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First Certified DivX/DVD Player Released

An anonymous reader writes "According to this article, a company named KiSS Technology announced at CeBit that they are releasing the first certified DivX DVD players, the DP-450 and DP-500! They are supposed to be able to playback ALL versions of DivX content and digital rights management. I'm completely stoked on this, I would buy one of these in a snap. This could make the purchase of dvd burners slow down in my opinion." (And Yes, it plays Ogg Vorbis, too.) Ebay imports, anyone?

4 of 272 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Ok, I'll bite. by igotmybfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No. You'll download movies in DivX format, burn them onto CDR, and play those on this uber-player.

  2. DP-500 has 10/100 Ethernet by -tji · · Score: 4, Insightful


    I don't know about divx.. the thing that is very interesting to me is the network port. So, I can theoretically access my Linux file server, which has my MiniDV movies, exported to DVD VOB format. Also, as part of my creation process, I can watch them over the network, rather than burning DVD's as tests. And, once I'm done, I can have an easily accessed home movie archive via the network server.

    It could also access my MP3 library on that Linux file server.. Could be a nice, small, quiet media server to replace most of my HTPC (Home Theater PC) functionality (everything except the HDTV receiver/recorder).

  3. Re:Ok, I'll bite. by jilles · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In addition to the obvious convenience for e.g. Kazaa users, one could use this as a cheap alternative to creating dvd's from your homemovies. Just convert your homemovies to divx, burn them on a cheap cdr (as opposed to still very expensive dvdrs) and you have nice cheap good quality video that you can watch on your vcr.

    Second idea: cd companies could burn a divx video on along with the sound on a multisession cd. Should play just fine in any cd player and owners of PCs/Macs/Whatever or this cool device get a little extra.

    There's plenty of legal uses for this device. I want one even though I don't own a video camera :-).

    --

    Jilles
  4. Re:Yeah. Wicked. by Mattsson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah... But then you'd have a loud computer standing next to your tv and have a kludgy interface that probably would make you have a keyboard there too.
    Not to speak about boot time, shutdown time, fsck time, etc.
    It's the same as the difference between using your computer as a dvd player/cd player vs using a dedicated dvd player to watch your dvd's and play your music cd's in your livingroom.

    I haven't read the article, but I'll wager that it doesn't have a ethernetport though...
    That would be the major problem with this player. That you have to burn all your movies to cd before watching it.
    I'd love to have one of these that was also capable of playing movies and mp3's over the network from my fileserver... :/
    Think about it.
    Sit in your sofa, turn it on using your remote, 4 seconds later your browsing through your movie collection, 10 seconds after turning it on you start viewing your recently downloaded Hikaru no Go episode. =)

    You probably could do something like that using a "Linux in BIOS-eeprom" installation (to get fast boot times) and autoload some kind of special software that let you use a remote to browse the local harddrive or mounted nfs or smb shares.
    But I'll bet that doing this would take more than a few hours *and* probably cost more than the Kiss player.
    There are only a few select mainboards that work with the eeprom loaded linux, so you'd probably have to buy some new hardware to build a machine like that.
    And it would probably not be fan-less or harddrive free either. (Thus not being quiet enough to run while listening to music)

    Or you could get a X-box, chiping it and then install that mediaplayer thingie...
    But that's also expensive and loud. (The X-box makes a terrible racket compared to, say, a dvd-player)

    --
    /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)