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DVD Movies

DVD Movies

 

Nowadays apart from seeing movies at cinema halls or big theaters a different segment is getting popular called DVD Movies. DVD Movies on one hand are cheaper, while on another you can store them, keep their possession and see them at later date if you are currently busy. DVD Movies also add to the convenience as you don’t need to stand in front of ticket window or long queues at parking. DVD Movies have region codes, and they typically only play on a player or DVD-ROM drive sold in the country where the DVD Movies were sold. The actual region code is in one byte on the DVD (digital versatile disc). The DVD player or drive has a region code in its firmware. Personal computer DVD-ROM players often have the code in the software or MPEG-2 decoder. The two codes must match for the player or drive to play the DVD Movies. The code is also printed on the back of a DVD package, superimposed on a small image of the globe.

 

 Region code protection in DVD Movies is used by the movie studios to thwart unauthorized duplication of their copyrighted material and to control the worldwide release dates. Movie studios agreed to the DVD format when DVD manufacturers agreed to put a region code on every disc. However, unauthorized hacks to the Windows 98 registry have allowed some to play any DVD on their personal computers.

 

DVD regional locking is used to control which DVD Movies play in which countries or groups of countries. Movies are often released on different dates around the world. Region 1 has its own player that will only play Region 1 discs. Likewise, Region 2 players can only play Region 2 discs and not play any of Region 1's discs. The six codes are:

 

  • United States and Canada
  • Europe and Japan
  • Southeast Asia
  • Latin America and Australia
  • Russia, rest of Asia and Africa
  • China

There are also some outlets that sell Toshiba, Pioneer and Raite DVD players without region codes for DVD Movies.

 

Even though the storage capacity of a DVD is huge, the uncompressed video data of a full-length movie would never fit on a DVD. In order to fit DVD Movies on a DVD, you need video compression. A group called the Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) establishes the standards for compressing moving pictures.  When movies are put onto DVDs, they are encoded in MPEG-2 format and then stored on the disc. This compression format is a widely accepted international standard. Your DVD player contains an MPEG-2 decoder, which can uncompress this data as quickly as you can watch it.

 

A movie is usually filmed at a rate of 24 frames per second. This means that every second, there are 24 complete images displayed on the movie screen. American and Japanese television uses a format called National Television Standards Committee (NTSC). NTSC displays a total of 30 frames per second; but it does this in a sequence of 60 fields, each of which contains alternating lines of the picture. Other countries use Phase Alternating Line (PAL) format, which displays at 50 fields per second, but at a higher resolution. Because of the differences in frame rate and resolution, an MPEG movie needs to be formatted for either the NTSC or the PAL system.

 

The MPEG encoder that creates the compressed movie file analyzes each frame and decides how to encode it. The compression uses some of the same technology as still image compression to eliminate redundant or irrelevant data. It also uses information from other frames to reduce the overall size of the file. Each frame can be encoded in one of three ways:

 

As an intraframe, which contains the complete image data for that frame. This method of encoding provides the least compression. As a predicted frame, which contains just enough information to tell the DVD player how to display the frame based on the most recently displayed intra frame or predicted frame. This means that the frame contains only the data that relates to how the picture has changed from the previous frame.

 

As a bidirectional frame. In order to display this type of frame, the player must have the information from the surrounding intraframe or predicted frames. Using data from the closest surrounding frames, it uses interpolation, which is sort of like averaging, to calculate the position and color of each pixel.

 

Depending on the type of scene being converted, the encoder will decide which types of frames to use. If a newscast were being converted, a lot more predicted frames could be used because most of the scene is unaltered from one frame to the next. On the other hand, if a very fast action scene were being converted, in which things changed very quickly from one frame to the next, more intraframes would have to be encoded. The newscast would compress to a much smaller size than the action sequence. This is why the storage capacity of digital video recorders (which store video on a hard drive using the MPEG format) can vary depending what type of show you are recording.

 

If all of this sounds complicated, then you are starting to get a feeling for how much work your DVD player does to decode an MPEG-2 movie. A lot of processing power is required -- even some computers with DVD players can't keep up with the processing required to play DVD Movies.

 
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