2018-12-07, 23:51
Is it even possible to rip to MKV w/DV dual stream intact? Thought it wasn't possible as yet, only w/full ISO or m2ts?
(2018-12-07, 23:20)DaMacFunkin Wrote: Hi they are dual stream, there is no way to rip a 4K DV blu ray to single stream, both streams are needed.Yes. Can the dual-stream DV be ripped to MKV with the DV 'helper' stream remaining intact?
Quote:I figured FTV4k stick would be able do this as a DV device, as you say the ATV 4K can play them back.
(2018-12-08, 00:46)wrxtasy Wrote: Pre 2019 "Master Series" - Sony DV capable 4K HDR TV's were so woefully underpowered Sony had to get Dolby to develop a special Low Latency DV profile for them to offload DV picture processing from the TV's to the DV capable media or UHD Bluray players. LG's DV capable TV's had no such problems.
(2018-12-08, 07:27)Photonboy Wrote: H264 deinterlacing?Interlaced h.264 is used for Live and Recorded TV in lots of countries (the US is unusual in using MPEG2 for HDTV - almost all of Europe is h.264 for HDTV broadcasting)
Just curious but WHERE are you getting H264 that is interlaced instead of progressive? I just don't see why anybody would do that. Any device that can play H264 content can do it progressively anyway so why add the complication of interlacing that can create issues when merging the fields again?
(2018-12-08, 07:46)Photonboy Wrote: Update:
4K Netflix range is 8Mbps to 16Mbps... that's actually doable on a crappy 2.4GHz network so as long as the Internet download bandwidth is sufficient most 2.4GHz or 5GHz wi-fi networks should be fine.
(2018-12-08, 00:46)wrxtasy Wrote: There is not even a standardised way of muxing dual layer DV UHD Bluray Rips into a .mkv file.Sorry my bad then, I just presumed that because dvdfab etc would mix out the second video stream in a DV blu ray that that was how it was working on the Apple TV.
No media playback software on the market that can playback Dual Layer DV Bluray .iso’s either. It’s all proprietary Dolby tech.
All the DV streaming content from Netflix, Prime etc. is using a specific DV streaming profile.
Pre 2019 "Master Series" - Sony DV capable 4K HDR TV's were so woefully underpowered Sony had to get Dolby to develop a special Low Latency DV profile for them to offload DV picture processing from the TV's to the DV capable media or UHD Bluray players. LG's DV capable TV's had no such problems.
(2018-12-08, 10:59)DaMacFunkin Wrote:(2018-12-08, 00:46)wrxtasy Wrote: There is not even a standardised way of muxing dual layer DV UHD Bluray Rips into a .mkv file.Sorry my bad then, I just presumed that because dvdfab etc would mix out the second video stream in a DV blu ray that that was how it was working on the Apple TV.
No media playback software on the market that can playback Dual Layer DV Bluray .iso’s either. It’s all proprietary Dolby tech.
All the DV streaming content from Netflix, Prime etc. is using a specific DV streaming profile.
Pre 2019 "Master Series" - Sony DV capable 4K HDR TV's were so woefully underpowered Sony had to get Dolby to develop a special Low Latency DV profile for them to offload DV picture processing from the TV's to the DV capable media or UHD Bluray players. LG's DV capable TV's had no such problems.
So is there a a way to create a single stream DV file from UHD blu ray?
Thanks.
(2018-12-08, 07:39)Photonboy Wrote: 4K over wi-fi:@Photonboy thx for sharing
I tested the 4K Fire TV with my 5GHz network (Archer C7 router). Router in basement and stick on 2nd floor. This stick has very, very good wi-fi. Here's some info:
1) 5GHz network shows as barely connected in 4K Fire TV setup (I forget the word but a better 5GHz network would give a much better signal)
2) 58Mbps, 4K video played fine despite this weak connection
3) 120Mbps, 4K video had buffering issues
4) 4K BluRay I compressed was only 12Mbps (HEVC/H265) but looked about same as original
5) 4K Netflix is probably less than 10Mbps
*So the 4K Fire TV is very capable to play back 4K content as long as the bitrate isn't too high for your network. Anything streamed over the Internet is probably compressed enough it's a non-issue.
Unless you are streaming UNCOMPRESSED, 4K BLURAY or similar you are likely to not have issues if you have 5GHz. If you only have 2.4GHz I can only report that 58Mbps was too much for me but 30Mbps is probably doable (again depending on router, obstructions and distance).
(2018-12-08, 12:53)noggin Wrote:So how are Apple TV users re-muxing their streams to be able to playback in DV?(2018-12-08, 10:59)DaMacFunkin Wrote:(2018-12-08, 00:46)wrxtasy Wrote: There is not even a standardised way of muxing dual layer DV UHD Bluray Rips into a .mkv file.Sorry my bad then, I just presumed that because dvdfab etc would mix out the second video stream in a DV blu ray that that was how it was working on the Apple TV.
No media playback software on the market that can playback Dual Layer DV Bluray .iso’s either. It’s all proprietary Dolby tech.
All the DV streaming content from Netflix, Prime etc. is using a specific DV streaming profile.
Pre 2019 "Master Series" - Sony DV capable 4K HDR TV's were so woefully underpowered Sony had to get Dolby to develop a special Low Latency DV profile for them to offload DV picture processing from the TV's to the DV capable media or UHD Bluray players. LG's DV capable TV's had no such problems.
So is there a a way to create a single stream DV file from UHD blu ray?
Thanks.
Not available to mere mortals. (There may be some high-end proprietary Dolby mastering software that allows for this - but there's nothing available to general Kodi users)