User Guide

User Guide
Appendix: Cyberlink PowerDVD User's Guide

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Appendix: Cyberlink PowerDVD User's Guide

What is MPEG?

What is Pan&Scan, Letterbox and Widescreen?

What is NTSC and PAL?

What is DirectShow?


What is MPEG?

MPEG, simply, is an acronym short for the Moving Picture Experts Group which belongs to the family of ISO/IEC standards (International Organization for Standardization and International Electrotechnical Commission). It is a compression technology for digital video and audio signals intended for consumer distribution. Included in the MPEG family are:

  • MPEG-1 (Audio/Video)

  • MP3 or MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3 (Audio)

  • MPEG-2 (Audio/Video)

  • MPEG-4 (Interactive Multimedia System)

  • MPEG-7 (Multimedia Database & Retrieval)

MPEG technology is defined as a bit-stream representation for synchronized digital audio and digital non-interlaced or interlaced (MPEG-2 includes both) video compressed to fit into a certain bandwidth:

  • MPEG-1 -- 1.5-4-0 Mbps (megabits per second)

  • MPEG-2 -- 4.0-10.0 Mbps

MPEG is responsible for multiplexing and synchronizing one video stream with a single or multiple audio streams. MPEG-1 was designed to reproduce VHS/VCR quality in a digital format, while the MPEG-2 concept, similar to MPEG-1, is intended to cover a wider range of applications including DVD quality and its primary goal of an all-digital transmission of broadcast TV at coded bitrates between 4 and 9 Mbps.


What is Pan&Scan, Letterbox and Widescreen?

Ever since the conception of DVDs, you have heard of this terminology repeatedly but never had a clue as to what they are. You're in luck, because this section is exactly intended for explaining these prevalent DVD terms.

Starting off, everyone should consider the transference and hardship of all those involved when a movie has had its run at the box office (or your local theater) and is about to be shipped onto DVD, VCD, LD (laserdisc), or even VHS. The majority of movies are filmed using width to height ratios of 2:35:1 to 1:66:1. Why you may ask? Simple. Our eyes are suited for viewing "wider" screens, for it basically is in line with our vision. You may even proclaim that the standard televisions nowadays are ill-suited for our dear eyes but movie theaters' screen sizes are perfect for viewing video content.

Transferring is tremendously tricky, so that's where Pan&Scan, letterbox, and widescreen displays come into play:

  • The Pan&Scan feature is available for some DVD software or hardware players that allow users to watch the movie in its original aspect ratio (i.e. a lot wider than 4:3) without those black bars! Since most users have standard television sets (4:3), they won't be able to view the entire area at the same time but are allowed to control which portion they want to view.

  • Letterbox simply means a 4:3 or 1:33:1 ratio, which describes TV set ratios found in the majority of everyone's home. When watching movies with wider screen ratios on your letterboxed TV, the sides are cut off. If you see black bars, that means the screen ratio is not 4:3 and therefore more closely resemble its original screen aspect ratio, but you are sacrificing screen area when this occurs.

  • Widescreen's ratio is 16:9 or 1:66:1 where widescreen TVs will soon replace all those 4:3 letterbox TVs once everyone saves up! New TVs, such as HDTVs (High Definition Television), will utilize this ratio.


What is NTSC and PAL?

The NTSC (National Television Systems Committee) and PAL (Phase Alteration Line) are television standards used for commercial television broadcasting around the world. Both NTSC and PAL use interlaced content at thirty frames per second (approx. 60 fields) and 25 frames per second (approx. 50 fields) respectively.

Because fields in interlaced signals are independent of other fields within a given frame, problems arise when two fields--containing different imagery data--are interleaved for display on non-interlaced computer monitors. When video imagery with superfluous movement is displayed, it usually causes motion artifacts (visual imperfections). DVD titles whose content originates directly from films produced from Hollywood studios (24 frames/second) won't possess motion artifacts.


What is DirectShow?

Formerly known as ActiveMovie back in the prehistoric days, Microsoft's DirectShow is a multimedia architecture and a dramatic improvement over the previous one known as the Media Control Interface (MCI). Because of the inherent limitations of the 16-bit MCI such as the requirement of bloated single-function drivers, DirectShow was designed to accommodate the vast array of new and emerging multimedia hardware and technologies that the aforementioned could not. Based on Microsoft's Component Object Model (COM), MCI's major headache of inconsistent interfaces is now a thing of the past when using the multithreading and multitasking DirectShow.

DirectShow is one of the DirectX technology components which also includes DirectDraw, DirectSound, DirectInput, Direct3D, DirectAnimation, DirectMusic, etc. DirectX, a set of low-level application programming interfaces (APIs) for creating high-performance multimedia applications with its overriding design goal being speed, was originally designed to enhance Windows 95's gaming platform. But with the advent of the DVD, DBS and a host of other technologies, today it serves as the gateway in accessing different hardware peripherals and acting as an integral part of Windows OS (98 and ME editions) and Windows NT 5.0

PowerDVD is fully compliant with DirectX technology. One of the essential components of PowerDVD is DirectDraw, which accesses hardware directly and thereby increases graphics speed. It gives developers a common user interface and works in conjunction with HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer) and HEL (Hardware Emulation Layer). HAL allows developers to access hardware devices without explicit knowledge of the brand's model or its details. HEL is where DirectX features can be emulated if the device itself does not support those features.

For more information, please visit the Microsoft DirectX® page.


Please read all restrictions and disclaimers.


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