1 Movie & Media Player for all discs, files and video streaming". ^ "CyberLink Launches PowerDVD 19 for UltraHD Blu-ray and 8K Videos".^ "Customer Support - Why is 3D media playback NOT supported in CyberLink PowerDVD 20_365, and PowerPlayer 365".^ "CyberLink Releases PowerDVD 10 ULTRA 3D Mark II to Enable Blu-ray 3D on PCs".
During 2016, PowerDVD achieved certification from the Blu-ray Disc Association (BDA) for the playback of Ultra HD Blu-ray Discs, and became the world's first and only software player to pass the BD-ROM 4.0 PC Application Software License process. The latest version PowerDVD 20 released on Apincludes support for the new Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc and 8K video format. htmlĬyberLink PowerDVD is a universal media player for movie discs, video files, photos and music. ( April 2017) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message)ġ997 24 years ago ( 1997) Įnglish, French, German, Italian, Peninsular Spanish, simplified Chinese, traditional Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Brazilian Portuguese Please improve this by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Here's a blog post I wrote that shows how much storage space is needed for these high resolution formats.This article relies too much on references to primary sources. I also think this would be really appealing to people with high fidelity audio electronic components, including speakers. Then some people claiming they cannot hear any difference between 192kbps MP3s and CD might have some incentive to actually buy the music in an improved format.
This type of recording would finally be a noticeable improvement compared to 16bit/44.1 CD. And I really think recording artists should start offering concert videos in 24bit/96kHz 5.1. I'd be happy if they'd just keep the 24bit/48kHz instead of coverting the bit depth to 16bit/48kHz. Has anybody actually come across any 7.1 soundtracks? BTW, the link to the engadget article just brings up a blank page. And they're probably correct that nobody in the foreseeable future will use this high of a sampling rate in a surround track, but I think we might see some in 24bit/96kHz for 5.1 and probably not higher than 24bit/48kHz for 7.1. Not to nitpick, but nobody uses a sampling rate of 196kHz.