full HD, edit, and burn it on a DVD-R and play it in full HD format, in either DivX-XVID-MPEG4 or WMV9. The player does not by now support H264 compression, which at the moment is the most compressed video file format. Furthermore the palayer is equiped with WIFI. You can stream from Windows or MAC-personal computer any content to the player. It even goes on the internet and are able to opdate itself.(I have an Intel MAC) It also has USB2. The streaming and USB2 has some limitations though. Afyter my own investigations it will stream up to 1343 KiloBits per second. That is sufficient for ordinary DivX movies which use a default bitrate about 900 Kilobits second, but insufficient to HD homemade or Microsoft HD wmv content which stream about 10.000 kilobits/sec. For that content you have to burn a DVD-R or DVD-RW. The player has frequent updates, and you have to suffer a bit. Mabee you insert a record and the player will not read the files or displays dark screen.;-) Then you have to use the main switch butten on the player and give it a new start. Then everything will come on fine.;-) The ability of the player is magnificent in both ordinary DVD play and HD play. You just have not seen a high quality picture like this player is able to deliver. It could be a tool to free the consumers of the format tyranny!;-))) Just thought you should now, as i think that you are the most interested. The danes are just not ready for this kind of information yet!;-))) Greets jens Denmark -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ Why would you need to use a 4.7G DVD-R, why not a DL disc? Presumably the unit can read dual layer discs since all commercial movies are on dual layer discs? Just curious. |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Thu, 08 Feb 2007 08:19:42 -0800, SoCalCommie wrote:
No, according to the specs http://www.kiss-technology.com/?p=600en&v=users , it supports PAL / NTSC. TTUL... John Different model. Still, you can't get HD with NTSC. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
Different model? DP-600 is what... different from the DP600? And the
discussion wasn't about Hi-Def TV from normal broadcast sources (mostly crap content anyway - I HATE pro-sports and don't particuarily care for episodic shows - I watch movies). TTUL... John "Wes Newell" wrote in message news:Y%[email protected] On Thu, 08 Feb 2007 08:19:42 -0800, SoCalCommie wrote: No, according to the specs http://www.kiss-technology.com/?p=600en&v=users , it supports PAL / NTSC. TTUL... John Different model. Still, you can't get HD with NTSC. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org http://mysettopbox.tv/knoppmyth.html Usenet alt.video.ptv.mythtv My server http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php HD Tivo S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
Den 08.02.2007 kl. 15:46 skrev SoCalCommie :
I have a WMV-HD comercial disk (To the Limit) that plays thru my P4 based system at 1080p (I too downloaded the 'clips' from Micrsoft's 'HD media showcase' website). The disk is full double layer (8.5 G), contains both 720p and 1080p WMVs, but the feature is only 38 minutes long. So, unless you're willing to apply a lot of compression to the program, it wouldn't be possible to put a 'feature length' (120 minute) movie on a regular 4.7 G DVD-R. TTUL... John ++++++++ Glad you brought that up. Microsoft wmv HD fortmat uses a bitrate under 10.000 kilobits/sek. So obviously the 38 minutes is not due to limits in bits, but limits in the film length itself. With 10.000 kilobits/sek for mpeg4 or wmv you would have 1 hour HD-film on a singlelayer DVD-R. So we see that nearly every movie could fit a doubble layer disc. And there are several possibilities to tweek the codecs, which we haven't considered. Greets Jens -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
Den 08.02.2007 kl. 22:08 skrev Bates :
http://www.opera.com/mail/ Why would you need to use a 4.7G DVD-R, why not a DL disc? Presumably the unit can read dual layer discs since all commercial movies are on dual layer discs? Just curious. ++++++++++ You are so right. The player is able to read double layer discs. -- Sendt med Operas banebrydende postklient: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| 1 in 6 people don't watch BBC TV | DAB sounds worse than FM | UK digital tv | 471 | July 15th 06 01:51 AM |
| UKTV logos | {{{{{Welcome}}}}} | UK sky | 19 | May 11th 06 08:25 PM |
| Is there a way to make tivo switch to WATCH a channel? | Ken | Tivo personal television | 66 | March 13th 06 05:08 PM |
| OT,fm subcarrier article | KRINGLES JINGLES | Satellite tvro | 0 | February 3rd 04 02:11 AM |
| can't watch recordings!! silly reason | trappeduser | UK sky | 32 | July 29th 03 04:23 PM |