Sonntag, 21. März 2010

HD aka Blu-ray on a PC

Blu-Ray all over

When you want to watch HD content you have two options:
Live stream via cable/sat/Internet or out of a can.



This can is highly likely to have a blu-ray logo, since HD DVD is death as a stone now and DVD isn't in the HD league.


Since I am not a big fan of the streaming technique, besides the cost you always have some jerking, I went for blu ray. But this wasn't the easy way out...


First question: Standalone player or a drive for the PC?

I was very close to buy a standalone player, as usually I fancied something from Phillips: The sleek BDP7500BL looked fine to me.

But look at the accessories of that thing, even ethernet. And this was the odd thing: Samsung fits their players with WLAN nowadays, so you don't have to throw another cable through your living room... in the end I just went to a shop and saw a good Panasonic, but hadn't enough money with me.


Guess what, I never came back for that box. I had some more time and said to myself: Why buy another "PC" (this is pretty much you can call a blu-ray player today) when you have yours already connect to the TV successfully? Having bought myself a ATI 4850 HD this was a save and easy job, in particular via HDMI. Geforce seems to still have problems with that job, especially when it comes to HDCP and Audio over HDMI, which are two basics for good fun with your TV and the PC.
All that in mind, I ordered a nice Pioneer Blu-Ray drive: Pioneer BDR-205 That i now can burn BD as well, if I want to spent £6 on a medium.



A happy story? Not yet!

Yesterday the drive arrived, a good looking thing in black, but nothing special. Fitting it in the PC was the usual routine job, besides this is the first optical drive I have now with SATA connections, but since my mainboard has 10 (yes, ten) connectors, it was just a matter of plugging it in.

Pressing the start button - beep - a short look at the screen - black on white: There it is :D

Okay, now i reran the BD (Blu-ray) Advisor from Cyberlink and oops: Video Connection Type : Digital (without HDCP) No

Hmm what does that mean? Do the BD won't play? Time for some practice tests: I equipped myself with Band of Brothers, Inglorious Basterds and Caroline. I slip in the I.B. disc (funny, you can call a floppy a disc and a BD.. some things don't change ;-) ) and wait what happens...


At first the rotten Windows Media Player 12 that comes with Win7 gets a try at the disc... "Error, don't know what was used to encode bla bla" - well what was I expecting? Even Vista wasn't capable of proper DVD playback, now BD on Win7 with no extra progs? - Noooo

Okay then, next I tried the Media Player Classic, this comes with the K-Lite Codec Packs and is absolutely lovely, does the job for all my other video files and DVDs. But still no Luck. Args.

I just went to the Cyberlink Homepage again and checked their PowerDVD Versions needless to say I ended up wit the biggest "v10 ULTRA 3D" Version... Buy, download, enter the new serial and Yes some life from the BD!.


Well I run BD and just pressed play to check if the HDCP causes any problem - no, it doesn't!
I can easily move the window with the movie from my main DVI-Monitor to the HDMI-TV. Great, finally success ! And it pays off, especially the sound and the sharpness, really nice.


Band of Brothers  BD

In the evening we unpacked Caroline, and found some 3D glasses in it... err what? Is this supposed to work with my TV? Well we tried it out and, yes it works with our standard Samsung! Some scence were a little overloaded and since we only have the cheap 3D version, no real pol-shutter glasses this hurt a little, but non the less, I am very impressed. 3D at home. I like my decision, and sorry, I have to stop here, the FSK18 Version of Band of Brothers with new BD Specials is waiting :D


Samstag, 6. Februar 2010

Current Games - code and story



Good News first

The guys from Blizzard had a short break in "balancing" (clear: playing) Starcraft2 and found out they hadn't released it yet ;-)

So here the Beta, maybe we will get it this year:
http://www.starcraft2.com/beta-faq.xml

You must have a Battle.net Account and run a short prog that detects what HW you have (well, thats what they say...)


I once heard that the hardware evolution according to Moore's Law will at one time bring us to a point where the software we have wont be able to fully make use of it.

Looking at PC Games you might think this is not true, because what ever the latest game is, it will make sure that your graphic card and processor are used 100%.
Thats right, but how efficient is it?

Have you ever wondered why the famous games today are release for nearly all platforms? I did and my guess is they only create one script, one times the textures and one code, in something like Eclipse. This will be auto-compiled, shipped to the customer, job done. A clear evidence for this is the "CookedPC" folder in the games!
All other other scenarios, including serveral human errors, cannot explain the complete failure of "The Saboteur" on PCs with an ATI graphic card. As far as I know the fix for this is still called "Beta patch 0.x".

Another thing that only gets generated once is the way you interact with in the game, it always just feels like a console game. A reason why I never played Operaiton Splintercell. I even tend to plug a controller /joypad into my PC, but this is not what I want, if I wanted that I had bought a freaking console in the first place!

Related to graphic files they have yet another issue: Space. Yes, I have a one Terabyte hard drive, but I don't want any bit to be wasted and looking at Mass Effect 2 with 13.3 Gigabyte I think there might be some room for improvment.
Maybe the should ask some guys from the Demoscene: Info-Vid (DE) (EN) Farbrausch: Demo1 (64k!)/ Demo2 (14.4MB) | FAQ

At least Mass Effect 2 was working fine at my PC with it's ATI card and playing it was very much fun.

I bought it online via the EA Download manager I got the game on my disc, thanks to my broadband I had to wait two days till I could activate it, because you could load it three days prior to the release date.
The Cerebus Bonus Card is an additional key that allows you to download more missions and Items. Needless to say you need online access for it, one extra mission was 500MB.
Today nobody has a huge problem with online activation, but when HalfLife2 got release and you had to activate it via Steam, some even refused to buy the game. Others who bought the game, and only had an modem-connection to the online world pulled long faces. I see them again when they try to download the bonus mission(s). Outside the urban areas this problem is consistent for years.


Looking at the stories of games, since Spore there is nothing really new out there, which tries to break the mainstream genre of shooters/strategy games. 


Or wait, what is this: Dante, a game inspired by an old italian poem - this sounds promising! Well it will only appear for the console...

Dante: Tests (de1/2) (en) Homepage

Sonntag, 31. Januar 2010

Willkommen



Hello,


welcome to my Blog. 

I currently only use twitter, but it really su**s when you try to make a statement with fact etc. and must limit yourself to 120 letters. Nothing really detailed could be told with that - or you just use bit.ly to point away from twitter, which makes it useless for the first place.

I would like to post my thought about the World and News from the IT.