Friday, February 10, 2012

The Right Way to Set Up Your New Blu-ray Player

After having just gotten your new Blu-ray Dvd Player, you will obviously be excited about testing it out. No doubt you will be anxious to see the glorious 1080p photo and High Definition sound quality. So the request is this: how to set up your new Blu-ray player to get the top possible execution from it? Will it be as easy as connecting your Dvd player? Will it be a breeze?

Not exactly!

Blu Ray Films

When setting up your new Blu-ray player you have to keep in mind, this is a rather new technology, therefore over the past few years Tvs and Av receivers have been adapting to conform to this new format. Unfortunately, you may discover not all of them can preserve every new feature of your Blu-ray player. This may make the process a dinky more difficult than setting up your approved Dvd player. So I have outlined a few procedures and possible difficulties you might come over so that you can more surely consolidate your new Blu-ray player into your home entertainment system, hopefully without too much frustration.

The Right Way to Set Up Your New Blu-ray Player

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Coraline 3D GLASSES Only - for Blu-Ray and DVD Feature

  • 3 Cardboard Frame Anaglyph Glasses for new release DVD - Coraline - for 3D Viewing
  • These are the glasses that you need for the 3D DVD Coraline. Our anaglyph cardboard glasses (magenta and green) will work with the DVD/Blu-ray which is to be released shortly and will come with its own cardboard anaglyph glasses.
  • These are not the glasses that were used in the theaters for the Journey Movie. Those were black framed grey lenses that are polarized and will not work for the DVD.
  • There is no DVD - only the special glasses

Coraline 3D GLASSES Only - for Blu-Ray and DVD Overview

These are the 3D glasses you need for the home DVD of Coraline. They are magenta/green and NOT red/blue.


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*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Feb 11, 2012 04:08:05

Basically to get the best execution out of your Blu-ray player you need to understand three features: Picture, Sound, and Internet Connectivity. You will discover all three can be surely done with some easy cable connections; no fine-tuning necessary, just some easy modifications to the set-up menus maybe all that is required. Hopefully this guidance will cut out any blurring and the whole process will go very smoothly for you.

Picture

1080p High Definition photo ability - this is why most citizen buy their first Blu-ray Player and it is the best feature of any Blu-ray player. Blu-ray movies are stored on a disc in 1080p at 24 frames-per-second so you often see this referred to as 1080/24p. The director filmed the movie at this rate, so Blu-ray discs allow you to view the movie as it was originally meant to be seen. Blu-ray players allow you to watch these Hd movies by connecting it's Hdmi output to the duplicate input on your Tv, so a Hdmi cable will need to be purchased if one is not included with the Blu-ray player. In most cases a Hdmi is not provided. Hdmi cables can run in any place from to 0. (Some argue there is no distinction in Hdmi cables, no matter what the cost.)

Not all Blu-ray players are capable of this 1080/24p output rate. These players will be older, and instead of the 1080/24p output rate they convert the signal to 1080/60p using a recipe called "3:2 pulldown' technique. What this naturally means is one frame is played three times and the next frame is played twice and so forth. This results in one frame being shown on the Tv screen slightly longer than the other. This produces judder into the picture, a dinky arresting or shaking of the picture.

To avoid this problem, a easy explication would be to buy a newer model Blu-ray player. Most of the latest models can output 1080p pictures at 24 frames-per-second via Hdmi. Also, your Tv set must be able to preserve it. If it does not, then if you feed a signal of 1080/24p into a Tv which can not preserve it, the Tv will convert the signal to 50 or even 60Hz. This will also place judder into the picture.

What this all comes down to is to get the best, purest and most genuine High Definition photo possible, you need a Blu-ray Player capable of a 1080/24p output signal (this is surely prime on the set-up menu) and a Tv capable of supporting this signal. Most of the newer Lcd and Plasma televisions will give you the right preserve you need. Lcd sets ordinarily have a 120Hz mode, where each of the 24 frames is repeated five times and shown on the screen for the same whole of time, producing no juddering. Plasma ordinarily has 72Hz 3:3 pulldown mode and they can use this because they do not have as much slowdown as the Lcd.

Sound

The second feature most citizen buy the Blu-ray for is the excellent sound quality. Blu-ray has the excellent 'lossless' Dolby True Hd and Dts Hd master Audio. What you get with these audio formats is 100 percent same to the primary studio master track. This is a clear benefit over Dvds which use Dolby Digital and Dts, but again as with the photo signal, not all Av receivers are capable of decoding the newer High Definition formats.

Set up is fairly easy if your receiver can decode the formats because both Hd formats can be used via the Blu-ray player's Hdmi output port and the Hdmi input port on the receiver. This allows a bitstream (meaning raw digital data) to be transferred to your Av receiver where it is decoded into multichannel sound. All you need to do is set your Blu-ray player's Hdmi output to bitstream or primary. The Hdmi ports on these devices must be specified as version 1.3/1.3a/1.3b. These are the only versions that allow for the transmitting of Dolby TrueHd and Dts-Hd Audio. You will also need a Second Hdmi Cable to associate the Av receiver's Hdmi output to your Tv's Hdmi input. The Av receiver will decode the audio and forward the 1080/24p video signal.

Things can get a dinky trickier if your Av receiver does not decode the Hd audio formats. However, it does not mean you can not still enjoy the great high ability sound. One selection ready to you is to set up your Blu-ray player to internally decode the audio and convert it to Lpcm (an uncompressed form of audio). This selection is placed in the set-up menu and found on approximately every Blu-ray player. Lcpm can be transferred over any version of Hdmi and it preserves the high multichannel sound ability of both Dolby True Hd and Dts Hd. This way your receiver does not have to do any decoding. (Take note that some lesser Blu-ray players will only convert 5.1 Dolby Digital or Dts into Lpcm.)

This Lcpm selection assumes your Av receiver has Hdmi inputs. If it does not have these Hdmi inputs, then your best selection is to look for Blu-ray Players that can decode the Hd sound formats into high ability analogue and output them from multichannel outputs. Using optic or coaxial outputs which are ordinarily found on most players can not be used because the do not have the enough bandwidth capabilities to forward Dolby TrueHd and Dts-Hd Audio.

Internet Connectivity

Most newer Blu-ray players have a feature called Bd Live which allows you to download content from the internet, play games online and partake in web chats. To use this feature you need a Blu-ray player with a Profile 2.0 since these Blu-ray players have an Ethernet port you can use to associate to an internet router or computer. (Profile 1.1 may have an Ethernet port but Will Not preserve Bd Live.)

Also, you may need a Usb flash memory drive or Sd card to plug into your Blu-ray player. This provides digital storage for updates and extra data. It's recommended that the drive or card be at least 1 Gb. Other than the Playstation 3, no other Blu-ray players on the shop have internal memory built-in, but some newer Blu-ray players are now unveiling Wi-Fi, eliminating the need for external storage.

Conclusion

Hopefully, by checking all three factors discussed above - Picture, Sound, and Internet Connectivity - will make setting up your new Blu-ray player a lot easier. Just supervene all the steps and you will get the best photo and sound ability that only a Blu-ray system can deliver. Happy viewing!

The Right Way to Set Up Your New Blu-ray PlayerSummer Wars - Theatrical Trailer - In Select Theaters Dec '10 - DVD/BD Spring '11 Video Clips. Duration : 2.47 Mins.


www.funimation.com Summer Wars- Coming to theaters in select cities December 2010 and on DVD/Blu-ray Spring 2011 From the visionary directory of The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (2007 Japanese Academy Award winner, Best Animated Feature) comes the story of an ordinary family going to extraordinary lengths to avert the impending cyber apocalypse! Kenji is your typical teenage misfit. He's good at math, bad with girls, and spends most of his time hanging out in the all-powerful, online community known as OZ. His second life is the only life he has -- until the girl of his dreams, Natsuki, hijacks him for a starring role as a fake fiancé at her family reunion. Things only get stranger from there. A late-night email containing a cryptic mathematic riddle leads to the unleashing of a rogue AI intent on using the virtual word of OZ to destroy the real world, literarily. As Armageddon looms on the horizon, Kenji and his new "family" set aside their differences and band together to save the worlds they inhabit in this "near-perfect blend of social satire and science fiction". (AnimeNewsNetwork.com) Awards: Award of the Japanese Academy- Best Animated Film Tokyo Anime Awards- Animation of the Year Mainichi Film Concours- Best Animated Film Sitges International Film Festival of Catalonia -- Best Animated Film Fantasia Film Festival- Best Animated Film

Tags: summer, wars, funimation, anime, girl, leapt, through, time, Mamoru Hosoda, Digimon, Secret of Kells, Gkids, Sita Sings the Blues, trailer, theatrical, full, length, english, dub

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