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Page 1 of Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

PCs & Mobiles Forum

Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Georgia (Harmless) posted this on Saturday, 21st February 2004, 16:19

Hi,

I`m not sure if this is the right forum or not, but here goes. I have a new computer, a Compaq Presario desktop with a DVD drive. I`m in England and this is an English computer. However, I`m from the US and so I have DVDs from both the US and UK. How do I configure the computer in order to watch both?

Thanks,
Georgia

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Mike G (Elite) posted this on Saturday, 21st February 2004, 16:37

There are two things you need to consider: hardware region coding (in the DVD-ROM drive); and software region coding (in the program you`re using to watch DVDs - PowerDVD, WinDVD or whatever).

The software protection is easy to get around - just use DVDGenie to change or reset the region code.

Making the DVD-ROM drive region free is a bit more difficult, and may involve `flashing` the drive`s firmware (which can be risky). If you know the exact make and model of drive, you might be able to get a region-free firmware version from this site.

Alternatively, DVD Region Free is a safe, 100% software solution for making your drive region free, but given that it costs $40 (around the price of a new DVD-ROM drive!) I`d advise you to take your chances with firmware flashing before resorting to it.

Mike

This item was edited on Saturday, 21st February 2004, 16:38

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Georgia (Harmless) posted this on Saturday, 21st February 2004, 16:46

I`m not sure what my exact make and model are. My drive is a DVD player / CD-WR combo drive. I`m not sure if that makes any difference. If I use the DVDGenie alone will that allow me to play Region one movies as well as Region two, or do I have to use more drastic solutions.

I`m not sure what `flashing` the drive means and what do you mean by "risky"? Can `flashing` the drive harm it? I`d rather not take the change on ruining my new computer if I can avoid it.

Georgia

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

ebony.branch (Elite) posted this on Saturday, 21st February 2004, 19:50

I asked the same question a few months ago and got flamed for wasting everyone`s time!

I tried DVDGenie etc. as outlined above - it seemed to upset some other software I`d just installed (the notoriously buggy and sensitive Pinnacle Studio) so I had to uninstall the region hacking stuff.

The, a few weeks ago, I posted a similar question elsewhere and received the following reply:

"Have a look at afterdawn.com for DVD 4 3 - it lets you play any region dvds without affecting your hardware bios or player software."

It`s worked ok for me so far - anyone else had any experience of this programme?

Eb.

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

cynic (Elite) posted this on Sunday, 22nd February 2004, 18:37

flashing your dvd means reprogramming the flash memory that contains the software on the DVD that includes the region checking element to a version that doesn`t. If the programming fails leaving a corrupt flash content your DVD drive will obviously no longer work.
There are some additional problems with playing dvds on PCs if your video card has a TV out but doesn`t support macrovision properly as the player software will complain in some cases that a copyright protected DVD can`t be played (this affects DVDs from any region) . The solution is generally to reinstall earlier drivers for the video card but this may of course cause problems with other software that requires the latest versions to work.

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

ste_p0270 (Elite Donator) posted this on Sunday, 22nd February 2004, 18:52

Georgia,

why don`t you just buy another dvd-rom drive (£28ish) and set it to region 1
leave your existing drive set at region 2, then you won`t have the hassle of
flashing the firmware.

Ste.

This item was edited on Sunday, 22nd February 2004, 18:52

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Mark Oates (Reviewer) posted this on Sunday, 22nd February 2004, 23:39

Go to Control Panel in your start menu, then click System, Hardware, Device Manager and finally DVD/CD-ROM DRIVES. You should get a little icon with the name of your drive in it. Come back and tell us and we should be able to point you in the right direction.

If you have a new computer, any drive in it will be fixed to only allow five region changes before locking up to a single region. You may be able to flash the firmware in your drive (the free option, but it does involve a very very slight risk to the drive if there`s a problem during the flashing process), which will enable software like DVDGenie to work; otherwise, download DVDRegionFree for $40. Not all drives are flashable, because there isn`t hacked firmware available for every drive on the market.

J Mark Oates



Do not be alarmed. That strange sound is simply
my mind boggling.

This item was edited on Sunday, 22nd February 2004, 23:45

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

cassius76 (Elite) posted this on Monday, 23rd February 2004, 19:59

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Georgia (Harmless) posted this on Sunday, 7th March 2004, 19:01

Sorry for taking so long to get back to you. My DVD drive is a SAMSUNG SDRW/DVD SM-348B. Does that help?

RE: Trying to View DVDs on my computer from other regions

Mark Oates (Reviewer) posted this on Sunday, 7th March 2004, 21:22

This could be tricky. You can apply a firmware hack to this drive for free, but there are complications. Click here for a page that has all the relevant details. Go to "download search" and type in "Samsung SM348B". Sorry a direct link doesn`t work :/

You do need to be reasonably experienced with tinkering around with your computer to do a firmware upgrade as it can involve making a DOS system floppy disk and there is a chance you could find your machine no longer recognises the combo drive. If you don`t feel that confident, then don`t try the firmware option whatever you do. DVDRegionFree costs about £30 and works without causing problems.

The link at the top of this posting is for a site called "The firmware page". If you search it and its forum you`re bound to find enough information about flashing firmware to decide whether or not you want to give it a go.

Good luck either way.

J Mark Oates



Do not be alarmed. That strange sound is simply
my mind boggling.

This item was edited on Sunday, 7th March 2004, 21:26

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