![]() Now open up the terminal and go to the directory, where the images from the movie maker are saved. You can either write the path to a folder in either “Selection” or manually select the path to that folder using your mouse. Also, to change the location of a folder that will have and save all the JPEG pictures, press on “Set working directory:” button which is shown below. Lastly, make sure to put a title on your movie in a box on next to “Name of movie”. This will take take many spanshots of your movie amd save with a “.jpeg” extension. The last button that you should press is “Format” and select “JPEG frames(ImageMagick)”. Next press on the “Movie Setting” and select “Trajectory”, these steps are shown below: In that window, press on the “Renderer” button and select “Internal Tachyon(Ray Tracer)” from the dropdown menu. Those steps should take you to a window called “VMD Movie Generator” shown below. This following image shows the steps you chose: I hear this is the offical player of India.After loading your files to VMD, press on a Window called VMD Main and press on Extension menu and select “Visualization”, and “Movie Maker” from the dropdown menu. I like the price on the player and the movies. Some mainstream studio films currently on VMD:(all 1080p and cost $17.50 or less) It doesn't use blue-laser technology that HD-DVD and Blu-ray use, 'the HD VMD. (I wonder if the load times are quicker using the red laser over the blue?) The movies that work in them are similarly inexpensive.' Another big difference come is how this new format operates. It sales for $249 and comes with 5 bollywood/indi movies. (theoretically it can do 200GB with 20 layers) It only supports 5.1 DTS, Dolby Digital, AC3, THX, linear PCM and Dolby Digital Plus.ĭisc sizes are 20-40-50GB sizes. It however doesn't support DTS HD or Dolby Tru HD. It supports MPEG-2, MPEG-1, VC-1, WMV9 and H-264(AVC) 40 Mbit/s which is more then HD DVD (36) and just under Blu-Ray(48). ![]() The DVD forum chose the quick and easy approach which isn't exactly wrong, but I think it was a bit lazy. And now studio support is fading fast for HDDVD.Īt the end of the day, Sony with the BD association had the hindsight to create a new technology, which has been slowly getting up to speed with features. Even $99 players from Toshiba failed to make an impact. Blu-Ray discs cost the same if not LESS than HD-DVD to produce now so thats gone. All the things HD-DVD had in its favour have gone now. would you like to specify its path > I did a thorough search for this videomach.exe file on my hard drive but > nothing came up. And the other "Extra" features that HD-DVD has are coming to Blu-ray too so it makes it mute. At the moment Blu-Ray movies take a 3 way split on MPEG 2, AVC and VC-1 with most if not all studios supporting only AVC/VC-1 now. Thats actually a scary thing, and if Blu-Ray does pull through, could be a real pain in the ass for us consumers, thats one of the reasons movie studios like Blu-Ray, and one of the reasons why some (clever) folks prefer HD-DVD.Īt the end of the day, Blu-Ray DID start out a bit shady with the software codec support etc, but its only software, it can be improved, and already is. And the last thing (Which we havent seen much of yet) is its copy protection BD+. That in itself is a god send for me! also its data surface is alot closer to the "front" of the disc so it can effectively hold more layers (0.1mm as opposed to 0.5 on HDDVD). It uses different polymers and dyes to effectively increase the capacity it can handle and it also has a tougher surface, its ALOT harder to scratch a Blu-Ray disc. You can make a HD-DVD disc with the same fabrication plant that makes DVD, but you can't do that with Blu-Ray as it uses a completely new tech. ![]() and Europe - Denmark, Finland, France, Poland and Sweden, specifically - will have a third HD disc format to choose from, the HD Versatile Multilayer Disc VMD). Starting in September, home media buffs in the U.S. Hence why they origianlly had an upper hand in price. As if high-def DVDs werent already a consfusing enough sell to consumers. The blue laser is narrower than red hence they can fit more data on a disc with the same tech as DVD, thats all HD-DVD is. The disc uses completely new technology PHYSICALLY whereas HD-DVD is just a bastardised DVD with Blue laser tech.
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