Tips T0015
What is a DVD Region Lock?
A "DVD Region Lock"
is technology on DVD players that prevents those who
live in one region from successfully viewing a DVD movie
that was produced and distributed for a different region.
Although you could purchase a DVD movie in the United
States and mail it to someone in China ten months before
the DVD is released there, the DVD will not play on
the recipient's Region DVD player.
The movie industry separates the world
DVD market into six regions so distributors can focus
on one or two areas at a time and make it more profitable.
That's why a movie released in the United States and
Canada in the summer may not be released in other parts
of the world until autumn, winter, or even a year later.
The geographical regions are:
Region 1 - United States and Canada
Region 2 - Japan, Europe, South
Africa, Middle East, and Greenland
Region 3 - S. Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Parts of
Asia
Region 4 - Australia, New Zealand,
Latin America, and Mexico
Region 5 - Eastern Europe, Russia,
India, Africa
Region 6 - China
Region 0 - This will work on all other regions; Region
0 DVDs can be played worldwide but are still subject
to PAL discs and NTSC compatibility
What does this mean to you? If you only
view DVDs produced for the region you live in, knowing
which DVD player software can handle which regional
codes is unimportant. But if you ever purchase and view
DVDs across regions it is wise to keep current on region
coding methods because industry standards change. You
want to be sure that your DVDs and your DVD players
always match so that you can view movies trouble-free.
Those who frequently purchase across regions often attempt
to overcome this viewing problem with Code Free DVD
players.
Code Free players are DVD players that
have been altered to bypass the Region Lock restriction.
In response to their popularity, the movie industry
has created a new secure layer of coding called RCE
(Regional Code Enhancement). RCE prevents some of the
latest Region 1 DVD releases from playing on Code-Free
DVD players.
Even if you use a Code-Free DVD player
you still may run into problems playing DVDs that have
been produced for Japan or Great Britain. These countries
often use unique standards, such as NTSC (National Television
Standards Committee), PAL (Phase Alternating Line) and
SECAM (Sequential Color Memory). These standards dictate
differing display lines-per-resolution than those of
Region 1. For example:
NTSC up to 525 lines of
resolution
PAL up to 625 lines of resolution
SECAM up to 625 lines of resolution and
25 frames per second
So, if your DVD player and your DVD movies
do not always come from the same region, you may not
be able to view your movies due to industry-implemented
locks and differing national standards. So be alert
when you purchase from the world marketplace; always
check region codes before you purchase DVDs online.
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