View Full Version : Audio Drop Out fix status?
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 01:44
I wish you'd do some further testing DVD Maniac, perhaps set up the tools on another PC from scratch.
Joergen,
I am happy for you that Rebuilder works just fine for you, but I am not usually inclined to post these problems for the fun of it. I am getting audio drop consistently enough for it to be a significant enough problem to identify to both the programmer and the forum members so that we can make Rebuilder work consistently for all its users. That's the purpose of a forum and a set of beta testers is it not?
I don't have the luxury of another pc to try the app on, and besides which I have never had problems with the other "lower" quality applications out there with my current set up so I have no reason to believe its hardware or OS related. I have spent a lot of time trying the Ifoedit routines and audio demuxing suggestions to try to help out jdobbs identify the problems so your claim that I am not doing enough testing is not fair.
This is a genuine issue with the application that others are experiencing and needs fixing - just like the other bugs that have been ironed out during this Beta test phase.
Sir Didymus
6th July 2004, 08:24
Originally posted by DVD Maniac
The movie I reported as having identical Audio stream size before and ater processing has audio drop out on it from the word go.:devil:
...
I just don't understand it :confused:
It seems the problem is not related [or at least not just related] to missed audio packets...
I don't want to bring anyone on fool conjectures, and I want to say I am not experiencing this issue, but it could be also useful to check if the results of the encoding process has been carried out perfectly.
Rebuilder.inf is reporting, for each segment, the frame numbers that should be produced during the encoding step...
Maybe it will take some long time, but it could be important to know if in your D2VAVS folder, each one of the m2v files actually contain the expected frame numbers. To check this VirtualDubMod could be useful...
I know this condition (wrong frame nr in the encoded cells) should never happen, and it should be reported by DVD-RB, but I am actually doing some "harsh" tests, cutting intentionally some frames in the m2v files produced by CCE, and what I am observing is that the provoked incongruencies are actually not stopping the rebuild process. The resulting title have (of course) evident audio/video glitches in it...
I say again: sorry if I bring you to lose time, and if the present post will demonstrate to be based on wrong assumptions...
Cheers,
SD
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 11:57
Sir Didymus,
You may well be on to something there and its on a simlar line to a series of tests I am now running with some well known third party authoring and vob tinkering tools.
I think there is something going on with the way Rebuilder is dealing with the GOP timecodes/frame-indexes. These errors are probably very small so as not to cause problems on the majority of media / player combinations, but on others (poor sods like me) they are causing these annoying audio drops.
I will post these results later.
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 13:08
Here are the results of the tests I have run with a movie (Paycheck)that had severe audio drop problems with Rebuilder:
Source Files : The main movie VTS Produced by Rebuilder
Tools Used : Vobedit, DVD-Lab v1.4, Cahpter Xtractor
First I demuxed the Rebuilder movie VTS into the .m2v and main audio .ac3 files with vobedit to run the following simple tests :
1. Simple Movie only output (no chapters, single vob)
Authored into a movie only disc using only the source files.
RESULT : PASSED - Audio drops have gone
2. Movie only with chapters (Still single vob)
Same movie only disc but this time authored with the chapters from the relevant .ifo file (used Chapter Xtractor)
RESULT : PASSED - Audio drops are gone, even at chapter points
My conclusions from this are :
1. There is nowt wrong with my PC/Hardware (Joergen please note!)
2. There is nowt wrong with my burning sw/method/media/players
3. The .m2v files created by Rebuilder are fine
4. Something is going wrong in the remuxing stage which is creating small errors which some players can cope with / others cannot and result in audio drop-outs.
Not sure if this helps you to solve the problem jdobbs but I am confident that its nothing to do with my setup , media, players or Digital amp.
jdobbs
6th July 2004, 14:46
Originally posted by DVD Maniac
Here are the results of the tests I have run with a movie (Paycheck)that had severe audio drop problems with Rebuilder:
Source Files : The main movie VTS Produced by Rebuilder
Tools Used : Vobedit, DVD-Lab v1.4, Cahpter Xtractor
First I demuxed the Rebuilder movie VTS into the .m2v and main audio .ac3 files with vobedit to run the following simple tests :
1. Simple Movie only output (no chapters, single vob)
Authored into a movie only disc using only the source files.
RESULT : PASSED - Audio drops have gone
2. Movie only with chapters (Still single vob)
Same movie only disc but this time authored with the chapters from the relevant .ifo file (used Chapter Xtractor)
RESULT : PASSED - Audio drops are gone, even at chapter points
My conclusions from this are :
1. There is nowt wrong with my PC/Hardware (Joergen please note!)
2. There is nowt wrong with my burning sw/method/media/players
3. The .m2v files created by Rebuilder are fine
4. Something is going wrong in the remuxing stage which is creating small errors which some players can cope with / others cannot and result in audio drop-outs.
Not sure if this helps you to solve the problem jdobbs but I am confident that its nothing to do with my setup , media, players or Digital amp. I also think it may be something particularly associated with PAL.
What happens if you pull out a single offending cell (maybe with VOBEDIT) and have IFOEDIT create a new IFO for it? Does it still have dropouts? If so, it would be nice if I could get a copy of that cell for testing. This would also help identify whether it was the multiplexing that is causing the problem or something else.
Originally posted by jdobbs
I also think it may be something particularly associated with PAL.
I've never done a PAL disc but I consistently get dropouts. Mine don't appear to be as numerous (per disc) compared to DVD Maniac, but I wonder if that's more to do with our DVD players than the souce format. I see a variable range of susceptibility to this problem across the players I own.
jdobbs
6th July 2004, 15:59
Originally posted by Noah
I've never done a PAL disc but I consistently get dropouts. Mine don't appear to be as numerous (per disc) compared to DVD Maniac, but I wonder if that's more to do with our DVD players than the souce format. I see a variable range of susceptibility to this problem across the players I own. There is also an impact associated with your audio system if you are using direct digital connection. You may want (sometime as a test) to hook the analog audio outputs concurrently (to another amplifier, your television for example) with the digital. If the analog continues to work during the digital dropout the cause is not the disc...
Yeah, I've tried that. I get dropouts on all outputs when I get them.
Joergen
6th July 2004, 16:55
DVD Maniac: The reason I suggested setting the RB environment up on another clean PC is cause its not like for instance DVDShrink, and not even like some of the other multi-tool packages that force-install everything in one go.
I'd like to see you set everything up on another PC so that you follow the links in the setup thread and make sure there is no previously installed software bugging out the process.
With tools like DVDShrink, the programmer controls everything, all the way from decrypting to burning the result. So if the output is not as it should be, he can replicate it and fix it if he can get a hold of the problem-disc.
Hope you guys find a solution. DVD-RB is so fabulous that everybody should have the privilege to use it.
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 18:09
What happens if you pull out a single offending cell (maybe with VOBEDIT) and have IFOEDIT create a new IFO for it? Does it still have dropouts? If so, it would be nice if I could get a copy of that cell for testing. This would also help identify whether it was the multiplexing that is causing the problem or something else.
Jdobbs,
I have done this and the drop-outs are there exactly as with the full title. File size is a bit of a problem here - 206MB, sorry but I think its worth the effort you get this as there are drop-outs all over the damn thing. I don't have an ftp to use - do you have anything available which we can use? (emails out the question).
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 18:18
I'd like to see you set everything up on another PC so that you follow the links in the setup thread and make sure there is no previously installed software bugging out the process.
Joergen,
Appreciate you are trying to help out but believe me I followed the set-up instructions to the letter and I really cannot see that other sw is interfering as I do registry cleanups regularly.
Lets see if this corrupted cell I have created lets jdobbs nail this problem - if not then I will consider a system re-install as a last course of action!
brikin
6th July 2004, 19:09
jdobbs I get audio dropouts on X2 and Kill Bill. I only us NTSC. These audio dropouts only happen on my Panasonic DVD player not my Sony. I will try the fix with IFOEdit and see if that fixes the problem on my Panasonic.
Joergen
6th July 2004, 19:46
Ah birkin finally said the magic words "not on my other player". I find it impossible that one person has an audio dropout problem that happens on every player including software players where other people dont encoding the same disc.
But if there is a problem that only happens with a specific type of player, then its probably globally replicable and fixable.
Joergen,
I don't think anyone claimed this was a universal problem...I've been commenting on its variability almost ever since I started experiencing it. You seem to want to defend DVD Rebuilder against being the culprit of this problem. Perhaps you should just be glad you're not experiencing it, but your next player may very well be among those afflicted.
We all appreciate Rebuilder and all the work jdobbs has put into it, which is why we want to help improve it. Your denial of the problem just because you haven't had it is not helping.
DVD Maniac
6th July 2004, 20:44
I don't think anyone claimed this was a universal problem...I've been commenting on its variability almost ever since I started experiencing it. You seem to want to defend DVD Rebuilder against being the culprit of this problem. Perhaps you should just be glad you're not experiencing it, but your next player may very well be among those afflicted. We all appreciate Rebuilder and all the work jdobbs has put into it, which is why we want to help improve it. Your denial of the problem just because you haven't had it is not helping.
Noah,
Second that. I don't have an axe to grind against jdobbs or the program and I am sure you don't either. I am simply reporting the faults as I find them and trying to helpout in finding the solution.
My posts and reported test results bear testimony to that......
BTW - I also have two set-top players. My Philips (normally the fussiest) gives the worst results. The Panasonic normaly eats most things thrown at it but even it delivers drop out at the same points (albeit for slightly less time each time). Please can I ask Joergen and other doubters to accept that this is a genuine bug with the program and nothing to do with glitchy PC's, the odd one off extremely fussy cheapo Player (mine are not!), the air pressure or any other factor which the tests we have run demonstrate.
Anyway, while I wait for jdobbs to let me know how we get this cell over to him, I also tried one more test. Using the .m2v file demuxed from the Rebuilder output, I ran the good old ifoedit "Remux .m2v" routine with the source VTS for the main movie. And guess what? The audio drops have gone again. I am even more sure now its to do with the final stage of the Rebuilder process.
Originally posted by DVD Maniac
Anyway, while I wait for jdobbs to let me know how we get this cell over to him, I also tried one more test. Using the .m2v file demuxed from the Rebuilder output, I ran the good old ifoedit "Remux .m2v" routine with the source VTS for the main movie. And guess what? The audio drops have gone again. I am even more sure now its to do with the final stage of the Rebuilder process.
That's very interesting...good idea on the test, as well.
I could potentially host some files. I'm not sure my hosting company would be thrilled about me transferring copyrighted material via their servers, but I think I can sneak it under the radar.
OTOH, maybe jdobbs can just replicate this test with a known stuttering disc and compare the output of each method. If you need R1 examples, some of my worst discs for dropouts are Die Another Day (DTS), X2 (DD5.1), and The Terminator (DD5.1).
jdobbs
6th July 2004, 23:24
Originally posted by Noah
That's very interesting...good idea on the test, as well.
I could potentially host some files. I'm not sure my hosting company would be thrilled about me transferring copyrighted material via their servers, but I think I can sneak it under the radar.
OTOH, maybe jdobbs can just replicate this test with a known stuttering disc and compare the output of each method. If you need R1 examples, some of my worst discs for dropouts are Die Another Day (DTS), X2 (DD5.1), and The Terminator (DD5.1). I've done X2 with no problems. I have the Terminator (I assume you mean the original one) which I haven't yet tried to backup, so I'll try it and see what happens. But I'm not too hopeful that I'll be able to repeat it...
Joergen
6th July 2004, 23:27
The reason why I'm so suspicious is that I personally own the following players:
Panasonic A350 (old)
Sony NS430 (best)
PS2 V7 PAL (flaky)
Euroline 2500 (cheap)
That I use in different rooms or situations frequently, and my friends have:
Panasonic S-35
Pioneer DV-717
Euroline 4200
Pioneer DVD LCD car player (dunno model)
Pioneer 600(-something)
All PAL players, and so far only one DVDShrink disc with reported dropouts. I love RB so much that if I ever bought a player that DID have droputs, I'd sell it (or jump on it). But I hope you guys can iron out the bugs together.
jdobbs
6th July 2004, 23:45
Originally posted by brikin
jdobbs I get audio dropouts on X2 and Kill Bill. I only us NTSC. These audio dropouts only happen on my Panasonic DVD player not my Sony. I will try the fix with IFOEdit and see if that fixes the problem on my Panasonic. If these are NTSC, I've done them both, no problem. I've tested them on a JVC, Sony, and two kinds of Apex players (1200 and 1500).
jdobbs
7th July 2004, 00:02
Originally posted by Noah
That's very interesting...good idea on the test, as well.
I could potentially host some files. I'm not sure my hosting company would be thrilled about me transferring copyrighted material via their servers, but I think I can sneak it under the radar.
OTOH, maybe jdobbs can just replicate this test with a known stuttering disc and compare the output of each method. If you need R1 examples, some of my worst discs for dropouts are Die Another Day (DTS), X2 (DD5.1), and The Terminator (DD5.1). I just looked at my copy of the Terminator. It is already sized for DVD-5 and it doesn't have a DD5.1 track. You must have the "Special Edition" in which the original mono audio track has been remixed.
DVD Maniac
7th July 2004, 00:15
Why don't we find a way of sending jdobbs the dodgy cell to test? Then we know what we are dealing with.
I just looked at my copy of the Terminator. It is already sized for DVD-5 and it doesn't have a DD5.1 track. You must have the "Special Edition" in which the original mono audio track has been remixed.
Yep...its the newer version.
Is there a tool out there that can analyze DVD packet structure?
I really think DVD Maniac's test is a strong indicator of the source of this problem, but I just don't know how to go about analyzing the problematic data and comparing it to non-problematic data. I'm certainly willing to try if someone can point me in the right direction.
jdobbs, on another track, maybe you could contact the author of IFOEdit and have him take a look at your remuxing code?
jdobbs
7th July 2004, 00:31
He's long gone and working on DVDXCOPY... not a lot of incentive to make DVD-RB work.
jdobbs
7th July 2004, 01:00
@dvd maniac
Check your PM.
DVD Maniac
7th July 2004, 01:31
Jdobbs.
Done - check your PM.
Hmmm, too bad IFOEdit isn't open source...you could at least look at it, then. I don't think much else out there remuxes.
I'm sure you'd rather track down the problem and fix it, but maybe there's a way to develop a command-line interface to IFOEdit (ala eclcce.exe) and have it do the rebuilding. Not the most elegant solution, I know. I'm just throwing ideas out there.
jdobbs
7th July 2004, 01:43
Originally posted by Noah
Hmmm, too bad IFOEdit isn't open source...you could at least look at it, then. I don't think much else out there remuxes.
I'm sure you'd rather track down the problem and fix it, but maybe there's a way to develop a command-line interface to IFOEdit (ala eclcce.exe) and have it do the rebuilding. Not the most elegant solution, I know. I'm just throwing ideas out there. Well, I'm following the standards... so it should be correct, it really isn't that complicated. But that doesn't mean there couldn't be a bug in there somewhere.
BBTools has muxing code in it. But the techniques I'm using are a little unique -- especially merging audio/subpictures from the original as it is building.
The IFOEDit muxing code has bugs of its own... especially with NTSC that has pulldown applied, so I don't think that would be a good baseline to use.
gizzin
7th July 2004, 07:10
what program do you use jdobbs to burn the output of rebuilder? what version of cce are u using?
jdobbs
7th July 2004, 13:22
I use CCE version 2.50 SP and 2.69.01.09 Basic for encoding. I use B's Recorder Gold to burn (it came with my DVD Burner).
jkbauer
8th July 2004, 08:49
hi jdobbs.
I did some more researching on the forum and discovered there were other threads specifically about audio delay. I probably shouldn't be here, but since I already posted, I'll finish up here.
I tried various tests to see if I could correct the problem. Nothing as complicated as the experienced users around here. In my case the audio actually starts before the video, but either way is not in sync. The problem always occurs at the exact same chapter point. Whether I backup the whole disc, selected titles, or just that title set, the problem always occurs. My guess is that there is something about that file that Rebuilder does not like.
I have gone about the long way to get this backup to play correctly. But in case you are interested, it is West Wing, Season 2, Disc 5, 2nd episode ("17 People"), chapter 5 (chapter 6 should be credits).
I have not tried to play the disc in a set top player yet, only on my PC (PowerDVD). I have attempted to back up another disc, and that one seemed to be fine. DVD-RB is a great program. I will need to work with it more, and hopefully be more useful to the forum in the future.
intimidation
9th July 2004, 16:14
Hi all...
I too am am getting audio drop outs on every movie that i produce through RB (All Pal). I have also narrowed down that it only happens in my pioneer 656A and not in my cheaper samsung 709... I have tried using different media only to get the same result.
My pioneer is connected through digital coax to reciever but i tried connecting via analogue and the problem was still there with the pioneer.
I have been reading posts and waiting for the solution to this problem.
@ Maniac. U are not alone with this problem...!!! :)
@jdobbs exellent work... quality is fantastic...
Bradley
Joergen
9th July 2004, 17:39
Thanks for the report. I think it's comforting to hear it's player specific.. i still cant quite swallow the fact that some person would have dropouts on EVERY movie and EVERY standalone without exception.. that cant be RB's fault, but one player getting dropouts probably is.
Originally posted by Joergen
i still cant quite swallow the fact that some person would have dropouts on EVERY movie and EVERY standalone without exception..
Which no one ever claimed... :rolleyes:
Video Dude,
It would be a misnomer to classify this as a "Pioneer problem." I for one have encountered it to varying degrees on players of 3 different brands, none of them Pioneer. Keep in mind that there are far fewer manufacturers of DVD chipsets than there are manufacturers of DVD players, which means that players of various different brands use the same chips and would likely share the same attributes, including susceptibility to this problem. Moreover, brands such as Pioneer often use DVD chipsets from several companies. Sometimes even different revisions of one specific model will contain different chipsets. The bottom line is that tracing this problem down to a brand is pretty much impossible.
DVD Maniac
9th July 2004, 20:44
This debate is getting off track and also rather tedious (sorry but thats the way I am feeling).
ALL encoding utilities that I have used have their flaws or bugs to a greater or lessor extent which will produce potential problems in the output VOB files they create. Just read the forums for Shrink, Recode, DVD95 etc etc for evidence of that - even CCE ain't PERFECT. These "flaws" will produce different outcomes depending on all the factors like burning software, media and yes the player.
Taking an extreme example, say the good old REMPEG (I am sure lots of you remember the good old days of REMPEG 15 hour encodes and ifoedit remuxing). The results from this were frankly pretty poor, some results played OK, but a lot did not with blocky or freezing frames on many players. That's because REMPEG produces a lot of anamolies in the video stream and many players just can't cope.
Now to another extreme, take the "best" encoder on the market - CCE and with Rebuilder we are getting very high quality results but with some much smaller anomolies, errors, call them what you want. So now, instead of 50% of players having problems, we now have say 10% having problems - and this is what the audio drop out problem is all about.
So can I please ask that the owners of the 90% player group please give the "my player(s) work fine so it must be your PC, Media, Player" rap a rest and let us poor souls with the 10% group get on and help jdobbs fix the problem so we get the % up to 99% or as close to 100% as we can get!
Joergen
9th July 2004, 21:13
Of course the sooner the problem is fixed the better. It will make DVD-RB more reliable, respectable in the eye of the masses and accepted as THE CCE backup tool.
Somebody in NTSC land with the delay/drift/dropout problem should indicate the make and model of player so there would be a slight chance jdobbs could find such a player to test with.
Originally posted by DVD Maniac
So can I please ask that the owners of the 90% player group please give the "my player(s) work fine so it must be your PC, Media, Player" rap a rest and let us poor souls with the 10% group get on and help jdobbs fix the problem so we get the % up to 99% or as close to 100% as we can get!Yeah, I'm at a point where I don't care to convince anyone else of the seriousness and the source of this problem.
As long as jdobbs takes it seriously...that's my only concern.
luphy
10th July 2004, 00:11
Those with audio drop outs:
Maybe you can take the re-encoded movie(s) and go to an electronics store and test it on as many DVD players as you can.
If you can even find out which chip each DVD player uses, that would go a long way to finding out if it's specific to a certain chip.
I'm curious....just how many different DVD player models are out there? Over a thousand?
Joergen
10th July 2004, 00:34
I think it's pretty safe to say each player model, which in essence is a combination of hardware and firmware, is unique. The constant need for cheaper and cheaper solutions is driving the revision of hardware. The PS2 is a good example of "one player" that in fact is 20 or more players with 9 revisions of hardware who knows how many software, 5 completely new motherboards.. only the outside casing has remained the same. :)
DVD Maniac
10th July 2004, 01:47
Look all, I realise everyone is trying to help out amd all but this player / Rebuilder compatibility debate is really going to get us nowhere. Joergen is spot on about player complexity - compiling a Rebiulder "compatibility" list for jdobbs to find the route cause is not just impossible its just plain silly.
Read the earlier posts in this thread and you will see that jdobbs now has some specific cell material that he is analysing in order to find what is causing the problem and hopefully fix it.
Lets just be patient now and let the man do his thing - I am sure he will nail this problem and we can forget about trips to Dixons / PC World / wherever with our +RW's in our eager mits for testing purposes!
@luphy
At least you made me laugh with this one - that's a real belter of an idea!
Best Buy / Dixons Shop Assistant : " Can I halp you sir"
Doom 9 Forum member : "Yes, I would like to test this dodgy looking DVD on all your players"
Best Buy / Dixons Shop Assistant : "Checking for Rebuilder compatibility are we sir - you are only the 4th today!"
Doom 9 Forum member : "Errrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr"
:D
Oldeman
10th July 2004, 15:57
This is not just a CCE + DVD-RB problem.
I get the audio dropouts on QuEnc + DVD-RB created DVDs on about half my DVD players (mostly Toshibas). The audio gets severely out of sync with the video due to the dropouts.
My APEX 1500 and Philips DVDR75 do not show the audio dropouts.
However, ReJig + DVD-RB DVDs work fine on all.
the Oldeman
Noah
10th July 2004, 18:44
Originally posted by Oldeman
However, ReJig + DVD-RB DVDs work fine on all.
Have you done the same titles with each method to verify this?
I just realized that I've always had "AudioDub(BlankClip())" checked. Could this have any effect? As I understand it, this fakes an audio track for CCE in order to prevent a memory leak.
I know we think the problem is with Rebuilder's remuxing in the rebuild stage, which I don't think this setting would affect.
jdobbs
10th July 2004, 23:57
Originally posted by Oldeman
This is not just a CCE + DVD-RB problem.
I get the audio dropouts on QuEnc + DVD-RB created DVDs on about half my DVD players (mostly Toshibas). The audio gets severely out of sync with the video due to the dropouts.
My APEX 1500 and Philips DVDR75 do not show the audio dropouts.
However, ReJig + DVD-RB DVDs work fine on all.
the Oldeman Curiouser and curiouser. If it is the muxing... it would have to happen in ReJig as well.
Noah
25th July 2004, 00:42
Any news on this issue?
Were you able to find any anomolies in what DVD Maniac sent you, jdobbs?
Oldeman
25th July 2004, 04:58
I just tried Dvdrebuilder v.56 with Quenc 51D2 on R1 movie Blues Brothers. The video looks very good.
As before, the resulting DVD has severe audio drop outs on all my Toshiba players, 4900, 4800. and 3950. The Audio gets ahead of the video.
My Apex 1500, PowerDVD and Philips DVDR75 play it without problem.
I have not run this particular movie throuigh Rejig. but I am confident It will be fine, as I have never seen this problem on a ReJig trancoded disk.
WinXP system 3.0E P4, 512Mb DDR 32000 memory,
DVD-RB options Quenc mode, Dynamic bit rates, supress warning prompts,
Quenc one pass mode,
AVS options: convert to YUY2, Audio dub(blankclip) no advanced options. Setup options: run encoders minimized. MPEG2DEC3DG add to avs file not checked.
Any ideas?
DVD Maniac
25th July 2004, 23:26
I have not heard back from jdobbs for some time now regarding the test cell material. I do hope he has not given up on the problem as I think the number of posts have demonstrated that its not just one or two of us affected.
jdobbs,
Please can you comment on what we can expect in future releaseses?
- Cannot be fixed? (or cannot isolate the cause)
- Found the likely cause but V Difficult to fix - have to wait for a while longer
- ???????
We would really appreciate an update
Oldeman
26th July 2004, 00:21
I would like to add that the problem seems a lot worse on dolby5.1 audio and minimal on normal 2channel stero sound, if that makes any sense.
The 5 channel has very distruption audio drropouts whereas the two channel just seems to slowly lose synchronzation with the video.
I noticed this by obseving the most recent test had a film preview with non-5channel sound and it seems to work normally, so I thought AhHG this is fixed...but as soon as the feature started, bam.. severe audio dropouts...Again this only happens on some players including all my Toshibas.
Its got to be some minor timing parameter that the cheaper playert ignore,,,I think?:(
Joergen
26th July 2004, 01:54
The "sony" problem was fixed, and hopefully the "toshiba" problem is next. There IS progress.
DVD Maniac
26th July 2004, 10:51
As I have posted previously, linking this problem to particular brands of players is not the way to see it. All DVD Players are built to play 100% DVD standard compliant discs. The small glitches that all our favourite encodoing tools create, manifest themselves in different ways on different players - but its not the players fault that it cannot perfectly playback the slightly imperfect results we throw at them.
Rebuilder is simply producing small errors in the Rebuild stage which some players are saying - "Sorry I can't play this properly because its not the standard I wad designed to play" and others are just more forgiving.
Thats life :(
If I owned a player that did not show up these problems I would still want the problem fixed - what happens if my forgiving player stops working and I can't replace it with one that is?
Joergen
26th July 2004, 13:04
Linking this or other problems to specific players might be wrong as you said, but since the "sony" problem was for pretty much all sonys and sonys alone (except the PS2), thats what it should be called. Like a disease is called after its discoverer or even the patient :D
I'm sure jdobbs is looking into this, he's just got so much work and so little time. Plus its the summer, when programmers are distracted by the warm light emitted through the portals in their houses ;)
SansGrip
26th July 2004, 15:12
Wouldn't it be nice to have a software DVD player that reported every single problem it encountered during playback of a disc? I mean everything from an unreachable PGC command (not non-standard, per se, but might indicate a logic error) to timing problems to the slightest of buffer underruns in video or audio.
I would be surprised if such a thing didn't exist, but I've never heard of one. Maybe I should email Jack Valenti and ask.
;)
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