Just posted at fh.org. If your wondering, this is far higher quality than the DVD. Its a big avi file and your not going to see a better quality copy of this film... , even if the film totally does suck donkey balls.
microbioz wrote:As most high definition material, the quality is amazing.
Judging by the size I think it's the same copy I have downloaded some time ago.
Specs:
size: 3.82 GB (or 3,921 MB or 4,015,232 KB or 4,111,597,568 bytes)
video: Windows Media Video V9 720p (1280x720 pixels)
audio: AC3, 48000Hz 384 kb/s total (5 chnls)
Screenshots:
http://img113.exs.cx/img113/5739/m16vu.jpg
http://img113.exs.cx/img113/2738/m20za.jpg
http://img113.exs.cx/img113/5827/m38it.jpg
yidaki wrote:you can use your computer and output to highresolution projector, or just watch it on your monitor directly.Superman wrote:looks very cool!
if only I had an HDTV..
no need for an expensive hdtv.
but, superhighbitrate stuff like this kills most cpu's, so a hardware mpeg2 decoding card is always appreciated
(hdtv is broadcasted in mpeg2, so if it's anything else, it's a transcoded/re-encoded copy, in which case alot of information has been lost and the high resolution isnt come to it's favour)
microbioz wrote:In fact, Microsoft recomends exactly that :
Minimal Configuration (Play 720p video)
2.4 GHz processor or equivalent
384 MB of RAM
64 MB video card
1024 × 768 screen resolution
16-bit sound card
Speakers
Optimum Configuration (Play 1080p video with 5.1 surround sound)
DirectX 9.0
3.0 GHz processor or equivalent
512 MB of RAM
128 MB video card
1920 × 1440 screen resolution
24-bit 96 kHz multichannel sound card
5.1 surround speaker system
mmjamie wrote:
- Code: Select all
Media Type : HDTV Rip
Resolution : 1280x720
Framerate : 23,976
Video Bitrate : 1805,76 kb/s
Audio Codec : AC3 - Dolby Laboratories, Inc
Audio Bitrate : 375kb/s
Audio Channel : 6
Size : 3,82 GB ~ (4.111.597.568 byte)
Its a Microsoft codec, and you need a decent PC to playback this file.