JTF.ORG Forum
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: White Israelite on July 21, 2011, 11:12:12 PM
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Well, off topic here but I ended up buying the lord of the rings trilogy on bluray and popped it in my laptop, I run a HDMI cable to my HDTV since my TV is 1080p and my laptop is only 720p and watch the movies through my computer, turns out I cannot play the video and it says something about copyright protection and that it isn't supported through HDMI, so I setup my HDTV through SLI as a second monitor and the video plays, but I have no sound in the movie, changed my audio track to Portuguese and the Portuguese works but the English doesn't, try all the other disks and same result.
Turns out there is some sort of water mark or prevention which means I cannot even use my computer as a bluray player to my tv despite the fact the biggest marketing gimmick for HDTV capable laptops is HDMI out to broadcast to your tv.
This shows how greedy Hollywood is and their stupid digital copyright protection, and this is exactly why I will never buy a signal movie again.
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try downloading VLC media player, it never gives me any BS
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Doesn't work with commercial bluray.
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So go to pirate bay dl the bluray
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Well your problem solves itself. Go and learn portuguese :laugh:
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I watch the movies I'm really interested in by going to the actual theater most of the time but I download the rest. At least VLC player will play downloaded movies. I have a DVD player on my computer and was considering buying some movies from Amazon like the LOTR extended edition (I like high fantasy type stories and want to encourage more of that type of movie to be made) but I'm not sure if I will have the same issue or not.
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This is no different from the deal that Dell and other PC makers have worked out with the MPAA by which after a couple of years from your computer's date of manufacture, it automatically downloads drivers that disable DVD playing.
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This is no different from the deal that Dell and other PC makers have worked out with the MPAA by which after a couple of years from your computer's date of manufacture, it automatically downloads drivers that disable DVD playing.
Eh? Where did you read that? I haven't seen anything about what you mention.