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<description>Doom9.net - The Definitive DVD Backup Resource</description>
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<title>1/17 -  Just popping back up for a minute - it's been a very busy week. 
 Unlike in the past they really...</title>
<link>http://www.doom9.net/</link>
<description><![CDATA[Just popping back up for a minute - it's been a very busy week. 
 Unlike in the past they really made us work this time round..<br><br>
 It hasn't been a good week for big content: their first trial against 
 a BitTorrent site tracker (OiNK) in the UK <u><a href="http://www.zeropaid.com/news/87801/oink-admin-found-not-guilty/" >resulted 
 in a not guilty verdict</a></u>, the French authority in charge of disconnecting 
 people from the Internet for copyright infringement <u><a href="http://www.zeropaid.com/news/87704/french-three-strikes-agency-logo-violates-copyright/" >has 
 been found guilty of copyright infringement themselves</a></u> and the 
 <u><a href="http://www.zeropaid.com/news/87781/riaa-digital-music-price-fixing-case-reinstated/" >online 
 music price fixing case against the RIAA label has been reinstated.</a></u><br><br>
 And, after all the crying about losing money to piracy, guess what 
 happened - <u><a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB20001424052748704789404574636531903626624.html" >revenue 
 from movie theaters is up 10% in 2009 over 2008</a></u> despite the 
 financial crisis. So, dare I ask if we really need to have three 
 strikes, laws against camcording, etc. if people still spend their 
 hard earned dollar on movie tickets despite the latest CAM release 
 never being too far away?<br><br>
 Remember the HD-DVD/DVD combo discs? Well, <u><a href="http://www.blu-ray.com/news/?id=4040" >they're 
 back</a></u>, almost... instead of the now defunct HD-DVD side they 
 simply sport a Blu-ray side. <br><br>
 <u><a href="http://smplayer.sourceforge.net/" >SMPlayer 
 0.6.8.3430</a></u> bundles the latest SVN release of SMPlayer with the 
 latest multithreaded build of mplayer.<br><br>
 <u><a href="http://www.progdvb.com/" >ProgDVB 6.31.1</a></u> 
 uses the NIT information in the channel scanner.<br><br>]]>
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<title>1/11 -  As announced, I have to leave again for a bit today - if time allows 
 I might post some news in...</title>
<link>http://www.doom9.net/</link>
<description><![CDATA[As announced, I have to leave again for a bit today - if time allows 
 I might post some news in the forum during the week or just updated 
 the page on the weekends when I'll hopefully be able to go home.<br><br>
 In the meantime, finally for once I can write about a band I've 
 actually seen live - in a move that will undoubtedly displease the 
 recording industry, Swedish band Rednex is releasing their latest 
 single not through traditional, industry approved, but instead through 
 fan approved means: <u><a href="http://torrentfreak.com/rednex-diss-record-labels-partner-with-the-pirate-bay-100107/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A%20Torrentfreak%20%28Torrentfreak%29" >The 
 Pirate Bay</a></u>. And to further aggravate the matter, their take 
 on where the music industry is headed is certainly not in the line 
 of Big Content ;)<br><br>
 And I know it's repetitive, but we need to keep calling them on 
 their shenanigans - so while Rupert Murdoch has recently gone on 
 a crusade against content aggregators and dissed Fair Use, now that 
 his Fox News network is being sued for copyright infringement,<u><a href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100108/1446417680.shtml" > 
 suddenly the defense is that mockery of a concept called Fair Use</a></u>...<br><br>
 <u><a href="http://www.progdvb.com/" >ProgDVB 6.30.3</a></u> 
 contains a reworked time correction mechanism for EPG, allows recording 
 of subtitles in TS format and fixes crashes that occurred when using 
 the mouse wheel.<br><br>
 <u><a href="http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=147945&page=44" >DGNVDec 
 build 2001</a></u> moves field operation options from DGIndexNVto DGDecodeNV/DGMultiDecodeNV, 
 fixes backward steeping by GOP for program streams, fixes lockups 
 when serving MKV files and navigating near the end of the file, 
 contains some performance improvements and an up-to-date documentation.<br><br>
 Finally, I could start listing all the new gadgets announced at 
 CES last week, but let's sum it up in one sentence (at least as 
 far as Blu-ray is concerned): profile 2.0 seems to be the standard 
 now, players are booting up faster than ever, most players get some 
 kind of Internet connectivity used to stream a variety of content, 
 and then there's 3D.<br><br>]]>
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<title>1/6 -  Happy New Year. It took me a little longer to get back on the horse 
 than I anticipated, and I...</title>
<link>http://www.doom9.net/</link>
<description><![CDATA[Happy New Year. It took me a little longer to get back on the horse 
 than I anticipated, and I have to leave again for 3 weeks shortly, 
 but after that I should be around a lot more.<br><br>
 So let's recap what has happened in 2010 so far, hopefully in chronological 
 order: <br><br>
 First of all, France's three strikes law went into effect - that 
 is, almost: <u><a href="http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/01/france-three-strikes-law-delayed-by-govts-own-data-watchdog.ars" >Unless 
 the national privacy watchdog signs off</a></u>, the party at RIAA/MPAA 
 central cannot start.<br><br>
 <u><a href="http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?p=1359294#post1359294" >DGDecNV 
 build 2000</a></u> fixes random access for MPEG-2 program streams and 
 fixes reversed fields in the info dialog.<br><br>
 Then we have the <u><a href="http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=151733" >beta 
 test of a new input method for x264</a></u> - the new input method allows 
 to open almost any file without AviSynth and can handle variable 
 framerate content without timecode file.<br><br>
 Haven't we hard that being called managed copy before? Just before 
 CES opens its door, the MPAA members have come up with yet another 
 layer of DRM - the <u><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/04/technology/04video.html" >Digital 
 Entertainment Content Ecosystem</a></u>, or DECE, should allows us to 
 play content on any device. That is, as long as it remains wrapped 
 in DRM and each device has to get authorization from the mothership 
 to be played. Now why does that remind me of DIVX? By the way, Disney 
 is not on board - they have their own little DRM party called KeyChest.<br><br>
 <u><a href="http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=143716" >BD 
 Rebuilder 0.31.06</a></u> now uses B-frames for the high speed option, 
 changes the default CRF values to approximate quality on extras, 
 updates to the latest build of x264 and fixes some bugs.<br><br>
 DivX hasn't been on top of things for quite a bit now - the advent 
 of cheap, AVC capable hardware came before they were ready for it. 
 Now they're trying to get back on top with <u><a href="http://www.divx.com/de/electronics/divx-tv" >DivX 
 TV</a></u>.<br><br>
 Finally, plans for 3D Blu-ray have already been announced but here's 
 the<u><a href="http://www.highdefdiscnews.com/?p=33257" > 
 logo for it</a></u>, and after adding support for BD-Live, online video 
 sources, <u><a href="http://www.engadget.com/2010/01/06/new-lg-bd590-blu-ray-players-sports-a-250gb-hard-drive/" >LG 
 is also adding harddisks to their latest Blu-ray player lineup</a></u>. 
 Will players soon dub as a small NAS?<br><br>]]>
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<title>12/31 -  Older news can be found here.                                                                       ...</title>
<link>http://www.doom9.net/</link>
<description><![CDATA[Older news can be found <u><a href="http://www.doom9.net/Old_news/november09.htm">here</a></u>.<br><br>]]>
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