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Watch Blu-ray Movies On Your Pc
#2
Posted 01 June 2010 - 03:49 AM
I bought a DVD drive for a home build last year, and occasionally watch a Blu-ray title on my PC. I bought Corel Win DVD 9 as my software. I recently purchased Avatar, and found that the Blu Ray version won't run on my PC because the software needed to be upgradated. The problem is that Corel's last update was 10/09. According to Corel's knowledge base, to play newer title I need to buy the new version, 2010.
So another compelling reason not to watch Blu Ray on one's PC is the need to BUY new versions of the software yearly (at least with the Corel product I bought)
So another compelling reason not to watch Blu Ray on one's PC is the need to BUY new versions of the software yearly (at least with the Corel product I bought)
#3
Posted 01 June 2010 - 05:06 AM
I've never been 100% satisfied with the DVD playing capabilities of PCs, so I wouldn't dream of using one for Blu-Ray.
For the price, the dedicated Blu-Ray player is going to provide the best bang for your buck.
For the price, the dedicated Blu-Ray player is going to provide the best bang for your buck.
My rig:
Commodore 64 with Modem cartridge. Tape drive. Zork. OKI thermal printer. 13 inch RCA color TV with tuning knob busted off. Atari 2600 joystick, and a list of all the best BBS numbers.
Commodore 64 with Modem cartridge. Tape drive. Zork. OKI thermal printer. 13 inch RCA color TV with tuning knob busted off. Atari 2600 joystick, and a list of all the best BBS numbers.
#5
Posted 01 June 2010 - 09:13 AM
dmgolding, on 01 June 2010 - 03:49 AM, said:
I bought a DVD drive for a home build last year, and occasionally watch a Blu-ray title on my PC. I bought Corel Win DVD 9 as my software. I recently purchased Avatar, and found that the Blu Ray version won't run on my PC because the software needed to be upgradated. The problem is that Corel's last update was 10/09. According to Corel's knowledge base, to play newer title I need to buy the new version, 2010.
So another compelling reason not to watch Blu Ray on one's PC is the need to BUY new versions of the software yearly (at least with the Corel product I bought)
So another compelling reason not to watch Blu Ray on one's PC is the need to BUY new versions of the software yearly (at least with the Corel product I bought)
I've got a home-built media center pc with an LG BD player, running Power DVD 9 Ultra, and Avatar plays flawlessly. A lot of people had problems until they updated the BD player firmware, not the software. I wonder if that's what is happening in your situation since you're able to play other BDs with no problems. The DRM Sony put on the Avatar disks has caused a lot of heartburn for folks. You should be able to find a firmware update at the optical drive manufacturer's site.
BTW, Avatar looks fantastic on my 32" Vizio.
Desktop: Core i5 3570K w/Corsair H80 cooler - 250GB Samsung 840 SSD (boot) - 1TB Seagate Hybrid HDD (storage) - Galaxy GTX660 GC - 8GB G.Skill 1333 RAM - Antec 620W PSU - Antec Sonata III 500 case - Win8 Pro 64-bit w/WMC
Media Center: Core i3 3220 - 128GB Plextor SSD (boot) - 1TB Samsung HDD (storage) - Radeon 4350 - 8GB G.Skill 1333 RAM - Biostar ECO HD61V kit - Win7 HP 64-bit
Surface RT - Lumia 900
Media Center: Core i3 3220 - 128GB Plextor SSD (boot) - 1TB Samsung HDD (storage) - Radeon 4350 - 8GB G.Skill 1333 RAM - Biostar ECO HD61V kit - Win7 HP 64-bit
Surface RT - Lumia 900
#6
Posted 23 March 2012 - 06:54 AM
Rick, you're missing the point. The fact that Blu-ray is overkill for a PC is irrelevant. I don't want to watch Blu-ray movies on my laptop because I like it better than my 73" Mitsubishi, I want to watch Blu-ray on my laptop because I have to kill a couple more hours on my flight to Chicago and my copy of Ocean's 11 is a Blu-ray disk.
Until the industry starts consistently selling disks in both formats and/or Digital Copy, I don't have a lot of options.
And while we're on the topic of Digital Copy, the industry also needs to lighten up on DRM. Forcing me to pick a machine and stay with the decision for the rest of my life is beyond Draconian - it's stupid (you listening Warner Bros.?!?!)
Until the industry starts consistently selling disks in both formats and/or Digital Copy, I don't have a lot of options.
And while we're on the topic of Digital Copy, the industry also needs to lighten up on DRM. Forcing me to pick a machine and stay with the decision for the rest of my life is beyond Draconian - it's stupid (you listening Warner Bros.?!?!)
#7
Posted 23 March 2012 - 06:55 AM
Rick, you're missing the point. The fact that Blu-ray is overkill for a PC is irrelevant. I don't want to watch Blu-ray movies on my laptop because I like it better than my 73" Mitsubishi, I want to watch Blu-ray on my laptop because I have to kill a couple more hours on my flight to Chicago and my copy of Ocean's 11 is a Blu-ray disk.
Until the industry starts consistently selling disks in both formats and/or Digital Copy, I don't have a lot of options.
And while we're on the topic of Digital Copy, the industry also needs to lighten up on DRM. Forcing me to pick a machine and stay with the decision for the rest of my life is beyond Draconian - it's stupid (you listening Warner Bros.?!?!)
Until the industry starts consistently selling disks in both formats and/or Digital Copy, I don't have a lot of options.
And while we're on the topic of Digital Copy, the industry also needs to lighten up on DRM. Forcing me to pick a machine and stay with the decision for the rest of my life is beyond Draconian - it's stupid (you listening Warner Bros.?!?!)
#8
Posted 14 January 2013 - 08:23 AM
I've been dealing with this since blue ray first came out. The PC is absolutely the worst solution for watching blue ray. Even if you do get it running the way you want software gets updated so often that rarely stays stable for more than a few days.
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