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Emigrating DVD's?

RenHoek asks: "I found the love of my life on the internet, and I'm about to emigrate from the Netherlands to the USA. This leaves me with a big problem. My carefully collected DVD's are region 2 (Europe) and the USA is region 1. So except for buying a new DVD player (220 volts in Europe, 110 in the USA) does this also mean I have to sell my entire DVD collection here, and try to buy everything together in the US? It would seem I have a legal right to watch my legally bought DVDs, but region locking prohibits this, and circumventing region locking carries stiff penalties. Emailing the MPAA resulted in deafening silence. So what does the slashdot community advise? Should I follow the new American dream and start suing the moment I enter the US for the fact that the MPAA is either taking away my rights, or forcing me into a DMCA crime?" Thank god there are regionless DVD players! For those who don't know about them, which ones do you recommend and where are the best places to buy them?

4 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. ah, the noble apostrophe by Jamie+Zawinski · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What property or posession of the "Emigrating DVD" are we discussing again?

    Contrary to the opinion of a bunch of know-nothing high school teachers and linguists, the apostrophe does, in fact, mean "Look out! Here comes an S!"

    1. Re:ah, the noble apostrophe by Howie · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Dude, you missed off the apostrophe and the t. Err, and you mispelled possession.

      [Ahhh, post #500 for me, and it's a dictionary flame. At least it's jwz (I enjoy your site of rants, and your webcollage - thanks for the entertainment).]

      Best example I have seen of this is a sign by the roadside advertising "Xma's Tree's".

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
    2. Re:ah, the noble apostrophe by jamus · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Funny, my college grammar book (The Modern Writer's Handbook), and the MLA handbook gives cases where it's proper to use the apostrophe for plurals.

      From The Modern Writer's Handbook: Add an apostrophe and s to form the plural of words being named, letters of the alphabet, abbreviations, numerals, and symbols. The apostrophe _may_ be obmitted with capitals without periods: TVs, UFOs, PhDs.

      So, according to this rule, DVD's, DVDs, and dvd's are all okay. "dvds" is not.

      The MLA handbook says pretty much the same, except do not use them with numerals or abbreviations.

      In this case, DVDs and dvds are correct, while dvd's and DVD's are incorrect.

      I haven't learned that much from these books, but I do remember some of the obscure rules...

      To be on-topic, wouldn't it be possible to use DeCSS to rip a DVD, transcode it from PAL to NTSC, and then burn it to a DVD-R?

      It may not be cost effective, seeing that the last time I looked DVD-R's are about the same price as DVD movies.

  2. Re:Don't you get it. by danielrose · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Bah! Thats all FUD! You just need to load up linux on your DVD player! Then imagine a beowulf cluster of regionless DVD players! What is so hard about the slashdot way??

    --
    i hate pansy republicans