Intel admits that GN40 chipset is no match for Blu-ray

We know, we’re just being greedy at this point, but hey — did you honestly expect anything less? We knew Intel’s new Atom N280 processor, when paired with the equally fresh GN40 chipset, could deliver silky smooth 720p video playback. What we didn’t know, however, was how well it could handle 1080p material. According to Fudzilla, an Intel product manager has stated that the GN40 is “designed to do 1080p HD playback for typical broadband internet content,” but that it wasn’t engineered to “enable full Blu-ray capability where the bitrates and demands of multi-layer content are significantly higher than that of internet HD content.” The optimist within us is hoping that the GN40’s successor will take the next logical step and handle BD films, but we wouldn’t dare suggest you get your own hopes up that high if you’re not good with handling disappointment.

[Image courtesy of TechArena]

Filed under: , ,

Intel admits that GN40 chipset is no match for Blu-ray originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Mar 2009 15:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Lightning Review: Watchmen The Complete Motion Comic Blu-ray

Who watches the Watchmen? I watched Watchmen (The Complete Motion Comic).

Price: $35 Blu-ray, $30 DVD

Verdict:
So how are we watching Watchmen on Blu-ray before it’s even hit theaters? It’s actually the motion comic version that’s been available on iTunes for some time but has just been released to DVD and Blu-ray this week.

It’s an interesting idea that’s being adopted by Marvel and others—add a bit of motion to the original art and a comic book becomes a movie. Does it work for Watchmen?

Actually, yes, yes it works pretty well I’d say.
Even though I’m more of a comic book guy, seeing Dave Gibbons’ original art blown up on a 1080p big screen is a fantastic experience. Of course images are cropped, zoomed and panned for the widescreen format, but you can literally freeze any single frame of the six hours and capture a beautiful, poster-worthy still. That, in itself, is absurdly cool.

Animation is for the most part tasteful and smooth—if you didn’t know Watchmen was a comic, you might just believe that it was always meant for television. But there’s one major design flaw – the art is ALWAYS in motion. Either a camera is zooming or panning, or characters are moving this way or that. It sounds like a small point, but I found myself getting a bit motion sick watching the disc…and I don’t often become motion sick with games or television.

Some scenes do work very, very well with slight animation, though. When Dr. Manhattan becomes Dr. Manhattan, the famous panel is done incredible justice on screen. Or when Rorschach first interrogates a bar’s worth of patrons by breaking fingers for intel, I’d argue that the well-planned layering of movements crowd enhances the original art. But when Night Owl takes out his ship for a midnight cruise, the epic nature of his craft, bursting through a cloud of steam, is undermined by simplistic animation.
And then there’s the small matter of voice acting. In short, there isn’t any. The motion comic is merely narrated by actor/audiobook reader Tom Stechschulte. Predictably, his voices for each character were often so similar that, especially as lips do not move on screen, I couldn’t tell who was supposed to be talking. Oh, and have you ever listened to a rape scene between a man and a man acting like a woman? The lines lose some punch.

Buyers of the $30 DVD set will be disappointed by no real extras, while the $35 Blu-ray version lacks a menu system of merit and only includes a brief 3-minute behind-the-scenes of the Watchmen film by Dave Gibbons alongside an appreciated digital copy (PC only). You also score $7.50 off seeing the movie in theaters.

I’d still recommend people start with the actual Watchmen graphic novel. But if you never learned to read or just appreciate big, pretty pictures, the Watchmen Complete Motion Comic may be worth a viewing. At minimum, it’s a good use for your HDTV during your next hipster party.

Warner Bros. plans to support CBHD, the format war is back on — at least in China

It seems appropriate that after striking the fatal blow in the war between HD DVD and Blu-ray, Warner is the first to break rank and ally itself with the China Blue HD team. Ready to enter the ordinary Chinese consumer’s family, according to Managing Director Tony Vaughan, the Harry Potter series, Speed Racer and others will launch for 50-70 yuan ($7.30 – $10.22) per disc. Excuse us while we pick our jaws up from the floor, but with at least one Hollywood studio in pocket and 1999 yuan ($292) players on the way the son of HD DVD looks closer to a real Blu-ray competitor — and less like the destined for the scrap heap reject we predicted — than ever. With DVD sales shrinking and Blu-ray not quite ready to pick up the slack, how long until another studio decides the Chinese market has enough potential to publish movies on CBHD? [Disclosure: Engadget is part of the Time Warner family]

[Via Format War Central]

Filed under: ,

Warner Bros. plans to support CBHD, the format war is back on — at least in China originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 23:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Sony outs BDP-S360 and BDP-S560 Blu-ray players, new BD HTIBs

Hope you didn’t just pull the trigger on a BDP-S350, ’cause we get the feeling Sony’s two newest standalone BD decks are going to make you yearn for the next best thing. Here in Las Vegas, the company has just come clean with the Profile 2.0 BDP-S360 and BDP-S560, the latter of which includes integrated WiFi for tapping into BD-Live content and downloading future firmware updates sans an Ethernet cable. Also, the unit is fully DLNA-ready, handles DVD upscaling, bit-streams audio via HDMI, decodes Dolby TrueHD / DTS-HD Master Audio and plays nice with external media loaded up on a USB drive. As predicted, the lower-end BDP-S360 is essentially the same player sans WiFi.

Moving on, we’ve got a new pair of 5.1-channel Blu-ray HTIB systems: the BDV-E300 and BDV-E500W. Both bundles include a BD-Live-capable (Profile 2.0) Blu-ray player, while the BDV-E500W sports integrated S-AIR wireless audio capabilities. In other words, your rear speakers will get their signal sans cabling, and those who opt for the BDV-E300 are getting a kit that’s S-AIR-ready, meaning that you can add modules in the future to get the same wireless support. Both sets also include Sony’s Digital Media Port for controlling peripherals like Apple’s iPod and Sony’s own Walkman line, and the BRAVIA Sync technology ensures that HDMI-CEC lovers are taken care of. The models also bring along the firm’s Xross Media Bar (XMB) interface, a USB port for loading up media and an easy-to-follow setup DVD. As for pricing and availability, we’ve broken all that down below.

  • BDP-S360 Blu-ray player: shipping this summer for around $300
  • BDP-S560 Blu-ray player: shipping this summer for around $350
  • HT-SS360 component home theater system : shipping in May for around $350
  • BDV-E300 Blu-ray HTIB: shipping in June for around $600
  • BDV-E500W Blu-ray HTIB: shipping in June for around $800

Catch the release in full just after the break.

Continue reading Sony outs BDP-S360 and BDP-S560 Blu-ray players, new BD HTIBs

Filed under: , ,

Sony outs BDP-S360 and BDP-S560 Blu-ray players, new BD HTIBs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

MSI GT725 Receives ATIs Fastest Graphics Card

GT725_photo6.jpg

MSI is no stranger to mobile gaming laptops, and because it has been aggressive with product launches lately, ATI has entrusted it with its fastest mobile gaming card yet– the ATI Radeon HD4850, which claims to deliver desktop graphics performance on a single card. This implies, though, that the HD4850 won’t be as fast as its CrossFire solutions (dual cards), which can be found in systems like the Alienware M17.

Other goodies include a 1080p, 17 inch widescreen, a Blu-Ray player, and a 9-cell battery — parts that should easily rival some ofits fierce gaming competitiors. The GT725 runs a 2.53GHz, Intel Core 2 Duo P9500 processor, and weighs a shade over 7 pounds. No word on pricing yet, but if it’s anything like MSI’s other laptops, the GT725 should be priced in line with our current economy. Update: the GT725 is available at NewEgg.com for $1,600

Samsung BD-P1600 Netflix streaming Blu-ray player pops up at retail

Samsung’s new value priced Blu-ray player managed to fly under our radar at CES in favor of its better equipped brethren but that hasn’t stopped Dave Zatz and others from stumbling into them at retail lately, like this one sitting on a Best Buy shelf. By making BD-Live required 1GB storage and WiFi dongle aftermarket accessories, you can grab a slim, Netflix streaming, fast Blu-ray loading box for $299. Right now we’ll probably wait until the whole product line appears and prices slide down a bit more before considering picking one up, but depending on your needs this could be a good option, more pics of this bird in its unnatural habitat beyond the read link.

Filed under: ,

Samsung BD-P1600 Netflix streaming Blu-ray player pops up at retail originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Mar 2009 14:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

How To: Rip Blu-ray Discs

Included digital copies are still the exception rather than the norm in the Blu-ray world. Lame. You’d like to rip those discs for playback elsewhere, right? But there is something you should know first.

And that is this: Ripping Blu-ray discs sucks. Hard. It takes forever, eats up a ton of hard drive space, and for all practical purposes requires software that isn’t free. It’s like trying to rip a DVD in 1999: computers still have a long way to go before this is easy.

But just because it’s hard doesn’t mean it’s impossible, and once your system is set up it’s something you can start before you go to bed and have finished for you in the morning. Here we’ve outlined exactly what you need to rip your 1080p Blu-ray discs (the ones you own, of course) and then convert the video into a more manageable file size for watching on a computer, phone, game console or PMP. Because hey, you own this movie, and you should be able to watch it on whatever device you want.

But you’ll have to earn that right. Let’s start this painful process, shall we?

What’s you’ll need:

• A Windows PC (the Blu-ray ripping process is, at the moment, Mac-unfriendly. I used Windows 7 Beta 64-bit and all the following software is Windows-only)

AnyDVD HD (free fully-functional 21-day trial, $80 to keep) for ripping and decrypting BD discs

RipBot264 (free) for transcoding from AVC (you’ll also need a few codecs to go along with it: .NET Framework 2.0, the avisynth and ffdshow codec packs, and the Haali media splitter)

tsMuxeR (free) for muxing (may not be necessary)

• A Blu-ray drive (I used OWC’s Mercury Pro external)

• A ton of free hard drive space (80GB or so to be safe)

• A decent understanding of how video codecs and containers work (Matt’s Giz Explains has everything you need)

How it Works
AnyDVD HD is a driver that sits in the background, which automatically removes the AACS or BD+ security lock and the region code from any BD disc you load, allowing it to be ripped. The video on most Blu-ray discs is encoded in the MPEG4 AVC format in .m2ts files, so it will need to be transcoded from AVC to something else (like an H.264 MP4 file) for playback on other devices. MPEG4 AVC doesn’t have wide support in all of the best video transcoders we alread love, like Handbrake. This makes finding a free and easy transcoding solution a little tougher, but thankfully RipBot264 seems competent.

You can then either transcode directly from the disc, or go the route I took and rip the disc to your hard drive before running it through the transcoder, which reduces the chance for errors. Give both a shot to find what’s easiest.

Thanks to poster Baldrick’s guide on the Videohelp.com forums and the folks at Doom9—these instructions are based on info found there. Check them out if you get stuck.

Rip Your BD Disc
Again, if you want to try transcoding directly from the disc at the sacrifice of speed or the chance of corruption, you can skip this part (except for step 1) and go to step 4.

1. First up, download and install all the necessary software: AnyDVD HD and RipBot264, which also requires .NET Framework 2.0, the avisynth and ffdshow codec packs, and the Haali media splitter. (All links lead to their Videohelp.com pages, a fantastic resource). These codecs, nicely enough, should give AVC decoding capabilities system wide, so apps like VLC and Windows Media Player should be able to play them without problems.

2. Fire up AnyDVD if it’s not running yet, and from the fox icon in the system tray, choose “Rip Video DVD to Harddisk.” Choose a save point where there’s a healthy 40-50GB free and start it a-rippin’. It’ll probably take around an hour.

3. When it’s done, open up the BDMV/STREAMS directory and try to play the largest .m2ts in VLC or WMP. It should play fine with sound, but if anything’s fishy, you may want to try re-loading RipBot264’s required codecs or trying another AVC codec like CoreCodec’s CoreAVC. This is more paid software, but like AnyDVD, it comes with a free trial period. You need to be able to see and hear an .m2ts file normally during playback before you proceed.

Transcode Your Rip
Now, the fun part.

4. Open up RipBot264. When you try to run RipBot264 the first time, it may say you haven’t installed ffdshow even if you have. If this is the case, open the RipBot264.ini file in Notepad and change “CheckRequiredSoftware=1” to “CheckRequiredSoftware=0” and save it.

5. Click “Add” and select the largest *.m2ts file found in your ripped BD disc’s BDMV/STREAMS folder. RipBot will then analyze it and find the various programs available to encode—you want the one that matches the runtime of your movie, and not one of the special features. RipBot will chew on this file for a long time, and hopefully when it’s done, will present you with this dialog:


6. If RipBot throws an error of any kind here, first make sure you’ve got a bunch of HD breathing room on the volume you’re using.

If errors still come up, you may have to mux your rip. To put that in English: Blu-ray discs have a lot of different files on them representing several different audio and video streams. The process of joining all of these disparate elements into a single stream (usually a .ts file) is called multiplexing, or muxing, and its necessary to do before transcoding. RipBot264 can do this on its own, but it has problems with certain discs. So if any of the above fails, download tsMuxeR, select the biggest .2mts file in the BDMV/STREAM folder in your rip or on your disc, choose the appropriate language, and hit “Start Muxing.” You can then add the resulting .ts file to RipBot264 as the source.


7. Now you can choose how you want to convert the video. RipBot gives you presets for Apple TV, iPod or iPhone, PSP or a high-res file which can then be re-burned to a new BD disc. I chose the iPod/iPhone level.

8. Click “Properties”—here you can fine tune the output size of your video (I chose a nice 640×360 file) and preview it before you begin. MAKE SURE you preview your choices using the “Preview Script” button, because you don’t want to sit through the eternity of transcoding only to find that your dimensions are messed up and everything is in the wrong aspect ratio.

9. If all looks and sounds good, press OK, then “Start” and watch as your system transcodes the massive 1080p AVC stream into a new MP4 file. On my 2.53GHz Macbook Pro, it averages around 20fps, which is actually slower than real time playback. Yuck. So you’ll want to set this and forget it.


10. Wake up the next morning, have your coffee, and check your output file. It should play beautifully in your media player of choice, and look crisp as a kettle chip. My 640×360 encode of the Dark Knight was around an even 1GB in the end, which is not bad at all. Copy it to your device of choice and enjoy.

As you can see, this process is a bitch. It takes an hour to rip the disc, another hour and change for all the software to read your rip and get ready, then an amount of time equal to or even longer than the movie itself to transcode it, depending on your system. So hey, movie studios: how about making digital copies standard features on your BD discs so we don’t have to go through this, mmkay?

Note to Mac Users
While the BD-ripping world is largely a Windows one, you may want to fiddle around with DumpHD, a ripping tool written in Java that supposedly works with OS X. I couldn’t get it to work, but you can read more here to try for yourself.

If you manage to rip your BD disc, you’ll then have to find an AVC converter that works with OS X. Most of these are paid and I haven’t used any, but they exist. If anyone has had luck with a particular tool, let us know.

This method was tested and worked perfectly for me, but if you’re a video jockey and know of any additional software or methods that I didn’t cover that may help, PLEASE tell us about it in the comments. The knowledge dropped in the comments of these Saturday how-tos are a huge help to everyone, so please be constructive and provide links to other tools you’ve had success with. Have a good weekend everyone!

Cheaper Blu-ray? Sony, Panasonic, and Philips say it’s coming, honestly

Look, we don’t really “get” people who aren’t willing to buy the latest and greatest thing regardless of the price and / or current economic state, but evidently there’s a rather large sector still clinging to their antiquated DVD format. Blu-ray proponents Panasonic, Philips, and Sony are looking to change all that by knocking down the tab a few notches. The trio has revealed plans to form a single licensing firm for Blu-ray, which they anticipate will lower the cost of the license — and therefore the retail price — by “at least” 40 percent. They expect it’ll amount to $9.50 for read-only BD player, $14 for a burner, 11 cents for read-only discs, 12 cents for BD-Rs, and 15 cents for BD-RE rewritable discs. In its current form, hopeful BD makers have to seek out each company individually. The group also hopes a single licensing entity will help them spot unauthorized BD devices, so watch out, suspicious mom and pop Blu-ray stores.

Filed under: ,

Cheaper Blu-ray? Sony, Panasonic, and Philips say it’s coming, honestly originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 25 Feb 2009 15:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Chumby widgets coming to connected HDTVs, Blu-ray players and STBs

If you thought Chumby would stop at digital photo frames, you were wrong. Dead wrong. Today, the widget-loving company has announced a tie-up with Broadcom that will integrate its rich media internet platform onto system-on-a-chip (SoC) solutions that will eventually find their way into HDTVs, set-top-boxes and Blu-ray players. Essentially, Chumby is making sure it doesn’t miss out on the quickly filling insert-your-connected-device-here bandwagon, and quite frankly, we’ll be shocked if any of those other guys can rival what Chumby’s bringing. After all, widgets are this company’s forte, and we’re downright giddy at the thought of having over 1,000 internet-connected snippets of information at our fingertips while intently watching future episodes of Lie To Me. Hey, TV / STB makers — jump on this. Now. Video demonstration is after the break.

Continue reading Chumby widgets coming to connected HDTVs, Blu-ray players and STBs

Filed under:

Chumby widgets coming to connected HDTVs, Blu-ray players and STBs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Feb 2009 13:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Cheap Geek: Blu-ray Bundle, Macs, GPS Sale

garmin.gif

Here’s a little tidbit to start your morning: According to the New York Times, one year ago today, Toshiba, creator of HD DVD, conceded to Sony’s rival Blu-ray format. Take a look at Gearlog’s deals for Thursday, February 19 (especially the first one!):

1. Save some big bucks on a three-pack of Blu-ray discs from Amazon.com today. Choose from the Action Bundle, which includes Casino Royale, Black Hawk Down, and Hellboy; the Love and Marriage Bundle, with Made of Honor, The Other Boleyn Girl, and Across the Universe; or the Comedy Bundle, with Superbad, You Don’t Mess with the Zohan, and Talladega Nights. Normally all three Blu-ray discs would come out to about to be as much as $117, but with this offer, you’ll save 65 percent. The deal ends today, so get on it.

2. MacMall is knee-deep in its Apple Blowout Deals with up to 83 percent off of select Macs, iPods, software, accessories, and more. Save up to $84 on MacBooks, $1,044 on MacBook Pros, and $1,194 on MacBook Airs. Also, orders of over $49 get free shipping with this mail-in rebate. The sale ends on February 24. [Via Dealnews.com]

3. If you’re the type of person who gets lost all the time while driving, but is too proud to ask for directions, you’re in luck. Best Buy is having a sale of 10 to 33 percent off of select GPS receivers. Get the Garmin Nuvi 255 GPS in Piano Black for $179.99 (normally $229.99).