Jump to content

bommai

Members
  • Posts

    3
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation

10
  1. Comcast box will be enough. Once you have a cable box or a satellite box or even a Tivo (including the HD one), you don't have to worry about the built-in tuner. however, as an OTA person, I love my TV with built-in tuner. No more expenses. One more thing. When it says HD-monitor, that does not necessarily mean that it has NTSC tuner. The FCC rule is that if it has a NTSC tuner, it needs to have a NTSC tuner. So, many Westinghouse and others that say HD-monitor, don't include either tuners. So you need a cable box or satellite box for both analog and digital content. You cannot just plug your cable outlet to the TV.
  2. Does anyone know if the BB Western Digital MyBook 250GB HD is USB 2.0 only or USB 2.0 and Firewire. I would like it more if it had Firewire also.
  3. MPEG stands for Motion Picture Expert Group. It is a licensing/standardization committee for Audio Video compression systems. MP3 (the popular music format) is actually MPEG1-Layer3. It specifies the audio compression mechanism that is part of the MPEG1 A/V format. It is quiet old. BTW, MPEG1 is the format used in video CDs (VCD). While VCD is not popular in the US, it is quite popular in China/India since it does not have any DRM and you can use a regular CD to make a copy. Quality is pretty poor though (<= VHS). MPEG2 is the format used in satellite TV, DVDs, ATSC, and is also part of HD-DVD and Bluray Spec. MPEG2 is primarily the video format. It is more efficient than MPEG1 and it requires more processing power to decode. Several years ago, a separate hardware chip was required to decode DVDs in computers, however, a modern computer can decode MPEG2 (at least standard definition) in software itself. Broadcast High Definition TV uses MPEG2 also. At 1920x1080 i resolution, MPEG2 needs about 19Mbps bandwidth for good quality video. MPEG3 was worked on but never saw light of day. MPEG4 - Apples Quicktime file format was used as a basis for MPEG4. So, while Apples format was involved, MPEG4 is not an Apple format. MPEG4 includes various companies. The first video format that came out of MPEG4 was MPEG4-Layer2. This was ok, but not great. Later on they came out with MPEG4-Layer10. This is also called as H.264 or AVC. This format is great and is part of HD-DVD and Bluray codec. There are a variety of audio formats for MPEG4, one of them is AAC (advanced audio codec). While AAC is used by Apple for their iTunes Music downloads, it is not an apple format. AT&T and Dolby Labs were involved in creating AAC. AAC music could theoretically be called as MP4 music also even though that is not a popular term. Various video players support MP4 (probably layer 2), DiVX, XVid, etc. DiVX, XVid are all non-standard versions of MPEG4. Even Microsoft's own VC-1 (WMV9) is based on MPEG4, but they took the development inhouse instead of keeping it an open standard - typical microsoft. I hope this gives people some background!!
×
×
  • Create New...