See Monkey Do

October 8, 2009

Duplicating Cd’s and DVD’s

Filed under: Films, Living With Music, Pastime — admin @ 8:42 pm

DVD Duplication is excellent for low volume with quick turnaround. It is the process of duplicating data on an existing disc known as a DVD or Digital Versatile Disc. It is comparable the process to the duplication of a 3.5 diskette. Video and audio cassette. In all examples, you are replicating data onto a pre-existing disc. In DVD replication, the process begin swith a pre-made disc that is qualified to receive recorded data.

The features of DVD duplication process include a turn-around time of three to five business days. The printing options can be thermal, digital, or with photo finish. The type of media can either be CD or DVD .

Advantages include fast lead time since there is no need for longer machine set-up times or delays in glass mastering. DVD duplication is greatest for short run requirements needing quick lead time. It also proves cheaper in the long run considering there are no costs for glass mastering, costs for smaller quantity runs may be more reasonable. With the hi-tech printing machines, a good quality four-color process printing is available for the DVD packaging. Since the printing is done right from the electronic files, there are no film costs to worry about.

Various companies offer a complete line of DVD replication services that includes pre-mastering and verification, mastering, printing for manuals and booklets, label printing, and packaging.

A great number of services is available for all your DVD duplication needs. You just have to choose what is right for you and your funds.

September 28, 2009

Disney Look to Cash in on Marvel Brand

Filed under: Films — admin @ 11:19 am
The Walt Disney Company’s pending acquisition of Marvel Entertainment is the first “big” deal in the media industries in some time, and it comes when many have written off “traditional” media’s future.
The news is well documented–Marvel’s family of super-heros which this analyst fondly grew up with during the 1960s will now be part of the Disney family, but most importantly, will provide a huge amount of both existing and potential content for television, movies, DVD sales, merchandise, and hey, why not–even some new rides at Disney’s theme parks. With cartoons like Iron Man Armored Adventures already selling well, there could be a good case for Disney to make money from this business.
The price seems high, and as one analyst quoted in this article states is that “Disney is the only company that could do this deal.” It also continues the signal that Disney under Bob Iger is very different from the company headed by Micheal Eisner.
But will this acquisition provide a significant boost to Disney’s earnings and long-term growth prospects? Marvel had ran though many of its super-heros already, and the last two entrants of “Wolverine” and the “Watchmen” made money, but nothing to the tune of the Spider-Man or X-Men franchises. A new Iron Man sequel and a much anticipated “Captain America” and “Thor” are supposedly on the way, but movie audiences may be tiring of the super-hero genre.
Still, this is an exciting acquisition with a great deal of potential. Now it is up to Iger and team to make this all work.

April 2, 2008

Understanding Surround Sound Systems

Filed under: Films — admin @ 2:19 pm

Surround sound is the concept of expanding the spatial imaging of audio playback from 1 dimension (mono/Left-Right) to two or three dimensions. It is often employed for a more realistic audio environment, actively implemented in cinema sound systems, technical theatre, home entertainment, video arcades, computer gaming, and a growing number of other applications. Many popular surround sound formats have evolved over the years. They include ambisonics, quadraphonic, Dolby 5.1 Surround sound, DTS, and MP3 Surround.

Surround sound can be created using several methods. The simplest to understand uses several speakers around the listener to play audio coming from different directions. Another approach involves processing the audio using psychoacoustic sound localization methods to simulate a 3D sound field using headphones. The third approach, wave field synthesis, uses a very large number of speakers to generate the “audio hologram” of the original audio in the whole room (as of 2004 the only commercial implementation of this is Iosono). Surround sound is not limited to placement of speakers along a flat (2-dimensional) plane. Vertically-located audio sources can be considered.

Dolby Digital (DD) uses the AC-3 file format, which any Dolby Digital Decoder can decode to produce 5.1 audio. Dolby Digital is the technical name for Dolby’s multi-channel digital sound coding technique, more commonly referred to as Dolby 5.1. A six-channel sound coding process originally created by Dolby for theaters, AC-3 was subsequently adapted for home use and is now steadily becoming the most common sound format for DVD.

Six discrete audio channels:

•3 for speakers at the front - left (L), center (C), and right (R)
•2 for surround speakers at the side or rear - surround left (SL) and surround right (SR)
•1 low-frequency effects (LFE) channel carries supporting deep bass sound effects, ranging from 10 Hz to 120 Hz, which can for example be used by a subwoofer. (This is the ‘.1′ in ‘5.1′.)

DTS is an encode/decode process that delivers 5.1 channels of “master quality” audio on CD, CD-R, and DVD. Each DTS encoded disc represents a sonic “clone” of the original film soundtrack.

The difference between Dolby Digital (AC-3) and DTS is:

•DTS provides a deeper and tighter low frequency presence
•DTS allows the sound to breath - transparency
•AC-3 leaves the impression that something is missing from the mix
•At lower bit-rate AC-3 starts to sound like MP3’s encoded at a low-quality 96kbps
(artifacts)

DTS is more three dimensional. The sound actually moved forward from the individual speakers to sound more full. This fullness was most apparent with the music. Instead of simply coming from the speakers, the DTS filled the front soundstage not only side to side, but with more depth as well. Bass reproduction was also more defined in the DTS version, leaving the DD edition sounding muddy.

Dolby Digital incorporates dialog normalization, which alters the decoded level of the soundtrack. The typical setting reduces level by 4 dB; other reduction levels are possible. In most decoders, this leads to a reduction in signal-to-noise and dynamic range.

Dolby Digital also provides a “stereo down mixing” feature as a substitute for a dedicated stereo mix. However, many production engineers have admitted that they often have to modify the original 5.1 mixes in order to attain acceptable stereo down mixes. Therefore, the 5.1 mix on many Dolby Digital DVDs may differ from the original master.

5.1 Surround Sound Headphones:

While the traditional method of surround sound described above uses numerous speakers to produce the entire sound field, the surround sound mix is limited to a two-channel stereo mix when using headphones. That is why recent developments in surround sound technology include 5.1 surround sound headphones, to allow you to have the same sound quality and surround sound experience without waking the neighbors or disturbing roommates.

Mitchell Medford is an author and consultant for several consumer electronics manufacturers. Visit his website to learn more about home theater technology and plasma televisions.