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iDVD.ca -
Learn about DVDs with the "What Is DVD" article. Learn why
DVDs are an important development in the entertainment and computer
industries. Read on for more
information!
By: Jeff Shannon
By the time DVD ("Digital Video Disc" or
"Digital Versatile Disc") was introduced to the American
public in March 1997, years of research and development had
preceded its arrival as the "next generation" format of home
entertainment. Consumer electronics manufacturers and movie
studios established an industry-wide DVD-video standard in
1996; and by the end of 1997, DVD players had set sales
records and well over 500 DVD movie titles had been
released, with the rate of new releases rapidly increasing
from that point forward.
A DVD is identical in thickness (1.2
millimeters) and diameter (120 millimeters or 4.7 inches) to
a standard Compact Disc, but that's where the similarities
end. The DVD's storage capacity is seven times that of a CD,
with a 4.7-gigabyte capacity on a single-side/single-layer
DVD. That's the data-storage equivalent of a 133-minute
movie, thus allowing 95 percent of all movies to fit
comfortably on a single-layer DVD, eliminating the need for
"flipping" the disc and leaving extra room for multiple
audio, language, and subtitle tracks; bonus materials; menu
screens; and other features unique to DVD. This capacity is
nearly doubled (8.5 GB) on a single-side/dual-layer DVD, and
quadrupled (17 GB) on a double-side/dual-layer DVD, allowing
DVD to flourish not only as a movie-lover's format, but as
an amazingly flexible medium (DVD-ROM) for high-definition
computer games and multimedia applications. In short, this
makes DVD the home entertainment and multimedia format of
the new millennium.
Don't worry--you won't have to trash your
VCR if you don't want to. But the vastly improved audio and
video quality of DVD, along with its durability and
flexibility (no rewinding, instant scene access, etc.) makes
VHS pale in comparison. You don't need an upgraded home-theater
system (unless DVD makes you want one!); and affordable DVD
players are compatible with CDs, while some "combo" models
allow the playback of DVDs, CDs, and laserdiscs. With all
major movie studios now supporting the format, the selection
of current and classic movies on DVD (along with music
videos, opera, documentaries ... you name it!) is rapidly
expanding, along with outlets for DVD sales and rentals.
Videophiles and laserdisc loyalists will
debate the pros and cons of DVD for years, but one thing is
certain: the process of transferring a movie to DVD is
highly advanced and designed to deliver the highest quality
of audio and video available. For every video format (VHS,
laserdisc, and DVD), the process begins with "telecine"
(TEL-a-sin-ee), but the procedures for DVD adhere to much
higher standards. The telecine process begins when light is
passed through the film (frame by frame, with exacting
precision) and strikes an array of semiconductors that
convert the light into electrical signals. That information
is then digitally transferred to High Definition video (HD),
which is capable of picture resolution nearly equal to that
of the original film.
The HD master can be color-corrected and
further checked to match the original film (a process often
involving the film's director and cinematographer). Then its
massive data capacity must be compressed via MPEG-2 encoding
(developed by the Motion Picture Experts Group, or MPEG),
which produces a varying rate of transferred data to exploit
similarities from one film frame to the next. Less data is
required for redundant details while more data is reserved
for complex details such as rain, smoke, crowd scenes, etc.
(This process leads to image-quality debates between
laserdisc and DVD fanatics, due to the idiosyncrasies of
MPEG-2 compression, but DVD maintains a definite edge in
picture resolution.)
The MPEG-2 digital video transfer is later
synchronized with all the audio elements (soundtracks and
language or commentary tracks) and then combined on a
specialized computer called a "multiplexer," along with all
the potential elements of DVD, including subtitles, menu
files, chapter stops, closed-captioning, parental-control
information, regional encoding, and copy-protection. This
digitally combined information is then recorded onto a tape
drive, which is then checked for signal integrity, further
inspected for quality control, and finally used as the data
source from which a master DVD can be made for unlimited
duplication.
Don't let the techno-babble fool you--find a
local consumer outlet and test-drive DVD for yourself, and
remember how readily the public traded in their vinyl
records for music CDs. The same phenomenon appears to be
happening with DVD, although VHS videotapes are far too
entrenched in the market to disappear anytime soon. However,
as it becomes clear that DVD will avoid the niche-market
fate of laserdiscs to become the accepted format for home
entertainment, DVD--with its convenience, affordable cost,
and superior performance--speaks for itself.
Jeff Shannon is a Seattle-based freelance
writer focusing primarily on films and filmmakers.
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