Info and forum posts by 'John Ingham'
This user hasn't used our main site yet, so has no main account at present.
Joined on: Wednesday, 19th September 2001, 15:44, Last used: Wednesday, 19th September 2001, 15:44
Access Level: Harmless
About this user: I recently purchased a Samsung DVD-VCR combo model DVD-V5000 - also known in Europe as SV-DVD1E. I work in the production of Educational Media; ie Video tape and Video Disc (DVD, SVCD and VCD).
This user has posted a total of 1 messages. On average, since joining, this user has posted 0 messages a day, or 0 messages a week. In the last 30 days, this user has posted 0 messages, which is on average 0 messages a day.
Recent Messages Posted:
Answer to question "Can the Samsung SV-DVD1E read DVD-Rs and CD-Rs?
I recently purchased a Samsung DVD-V5000 (also known in Europe as the SV-DVD1E). According to the Instruction Manual, "DO NOT play CD-ROM, CDI, CD-R and DVD-ROM in this player!" What does this mean - will they damage the unit? In my view this is unlikely. I think what Samsung is really trying to say is that disks not specifically authored (or purposed) for playback in a DVD/CD set-top box will not play.
The good news though is that I HAVE achieved successful playback of both DVD-Rs and CD-Rs on my DVD-V5000 provided they have been properly authored for video. DVD-Rs burned on a Macintosh G4 using iDVD software work seamlessly with a very nice graphical selection menu. And provided they are compressed using Asparte MPAK and burned using "Toast", VCD-Rs also play well, except for a lack of a menu; items just played in order one after the other.
But disks burned on the same Macintosh G4 merely by "dragging and dropping" MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 files onto the DVD-R or CD-R will not play on my Samsung DVD-V5000, even though these same disks play on a suitably equipped computer! I assume this is because such disks don`t have the directory structure etc. expected by the DVD-V5000.
A correctly authored SuperVideoCD-RW sometimes played well on my DVD-V5000, but as often "juddered" with fields apparently in the wrong order (ie 1324 instead of 1234). I have yet to determine if this is due to the SuperVideoCD or the CD-RW?
Finally, in answer to a different thread, an MP-3 disk played fine after a somewhat lengthy loading sequence during which all the MP-3 files on the disk were found (even though some were buried several layers deep). The names of the items were truncated to about 8 characters and displayed "flat" in a crude menu hiding the disk`s directory structure. Selection was by cursor control but playback was quite satisfactory.
Overall then the Samsung DVD-V5000 (SV-DVD1E) is quite versatile. Now if I can only find a hack for the Macrovision...