



DVD Players - Buy Now or Wait for the Violet Laser Models? 211
PateraSilk asks: "I've been resisting the DVD pull for a while but VHS is becoming more and more obselete. So, I'm thinking about joining the hordes, but I have two problems with the DVD format: compression artifacts and low-level pixel dithering, which annoy me no end. Maybe I've just seen crappy DVDs, but this leads me to my question: should I go ahead and purchase a DVD player regardless of my qualms or wait for a violet/blue laser standard to emerge? My hope is that a larger storage capacity would lead to a less lossy compression format, but, then again, I could be waiting in vain. Plus, I don't want to embrace a technology only to have it be replaced within a couple of years." Remember, Sony's violet-laser player has already hit the market, so hopefully it won't be long before other manufacturers follow suit. How long will it be before competition in this market drives down prices to reasonable levels?
Let me get this straight (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not going to type anymore about this, that is just sbsurd.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Good point. Is it possible to mod the article -1 Troll? Seriously; I've never heard of a DVD that had a bad picture when compared to VHS. The article *has* to be a troll.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Then you didn't see the Highlander: Director's Cut THX Widescreen DVD. I was so psyched when I bought this, and it looks SO FUCKING BAD in some places it's abominable. Find the worst JPEG artifacted pictures you can find, then film them at 24 frames a second onto Super 8 film, run sandpaper over it, then project it onto a dirty bedsheet while videotaping it, then run a
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2, Informative)
I'm no acoustics expert, but I know enough to know that in the case of audio, those higher harmonics which the human ear cannot hear still make a difference. So I'm going to take the time to lay down some education:
Natural harmonics:
First you have to understand what the hell a harmonic is. When a Violin plays a single "C" note alone, there is actually a subtle chord being made by the instrument which gives a distinctive nature to the sound. At a much reduced volume than the C being played that you main
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Interesting)
Blah blah blah. What you failed to "educate" with your babble is that hi-fi speakers aren't going to reproduce any "beyond-hearing harmonics" so it's completely irrelevant if they exist or not.
Also if the "interferences" truly created noise in the audible frequency range then they will be recorded in the studio. So the hi-fi equipment will record and reproduce the "interferences" just fine.
Of course, I did know that you are speaking a load of crap. Yes, harmonics are real. No, your explanation of tone is completely wrong. And this gem of a sentence:
Takes the cake for Biggest Load of Audiophile Bullshit that I've ever had the displeasure to read. It's a string of buzzwords with no actual meaning. There's a grain of truth in there because audio is altered by reflection off surfaces, but it has nothing to do with "modulation" nor do the waves "affect each other".
Isn't it amazing how mysticism pervades every facet of our lives. From medicine (natural "healing") to music (audiophiles *puke*). I was particularly appalled at a recent story on the news where a cancer patient refused to take chemotherapy treatment, instead opting for traditional Greek remedies such as boiled tea leaves and bat-shit. When the cancer victim inevitably died after 3 years, the family blamed the hospitals and the government! I'm similarly appalled by audiophiles who enjoy the fruits of labour from actual audio engineers, yet invent these techno-babble BULLSHIT beliefs to surround it. It's mysticism in another form.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
"waves can mix (construct and destruct creating new frequency components) at the surfaces that they reflect off of (including those in your head), creating a new wave off of the surface with the new frequency component..."
He would be right...but like you said, this isn't the responsibility of the equipment to make all the imperfections. CD's and records are recorded with the audio they heard originally, not with all the reflections and stuff...that's why they use soundproof roo
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Sure, but he would still be wrong. You can't construct a new frequency component by mixing two waves. Yes, you'll get a new wave, but it's the sum of existing frequency components.
Maybe what he was trying to say was:
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
First, get a dictionary.
Second, they aren't the same thing. Putting two oranges into a fruit bowl doesn't create an apple.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Which is nothing like what this guy said. Don't try and find truth in nonsense. That's like basing your life on the text of Jabberwocky.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I may not have done a good job of explaining, but you've done a good job of tearing me apart on bad grounds. I'm not a babbling audiophile. I don't own any high end stereo equipment. I am a former musician, I do understand the harmonics that instruments create, and what I'm saying does have validity.
Audio waves do interfere with each other while reflecting off of a surface, as noted more precisely in another response.
Any yes, there's lots of stereo equipment out there that *will* reproduce sounds that
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
You did a terrible job of explaining.
No, you've got it wrong again. The vibrating surface is what affects the audio, not the two waves interfering. Even the word "interfere" is wrong because interference already has a meaning in audio and it only affects intensity. Poin
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I don't think you understand what an audiophile is--it's simply someone who loves quality sound playback.
I'm an audiophile. I'm also strongly in favor of double-blind testing for equipment, and I laugh at $100/ft monster cable and green felt-tip pen lines on CDs and si
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Too late. For the same reason that "hacker" now means "malicious computer criminal", audiophile now means "stupid idiot with too much money who buys greens pens for their CDs".
Re:Nonlinear (Score:2)
That is precisely what makes them audiophiles. They grab onto little nuggets of information that may or may
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
(Did I do ok?)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:5, Interesting)
Just like vinyl sounds better to an audiophile's ears than a CD, videotape just looks better to a videophiles eyes than a DVD.
Speaking as a videophile, I have to disagree.
The analog encoding on VHS loses high-frequency information way too fast. (See this comparison [cam.net.uk] for the sillyscope pics. It's comparing SVHS to VHS, but you can see how they all lose HF info.) Signal bleed and stretch kick in a week after you buy the tape. Moire (colors appearing in a black and white pattern) and susceptibility to poor combing (losing edges around 3.5 MHz) is inescapable, because the chroma signal is still overlaid on the intensity signal. (This last sentence applies if you hook up the DVD player with a composite cable, but I'm concentrating on VHS format problems, not connection follies.)
I know people who prefer laserdisc, which is an analog format, to DVD. It suffers from some of the problems as VHS (such as moire), but it does have a much higher bandwidth than VHS, meaning better resolution-- a sharper picture and clearer detail.
These laserdisc holdouts are a dwindling breed, though. The DVD revolution has taken hold.
So videophiles don't prefer VHS. What's PateraSilk's deal? I'm guessing he saw bad examples: poor transfers, possibly, or a bad (or misconfigured) player adding stairsteps when it downconverted a 16:9 tape. (See my other post in this article.) But I can't imagine anybody prefering VHS to DVD in general.
It depends upon what bothers you (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:3, Interesting)
It turns out he had it hooked up to the tv with the COAX. I told him to go back home and hook it up with the composite cables.
(I would've told him S-VIDEO BUT THERE ISN'T A F***ING S-VIDEO JACK ON THE DIGITAL CABLE BOXES THAT AT&T DISTRIBUTED IN MY AREA!) WHY??? WHY??? WHY???
Anyway, he came back the next day
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I think that if you bought better cables to hook the VCR up to your TV you'd agree with me that VHS is better.
I do use high-quality cables. My VHS connection uses a thick 75-ohm cable with a solid dielectric to the reciever, and of course my video feed to the TV is equally solid. My DVD connection, at the time I performed the evaulations, was an average consumer-grade S-Video cable, with TOS for the audio. (I've since changed the DVD connection to Monster MV2CV component cables direct to the TV.)
Obvio
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
'jfb
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I wanna see one comparing VHS to DVD now...DVD, you should be able to calculate since it's digital...
Upgrade required? (Score:2)
Is there a newer version available? Is there a upgrade discount for established Eyeballs v1.0 users?
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I was just going off of the fact that DVD can produce higher "harmonics", or frequencies, and that it has way more lines of resolution. But your right, I can see how people would like VHS better, I just personally don't. Maybe if I had nice, non 10 year old equipment, I would be able to understand. To me, whenever I have done a side by s
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:4, Informative)
Digital formats are nice, but they aren't automatically better than analog formats.
A good VHS recording, played back on a 6-head VCR, displayed on a nice TV actually does look better than the same recording done on DVD, played on the same TV.
They need to find a way to get rid of all the damn pixelation and screen re-drawing that goes on in DVD players and digitial cable/satellite.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
I disagree. I find DVDs to be considerably better picture quality than analog cable or VHS. (Some sample source material: For broadcast comparison, Buffy/Angel and Stargate SG-1 each have hours of material that's easy to compare. For VHS comparison specifics, offhand, I can only think of Stargate and X-Files (the movies), but I switched to DVD so long ago I forget most of what I checked out when I first switched.)
I do agree that digital cable is overcompressed, causing lots of artifacting.
A good VHS r
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
They aren't doing it for you or the picture quality...it's jsut profit.
and, Direct TV sucks...it looks AWFULL when things start maving fast.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Agreed, but the digital sound makes up for it, in my opinion. Analog cable seems to have a constant hiss in the background, and everything is downmixed to stereo. Digital movie channels can broadcast in 5.1 dolby. I don't notice much pixellation in DVD's, but the picture quality of the digital cable here in Toronto (Roge
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
There are a lot of DVDs where the VHS version looks better on our 4-head VCR and ancient 19" TV (no RCA inputs) than on his DVD player and new 21" TV. And there are a lot of movies that look better on VHS than on digital cable.
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Then you say
You're not watching the same TV. So you're not making the comparison you said you were. I doubt anyone with a properly calibrated TV and DVD player would ever say that VHS lo
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
Re:Let me get this straight (Score:2)
DVD players are so cheap... (Score:5, Insightful)
$100 (Score:2)
You can get a decent one for $60ish nowadays. $100 is where you start finding progressive-scan DVD players.
If the poster thinks DVD is worse PQ than VHS, he either:
a) Is using a REALLY shitty DVD player, even shitter than my $60 Rowa, which makes even VCDs look better than your average VHS. (Oddly, while I get horrendous artifacts when playing VCDs on any PC player, I get NO visible artifacts when displaying to an NTSC TV via a composite cable.)
b) Is comparin
Unbelievable (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the worst Ask Slashdot ever.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
This argument is as old as geekdom itself. Ooh, should I buy a now or wait another few months and buy
It's the nature of the beast. You have to suck it up and just buy or else you procrastinate forever.
Blame Moore's law or something.....
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
I think this whole Ask Slashdot is a troll.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
that was 3 years ago though!
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
Yes, it is!
Look, I came here to get some questions answered, and you haven't answered them!
Yes I have!
and so on...
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
My sentiments exactly. I just hope the parent poster doesn't judge women the same way he watches movies. Jeez.
Re:Unbelievable (Score:2)
Buy now (Score:2)
Also, if the Next Big Format uses 12 cm discs, it'll almost definitely play current DVDs. Just like today's DVD players can play CDs and VCDs.
Don' Wait (Score:5, Insightful)
Get off it and get one (Score:4, Insightful)
Second, you can get the aforementioned, crappy Apex for $40, a reasonable name brand model for $110 and really nice stuff for a bit more. Expect the higher end jobs to be just about as relevant as SVHS players/recorders.
If you are really seeing artifacts on DVDs frequently, then how can you stand tapes? If you buy them, they are much more bulky, no random access, etc. If you rent them... Lord help you. When I was still renting tapes, if I couldn't get it within a week of release, I passed. It was generally just barely viewable to me. It was unwatchable to my wife, as the captioning information degrades VERY quickly on VHS. This is just one very obvious sign of the lack of durability of VHS tapes.
Captioning data. (Score:2)
Apex (Score:2)
But others are VERY nice players that rival the "name brands". In some cases they blow away the "name brand" players. Apex makes one of the most feature-packed portables out there. Apex is well on the way to joining the ranks of "Name Brand" manufacturers.
Buy a good one. (Score:3, Informative)
Now, compare that one to some of the cheap new ones that some of my friends bought at Wal mart for around $100, and there is a very definite quality difference in the picture and sound. On my player, there is only pixelation if the disc is very dirty. The cheap new ones pixelate if you so much as look at them wrong.
The bottom line is, if you are really that bothered by pixelation, fork up some cash and buy a nice one, not an Apex or one like it.
Still gonna be awhile (Score:3, Informative)
It will be YEARS before you see DVD movies move off of the current standard. There is no reason for the movie industry to alienate the current adopters. They will not be releasing movies (much less re-releasing existing DVDs) until the proportion of violet laser players in use is larger than the install base of older players.
The only way around this is to make violet laser DVDs backwards compatible and that doesn't seem feasible to me.
I'm not against the technology, I would love to see HD DVDs become standard, but it isn't realistic to base your adoption on the new technology. The only place violet lasers are going to make a difference in the near future is for data storage.
BTW, I would guess you were watching on a fairly cheap DVD player. There is some low level color distortion (not nearly as much as on DirecTV streams though) in the MPEG encoding, but better DVD players can prevent most artifacts. I waited to buy my player until the new Faroudja chipset was available about 18 months ago and I couldn't be happier with the picture quality. You can get better than that, but the Faroudja based players are reasonably priced with great quality.
Re:Still gonna be awhile (Score:2)
You have to realise that if they used HD resolutions with DVD, they would be more artifacts since they would have the same datarate per frame, but with a higher res, which would require more loss.
Like trying to compress a 800x600 JPG to the same size as a 640x480...your just net gunna get better quality...unless the picture is simple (like non moving adjecent frames would be on dvd).
Re:Still gonna be awhile (Score:2)
For the HD DVD format, I was giving the exapmple if they were done on a DVD with current technology, not the violet laser.
I'm gunna hold out until they start using gamma ray lasers! w00t! Heck, the RIAA will probably love them...will most likely only get one use out of each disc
Don't forget regions (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, you have three problems. If you're new to DVD, you may not know about the 'region' nonsense. Simply put: if you buy a disc in Europe [wallaceandgromit.com], forget about playing it in the US, and vice-versa.
There is no technical reason for this. It's pure marketing BS. However, there are DVD players on the market which make it possible to circumvent the region encoding. You may want to consider one of these...
Re:Don't forget regions (Score:2)
Re:Don't forget regions (Score:2)
I bought my last player, a Toshiba SD330e, from amazon.co.uk and it was supplied multiregion out of the box.
You don't want to wait... (Score:2)
I'm worried (Score:3, Funny)
There will always be poorly compressed videos (Score:5, Informative)
As per your comment on poor video compression, more often than not, poor video compression is the fault of the studios. I've seem a lot of crappy transfers (Highlander, Evil Dead, etc) and a lot of beautiful transfers (Anything Pixar has done, LOTR, Panic Room, etc). The fact is a lot of studios are willing to cram a crappy video transfer on a disc, edge "enhance" the hell out of it, and cram in some extras with th space they've saved. But the good studios (Dreamworks, Universal sometimes) have learned that it's better to put good video and audio on one disc and put the exras on a second, resulting in much improved video transfers.
So don't let a few bad transfers spoil the DVD experience, the bad transfers are usually equally as bad on VHS, so it's not like you're losing much. I'd say invest in a good solid medium range DVD player now (you can get solid progressive scan units for about $150), and then when the new laser models come out, wait through the price wars and tech sniggles and get one of them when the technology has been tightened up and the prices have gone down.
Re:There will always be poorly compressed videos (Score:2)
Another common problem I see is watching an anamorphic-mode DVD on a non-anamorphic-aware TV. Most consumer DVD players do a lousy job of antialiasing, so you get hideous stairsteps. The best example I know of is the opening credit sequence on the "Spider-Man" DVD. Looks great on an anamorphic-capable TV. (I thought about this when I saw it in the theater. Geek life strikes again.) Lots of stairsteps on a non-anamorphic TV, or if you have your DVD set to "4:3 Letterbox" when you have a 16:9 (anamorphi
Re:There will always be poorly compressed videos (Score:2)
Using VHS for time-shifting 99% of the time and occasionally watching bought videos of quality comedy and drama, and good films (of which there are less that 10) I can't see why anyone would buy a DVD player to put up with blocky DCT image artifacts, unskipable warnings, dropped frames etc.
When the
Buy a DVD player! (Score:2, Insightful)
You can buy a very cheap player for about $50. But why not spend a little more. For just a little more you can buy a decent progressive output DVD player. Check out this DVD Benchmark test [hometheaterhifi.com] which seems to be more thorough than most DVD tests. They recommend several players that retail for only $2
Re:Buy a DVD player! (Score:2)
Wait forever. (Score:2)
Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:4, Insightful)
DVD sucks because:
1) It goes out of its way to screw you over by refusing to route video signal through a VCR, thus rendering it inoperable with most legacy TVs.
2) Discs usually have mandatory, can't-fast-forward-through-them FBI warnings at the beginning of disks. By jove, when I buy a movie, I want to see a MOVIE, not some goddammed threatening legalese from the MPAA!
3) artifacts. DVD players (or at least the Sony my sister lent me) can't seem to keep the most basic artifacts suppressed. I remember seeing a white-painted wall, and noticing that the paint "crawled" like white noise as action elsewhere in the frame caused a wacky encoding of a simple signal. Call me back when you can film white walls.
4) compatibility issues. One in twelve DVDs I rent doen't work on my player, in which case I have to watch it on a laptop. (Unless THAT also doesn't work.) Yes VHS tapes get eaten, but not at that high a rate. VHS is more reliable.
5) Skipping. Usually have to endure this once or twice per film on rentals. Lame.
6) Frilly menus. Please less ghay animation, more do-what-I-want.
For these reasons I continue to prefer VHS to DVD. Yes, I use trolly language here, and for that I apologise, but I'm bitter everyone else has been so suckered by this crap technology. (And yes I had a Betamax way back when, and Yes, I'm bitter about that losing too).
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
It's not going out of the way to screw you. There are better connections available. You can't be backward compatible with everything. You can buy a TV for about $150 that has the connections needed to plug in a DVD player.
2) Discs usually have mandatory, can't-fast-forward-through-them FBI warnings at the beginning of disks. By jove, when I buy a movie, I want to
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
I've rented 6-10 movies a month from Netflix since September 2001. Number of compatibility problems = 0. Number of skipping discs = 0.
I'll have to concur. Right now I'm using a rather cheap D
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
It reminds me of Flash for web pages. Every web designer in the world seems to think that I want to see a Flash intro and Flash menus when I go to a site. But at least most of them have a Skip Intro button.
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
This is where all the research you did before buying pays off and you flash the DVD player with firmware that enables UOP (which allows you to fast forward through all that nonsense).
Flashing is naughty (Score:2)
Heh, or I just use my VCR, which doens't require flashing, whizzing on, or doing other obscene things - just stick it in and wa
Re:Flashing is naughty (Score:2)
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
References: Dune [imdb.com], Logan's Run [imdb.com]
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:3, Insightful)
You have a shitty VCR then, one which is overly sensitive to macrovision. You also have a fairly shitty DVD player which doesn't allow you to disable macrovision.
We used to route a DVD player through a VCR all the time. Finally switched out the TV in that room so we don't need to anymore. Oh, and funny that... the picture quality improved. Substantially.
artifacts.
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
Sorry bud.I can confirm that for the guy. I get that effect sometimes on my 19" Hitachi CM771. It certainly is the mpeg2 encoding.
K
Re:Why DVD _S*U*C*K*S_! (Score:2)
Oh, come on! (Score:2)
"wait for a violet/blue laser standard to emerge?"
Standard? To emerge? See DVD+/-RW/RAM/ROM/R for standardization example. In other words you will wait till the end of the world...
2nd of all:
Go get yourself a $50 DVD player. And that is before rebate, or without any deal. You can afford this, go ahead. You can invest another dinner when the violet/blue lasers get market share.
3rd of all:
I agree with you about the poor quality, but realistically it will be 10-15 years before another format
Re:Oh, come on! (Score:2)
Actually, the comparison to the various DVD recording formats is invalid on its face. Nobody really has a good reason to force standardization except consumers who want to trade their discs around. Even then, in terms of making DVD movie-type discs which can be played in normal DVD players, most players that can play -R can play +R and vice versa.
What will drive the DVD man
VHS/DVD/cable (Score:2)
Re:VHS/DVD/cable (Score:2)
You can't be serious (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You can't be serious (Score:2)
DVD players, like all consumer electronics these days, are immensely disposable. There will always be newer and better media (and players), so bite the bullet and shell out $59 for a cheap DVD players (or a DVD-ROM drive) and enjoy it, or buy a really expensive player (what, $170?) and gets the bells and whistles. When a better one comes out, move this one to the other room, sell it for $10 at a yard sale, or put it on the street -- what's the big deal? It costs as much as a
Now or Never. (Score:2)
As if... (Score:2)
DVD players work just fine now. People are happy. Everybody has one. I wouldn't worry about new discs coming out until HDTV is in use like DVD players are today. Until then, things will stay exactly like they are.
cheap vs. GOOD (Score:4, Informative)
until recently, we have been feeding our alternate encoder with DVD source as a test for reliability. we had some PS2s sitting around and used that. on the set, you can see DVDs that were sourced from DV camera and it looked like shit with all the interlacing and the block noise in the shadows, etc.
THEN, we got a VERY nice Sony DVP-NS915 [sony.com.ph] progressive output DVD player... the output with the SAME DVDs...
UNBELIEVEABLE.
there was such a world of difference! we even turned off the progressive mode and it was STILL beautiful! this thing kicked the crap out of the PS2 in output quality. no block noise, interlace noise gone, and a LOT cleaner image.
now i know, all DVD players are not equal. you definitely get what you pay for!
for a question like this, get a NICE DVD player and you'll be very happy. get a crappy one, well... you'll be asking this again and again.
also, blue-ray rocks! but you MUST have high end stuff end to end or you're just wasting money.
Not just DVD's (Score:2)
Get what you pay for. (Score:2)
If you spend $69 on a DVD player don't expect perfect video. I had a cheap player before and it was the weak link in my home theater chain. I upgraded to a nice, but expensive, Pioneer Elite 47Ai and it looks FANTASTIC. The bigger the TV the more difference you'll notice, of course. A goo
How about DVHS? (Score:2)
JVC [jvc.com] makes a few nice models.
DVHS: Stay Away (Score:2)
I've heard that the Mitsubishi units are good, but they're impossible to find.
If you want to get DVHS, you also need to find:
An HDTV tuner with 1394 output
Invest in a good broadcast TV antenna (None of the cable HD boxes seem to have 1394
Re:DVHS: Stay Away (Score:2)
Not quite true. You only need an HDTV tuner if you wish to record HDTV. One of the benefits of the D-VHS system is the ability to buy pre-recorded HD content. As for the HDTV display, why the hell would you buy a HD player/recorder if you didn't already have, or plan to get in the near future, an HD display.
If you see artifacts, adjust your TV (Score:2)
If you want to talk *artifacts*, try Tivo on Basic (or even Medium) quality. That's a great way to see the mpeg process live.
Anyway, get a copy of
what?? (Score:4, Insightful)
What the fuck?? I have never seen a Divx movie that wasn't either (a) encoded from a camcorder (which looks like shit anyway) or (b) re-encoded from a DVD. If it's reencoded from a DVD, it can't look better than the DVD, because you've already suffered the compression and decompression.
Maybe you're just saying that if we used MPEG-4 to compress DVDs in the first place, we'd be able to use a much higher bitrate and lose the kind of MPEG-2 artifacts that the poster complains about. I'm not sure that's true, since MPEG-4 is strong mainly at lower bitrates and has many of the same image quality problems that MPEG-2 has. But we can't base our opinion on Divx DVD rips!!
Of course you can! (Score:2)
Re:Of course you can! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Of course you can! (Score:2)
Anyway, Divx is very nice, but I don't think you can really say it looks "as good" as the source DVD it was ripped from, unless you're not very picky.