Some people seem to love messing up rental DvDs for the rest of us. It is not the player usually, every now and then you can get a player problem but it is almost always with the disc and more often than not for rentals it is permanent.
Some people seem to love messing up rental DvDs for the rest of us. It is not the player usually, every now and then you can get a player problem but it is almost always with the disc and more often than not for rentals it is permanent.
"A man's dying is more his survivor's affair than his own."
C.S. Lewis
"So many people tiptoe through life, so carefully, to arrive, safely, at death."
Jermaine Evans
I got a DVD player quite a few years back and it pauses a lot on rental DVD's. So is this normal for others out there who have a DVD player or is it I have a DVD player that has poor anti-skipping.Wrong. Its his player. Ive been in the video bussiness since 1982 when my family opened one of the first here in NY. I now work for a distributer of both Cds and DVDs. The older players will not play the all the new discs . Also some players will not read all discs .We still own a very large viseo store and I cant tell you how many people come in complaining of this problem. Buy a nice cheap 40 dollar player that plays everything. The more expensive ones seem to be more picky.Some people seem to love messing up rental DvDs for the rest of us. It is not the player usually, every now and then you can get a player problem but it is almost always with the disc and more often than not for rentals it is permanent.
Fighting for Truth , Justice and the American way
So what's the deal with DVD players? I read that whether expensive or cheap they are all pretty much the same because they're just punching out 1 and 0s.
Hell, Sony's most expensive single DVD player is less than $120 Cdn.
I'm going to buy one tomorrow, probably a cheap one just for the boudoir, so Gawain, what's the deal? Is there a difference in quality or just reliability?
((Mind you, if a cheapy has a one-year warranty...)
Unto each good man a good dog
At 40 bucks you cant go wrongThere are many models available at that price nowdays. Just make sure it says it plays everything like MP3s, DVDs, DVDRs and the like. There are players today for as little as 20 bucks. Also make sure its a progressive scan.
Fighting for Truth , Justice and the American way
Beirut, you might also want to research the fact whether or not the DVD player can play home grown DVD’s and backups. I know that Sony DVD players were built so that they couldn’t read those, and sales suffered as well as people who bought those. I always backup my most important DVD’s; to some I add subtitles that are not available on the DVD to begin with. I find it stupid to consider that only bootlegs are the sort of home burned DVD’s that goes around.
Oh, and expect to have some trouble with DVD-R’s with almost any DVD player.
But, on the other hand, to the primary issue, I would not absolve the rental DVD’s from all guilt. If the new DVD from the store runs well, and your rental DVD does not, the answer is pretty much clear; ruined rental DVD.
I was thinking you would have suggested a conservative scan.Originally Posted by Gawain of Orkeny
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And just what, pray tell, does progressive scan mean anyway?
This DVD is for the cute little 14" Toshiba flat screen (tube, not fancy LCD)we bought for the bedroom for $150. It's stereo and looks nice. It's a decent little TV. Plays Pac-Man really well too. (The only video game my sweetie likes.)
Unto each good man a good dog
Probably an old player, some DVD's have a little pause between chapters.
Well Gawain why does my DvD player work fine? It is quite old, but only has problems during rental DvDs, new non-rentals work fine?
I guess it could be only some. I stand mostly corrected.
"A man's dying is more his survivor's affair than his own."
C.S. Lewis
"So many people tiptoe through life, so carefully, to arrive, safely, at death."
Jermaine Evans
She doesn't play TW?Originally Posted by Beirut
*stands apauled*
Progressive scan is a video scanning system that displays all the lines of a single frame in one pass. Every single pixel is being refreshed in order (on your computer monitor) or simultaneously (as in DVD movies).
Opposite to that is the interlace method where you imagine splitting the screen in even and odd lines; first you refresh the even lines, than the odd lines. This causes the screen to appear flickering or shimmering sometimes when you look at TV too closely.
However, progressive scan is IIRC basically a standard these days, you can’t go wrong there, even if you try.
Two examples of interlacing at work, so you might get a "better picture".![]()
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