Re: Confused: PS3 versus Standalone Player
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Originally Posted by Rick Westfall
Thanks for the input and I will continue to welcome more. On the point of the looks of the system, that is not a concern of mine. The rack sits behind the seating area so it won't bother me, but I do understand how that would bother most.
I'm not technical enough to understand all of this. "Not passing bitstream audio" is like reading a foreign language, so I guess I won't notice that issue...
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Not passing the bitstream refers to the fact that HDMI 1.3 allows the digital data streams for DTS-HD MA and Dolby TrueHD, two compressed lossless audio formats, to be transmitted over the connection for decoding by a separate decoder. Both player and external decoder must be HDMI 1.3 compliant and be able to do their part. At least two players so far, the Samsung BD-P1400 and Panasonic DMP-BD30 can pass the bitstream and some new receivers from Onkyo, Yamaha, Denon, Pioneer and probably a couple of others can decode it. It is now apparent the PS3 will never be able to pass this bitstream. It is being reported that the PS3 will be updated soon to be able to decode the audio internally and pass decoded audio over HDMI to HDMI 1.1 and above external amplifiers that can handle lossless PCM. If true, that is good enough for me, but it isn't clear yet what all of this might mean and some potential real advantage to having HDMI 1.3 external decoding might exist. I just don't know what that would be.
Lossless audio just means better quality that might be audible to you and might not be audible compared to the lossy formats like Dolby Digital and DTS. With the PS3 we should ultimately be able to play all lossless audio formats, just not pass it for decding by an external decoder. Deal killer or not? Important or not? I think not but I don't know for sure at this point.
As far as the noise, I sit about 2 feet from my PS3 and can't hear it at all. I have to press my ear to it for the noise to be audible enough to bother me.
As far as the region coding thing with the PS3 and any Blu-ray player for that matter, as all US players honor the single region coding aspect for Blu-ray when it is used, I don't understand the complaint by Cees. I have not seen any Blu-ray players yet that will play multiple region coding, but it has been reported that the European version of the Samsung BD-P1400 will play two regions. That issue means nothing in my opinion in any event. Fox insists on using single region coding often, maybe always. Disney, Sony, New Line and maybe another company or two have used single region coding some. HD DVD doesn't use single region coding. This just means that Blu-ray discs released for region A can only be played in players manufactured for region A. The same holds true for region B and region C. As far as I know no company has yet released a title in the US with single region coding on Blu-ray and then the same company released the same title on HD DVD playable on all-region players. Only New Line has announced that some titles will show up on Blu-ray with single region coding then be released later on HD DVD with all region playback. Personally, I believe the issue is no advantage for HD DVD and only means HD DVD won't be releasing any titles that require single region coding, like those from Fox, not that any company will give in and release the title on HD DVD despite requiring single region coding. It is the owner of the rights that gets to decide whether or not to use single region coding and no laws exist anywhere to force them to give up that right and release the title without it. Warner releases all region playable software on both formats and is the only remaining major neutral studio and I expect Warner to always use all region playback but expect that Warner will end neutrality soon in any event.
Chris