Do any hardware DVD / blueray / multimedia players play DV and/or MJPEG? With recent popularity of USB2 and network connections, and ease of DV and MJPEG decoding, I am surprised players are not adding this. Would be nice to plug a USB hard drive with a library of videos from camcorder (DV) and camera (MJPEG), and get them played without having to encode to MPEG2/DivX/AVC or connect a computer to TV. There must be high end $$$ hardware that can play DV, but I am thinking about cheap consumer players like Philips DVD/DivX players and WD HD player.
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DV and Mjpeg are considered "old tech" and not played by much any more. Apple ditched firewire as a standard port on the last model of Mac Book Pro's. Even when DV was in, it wasn't really catered for outside of the PC. Yes, you can by DV playback decks, and some DVD recorders had DV in/out ports from direct recording, but this was converted to mpeg-2 on the way in, not stored as DV.
Like it or not, AVCHD is the way of the consumer future. If you want to use more practical formats, you have to pay or stay in the PC realm.Read my blog here.
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I don't know of any such players and the WD HD player doesn't support those either.
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Originally Posted by guns1inger
The issue for playback is 25Mb/s bit rate for DV and greater for quality MJPEG. These are considered intermediate editing formats not distribution formats. I routinely play out DV video to my various TV sets via a Canopus ADVC from edit programs, MCE, VLC or WinDV.
As HD video becomes popular at the consumer end, high bit rate playback is becoming a necessity. The current cener of attention is the Blu-Ray player which uses MPeg2, h.264 or VC-1 codecs. As a subset of h.264 they allow non-DRM playback of AVCHD to accommodate consumer camcorders.
Media players like the Western Digital or MCE Extenders use generic decoder chipsets that do not support DV or MJPEG formats mainly because of low user demand and added royalty costs.Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about -
Originally Posted by edDV
DV is still the best edit format, although the colour cost of the compression at the consumer level (and the generally poor quality of optics at the consumer level) are still the big disappointment of the format.
However none of this has anything to do with playback support. If all the camera manufacturers have pulled away from the format at the consumer level, why would anyone provide playback support for it. They consider it dead as far as new business is concerned. Rightly or wrongly.Read my blog here.
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Originally Posted by guns1inger
We also need to separate consumer MiniDV tape format from the DV video format (DVCAM, DVCPro and digitally stored DV).
So my point is, DV format and DV editing will remain so long as SD video is used. This is similar to saying DVD is not going to die anytime soon. IMO Blu-Ray has not succeeded in replacing DVD. AVCHD is a proprietary placeholder format for consumer HD camcorders. The consumer HD format wars are still wide open.
Pro HD video is converging on XDCAM MPeg2 based formats (including HDV) and intraframe AVC or wavelet solutions (e.g. AVC-Intra and various digital intermediates).Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
http://www.kiva.org/about
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