Dirty love sean

Dirty love sean kingston

Samsungs Duo HD player BD-UP5000 will fully support both HD-DVD and Blu-ray Disc formats and their interactive technologies, HDi and BD-Java. With the Duo HD consumers can enjoy additional studio content such as trailers, directors comments, more elaborate interactive menus and behind the scene footage. The new Duo HD joins Samsungs next generation DVD line-up which includes Samsungs second generation Blu-ray player available at retail this month. Together, these two models offer the consumer a strong line of High-Definition players to match Samsungs award winning, and best selling, line of HDTVs. Wednesday, April 11th 2007 The AACS Advanced Access Content System is the standard of decrypting HD content of HD DVDs and Blu-ray Discs. The implementation of AACS into both HD disc formats is the target of hackers throughout the whole world and it seems the HD DVD is not that secure as its inventors wanted it to be. Its encryption got hacked utilizing a flawed mechanism inside a special WinDVD version by members of the well known Doom9 Forums some time ago. When the company behind AACS, the AACS LA, reacted and prohibited the playback of HD DVDs using the aforementioned WinDVD version, the hackers found another way to get to the important data. This time a hacker called xt5 took advantage of a common unmodified Xbox 360 HD DVD drive Toshiba SD-S802A. He was somehow able to get a so called Volume ID out of the disc using this drive. With this Volume ID one could get access to all the neccessary keys needed to play a HD DVD movie. You wont need a software like WinDVD anymore. In order to fix this problem the AACS LA could add all external Xbox 360 HD DVD drives to their black list Revocation List, no owner of such a drive would be able to play back a HD movie with it except hackers of with above stated knowledge of course. Another solution would be to release a new firmware update for the Xbox HD DVDs but it would be only a matter of time until the next clever chap finds a solution for that. Fastmac today announced the first only Blu-Ray optical drive upgrade for Apples PowerBook, iBook MacBook Pro computers. The new slimline, slot loading drive uses one of the fastest most compatible Blu-ray mechanisms to provide up to 50 Gb of storage on 1 disk, without sacrificing compatibility with standard DVD CD recordable media. Fastmacs Blu-Ray optical drive upgrade is scheduled to ship within 10 days and is available for pre-order from for a special introductory price of Each drive carries a 1 year warranty and a 30 day money back guarantee. Wednesday, April 4th 2007 Consumers are already torn between choosing Blu-ray and HD DVD for their high definition format, but thats only the surface competition. If you dig a little deeper, you can find that there is another battle commencing between HDMI and DisplayPort, two different interface standards. Although HDMI seemed to the main choice among manufacturers, DisplayPort 1 has now been approved which could reignite the competition, giving yet more trouble for people moving to high definition. The main improvement of 1 is that it boasts High Bandwidth Digital Content Protection HDCP version 3, however groups backing HDMI still argue that HDMI can still do everything that DisplayPort can and more, urging manufacturers to stick to HDMI. But with the backing of large companies such as AMD, NVIDIA, HP, Lenovo and Samsung, DisplayPort wont be defeated too easily, and consumers could have some more HD headaches still to come. DisplayPort could well become the replacement for DVI among graphics card companies, whilst HDMI looks to have control of the TV based market. Although Blu-ray is still quite fresh on the shelves, owners of Blu-ray players may be concerned about news that the Blu-ray specifications are set to change this autumn. Although these players should remain adequate for general viewing, changes to BD-Java specifications mean that current devices may not be able to take full advantage of interactive features, including picture-in-picture. Unlike HD DVD players, many of the Blu-ray players dont all have Ethernet ports to let users upgrade the firmware, so users could be left stranded it isnt even clear if those that can take advantage of firmware upgrades will be compatible with the new specifications. Manufactures have confirmed that new disks will still play in first generation players, but early adopters may still be disappointed that their expensive hardware has become out-dated so quickly. The Inquirer noted that Slysoft promised its customers that their software would be able to remove Blu-ray Digital Rights Management DRM software by the end of this quarter. It seems that the people at Slysoft have not only done this, but accomplished their goal an entire month ahead of schedule. AnyDVDHD version 0 adds more than just true Blu-ray support. It also promises to run on Windows Vista and XP x64 along with all the other operating systems it supports. The free upgrade also removes region encoding. Now it seems that the only problem people will have with upgrading their PCs to support high-definition optical drives is affording the drive and Slysoft AnyDVD HD. You can get AnyDVD HD here, and if you already have it, you can patch yourself for Blu-ray support here. Samsung has been seen before as an official maker of Blu-ray hardware, and a supporter of the standard. So their announcement of an HD-DVD laptop took a lot of people by surprise. The Samsung M55 features a 17 widescreen capable of an impressive 1920×1200 resolution more than enough for 1080p HD DVDs, powered by an NVIDIA GeForce Go 7600 with 256MB GDDR3 graphics memory. The laptop also carries an HD-DVD player of course, 2GB of DDR2 667 system RAM, a Core 2 Duo T7200 processor, a 120GB hard drive, and support for all wireless standards, excluding 80 11N. All this is run with the help of Windows Vista Home Premium. The laptop will go on sale in Korea for KRW3m 3, 186/1, 627/2, Wednesday, February 28th 2007 Blu-ray has now sold more disks overall than rival format HD DVD, selling in a ratio of 100: Blu-ray has been outselling HD DVD for a few months now, but HD DVD had a head start in sales thanks to an earlier launch date, but due to PS3 there are now five times as many Blu-ray players in homes, making Blu-ray is the obvious choice for most consumers.

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