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Blu-ray or Bluray rips (once known as BDRip) are encoded directly from a Blu-ray disc source (usually from the Region A/USA Blu-Rays) to a 2160p, 1080p or 720p (depending on the source), and use the x264 or x265 codec. [clarification needed] They can be ripped from BD25, BD50 disc (or UHD Blu-ray at higher resolutions or bitrates), and even ...
The first 50 GB dual-layer Blu-ray Disc release was the movie Click, which was released on October 10, 2006. As of July 2008, over 95% of Blu-ray movies/games are published on 50 GB dual layer discs with the remainder on 25 GB discs. [10] 85% of HD DVD movies are published on 30 GB dual layer discs, with the remainder on 15 GB discs. [11] [12]
It claimed that, unlike TDK's and Panasonic's 100 GB discs, this disc would be readable on standard Blu-ray Disc drives that were currently in circulation, and it was believed that a firmware update was the only requirement to make it readable by then-current players and drives. [70] In October 2007, they revealed a 100 GB Blu-ray Disc drive. [71]
The BDrip/BRrip distinction and general size is respected in the Scene, but external groups like YIFI just do whatever they see fit, often doing very small, low(er) quality encodes even when basing themselves directly on BD sources, or tagging as BDrips when recoding; they just aren't reliable, but the descripted is still the generally ...
The sizes of the archives within the distributed file vary from the traditional 3½″ floppy disk (1.44 MB) or extra-high density disk (2.88 MB) to 5 MB, 15 MB (typical for CD images) or 20 MB (typical for CD images of console releases), 50 MB files (typical for DVD images), and 100 MB (for dual-layer DVD images).
Ultra HD Blu-ray (4K Ultra HD, UHD-BD, or 4K Blu-ray) [2] [3] is a digital optical disc data storage format that is an enhanced variant of Blu-ray. [4] Ultra HD Blu-ray supports 4K UHD (3840 × 2160 pixel resolution) video at frame rates up to 60 progressive frames per second, [4] encoded using High-Efficiency Video Coding. [4]
This chart shows the most common display resolutions, with the color of each resolution type indicating the display ratio (e.g., red indicates a 4:3 ratio).
50 144 60 85 240 10 bpc (30 bit/px) 30 100 30 60 200 5120 × 2880 (16∶9) 8 bpc (24 bit/px) 30 100 30 60 200 10 bpc (30 bit/px) 30 85 30 50 144 Only the highest standard frequencies (24 / 30 / 50 / 60 / 75 / 85 / 100 / 120 / 144 / 200 / 240) are listed. CVT-RB timing format and uncompressed RGB or YC B C R 4:4:4 color mode are assumed.