Hi there.
So lately, I have imported some DVD's from the states seeing as most Anime DVD's are over priced here in Australia.
I am compiling a digital back-up of my DVD collection, and I have heard AnyDVD is the way to go if you want to encrypt and get rid of DVD region coding, evidentially making the media region free.
My disc drive is a:
HP BD MLT UJ260
So, basically I pop my NTSC DVD into my (R4) encoded disc drive on my laptop, and I get an error message from AnyDVD along the lines of:
Any advice on how to bypass this issue, would be greatly appreciated..thanks!
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 11 of 11
-
-
The region assigned is Region 4.
I'm guessing the only way to work around this is by changing the drives region code? -
After doing some Googling, your HP drive matches a Matshita drive....and it is very possible you may be sh!t out of luck after all.
http://club.myce.com/f88/matshita-uj-812-a-101267/#post637240 -
Get an external optical drive, preferably USB3 if you have any USB3 ports on that laptop. Matshita drives are consistently the worst, and cannot be used for your purpose here without changing the region code. And you can only change the region five times.
-
Interesting. I wasn't aware that some drives check the drive and disc region codes in firmware -- then refuse to return the decryption keys when they don't match. Fortunately, none of my drives does this.
-
Yeah, this is news to me too, but fortunately I would never buy a Matshita drive. I'd advise Speeny to get a Pioneer external drive as I know that they don't do this ridiculous crap or he could look at the suggested website in the screen capture for a hacked firmware, but I'd guess there probably won't be any. It's free to look though.
-
Knowingly.....no....me either. It's labeled/rebadged as an HP.
Judging by the description on Google, most likely it's an OEM drive that came with the computer. I don't think anyone could have imagined in this day and age a drive would arrive to a consumer with these limitations.