In our PureVideo article, we took a number of screenshots from The Best of Friends – Volume 3 DVD, a particularly tricky DVD to decode properly as it is recorded in 24 fps and flagged as being 30 fps content. The problem here is that the DVD decoder is combining fields incorrectly from two different frames that do not belong together – or to put it more plainly, the DVD decoder is weaving instead of bobbing.īoth ATI and NVIDIA also failed the Big Lebowski test in our PureVideo article, so it’s not too surprising to see Apple’s performance here. This is what the screenshot should look like:Īnd this is what it looks like using Apple’s DVD player: When looking at Apple’s DVD player from the standpoint of image quality, we found that in the unique cases that tripped up most PC DVD decoders, Apple’s DVD decoder suffered as well. We aren’t going to reiterate the importance of de-interlacing quality with regards to DVD decoders, so if you’re not intimately familiar with the subject matter, please have a look at our Interlacing Primer – particularly the section about frame rate conversion. NVIDIA’s PureVideo decoder did manage to give an overall improvement in image quality over the competition, but it still wasn’t quite perfect. What we found was that although PC DVD decoders managed to handle the majority of cases quite well, it was the remaining few percent of cases where they would still produce some artifacting. Hard drive size limitations keep the mini from being used as a DVD file server (unless you get into using external FireWire storage), but we still wanted to take a look at its DVD playback quality, since storage space isn't the only important aspect of a good HTPC.Īt the release of NVIDIA’s PureVideo DVD decoder, we performed a fairly extensive comparison of DVD decoder quality. Not to mention that there's a good group of people (with significant movie content) who would rather not burn to DVD discs - they just want to double click on a. Why would you ever use a computer as a DVD player? Ask any average user and they'll tell you that it's a waste of a computer ask any videophile and they'll talk about the advantages of the scaling and filtering effects that a HTPC can offer over a standalone DVD player.
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