![]() If you're looking to buy a Blu-ray drive for your PC, then save yourself a lot of money and look for one with an older version of PowerDVD bundled as OEM software. A DVD-only version (CyberLink PowerDVD 10 Standard) is available for £32, but it's still a pretty steep price for sharper DVD playback. If you're looking for Blu-ray playback software, then PowerDVD is still a great choice – though we're increasingly amazed at the price of such software given you can buy an actual Blu-ray player for as little as £100 now. DVD playback is outstanding though, with great post-processing and upscaling tools that don't require any technical know-how to use. This approach reduces Media Center's flexibility, for example, you can't quickly flick to the EPG to check on your TV recordings while your movie plays in a window. Speaking of Media Center, a PowerDVD 10 icon appears in its menu, but this simply launches the programme over the top of Media Center, with an identical colour scheme to help it blend in. It's well designed, but the new interface is for desktop use only, and the Cinema mode for living room use is still limited to disc playback. One bonus is TrueTheater Surround, which like Dolby's Virtual Speaker technology, turns stereo audio into surround sound to impressive effect. It includes support for many common video formats (such as MKV and DivX), but all this can be done by free alternatives. A new tabbed interface lets you switch between movie, audio and video playback quickly and easily. There are other new features, aimed at those who aren't on the 3D bandwagon yet. There's a slider, so you can tweak how powerful the 3D effect is, but you'll still find that while some scenes look good, others just confuse your eyes. Where there are geometrical shapes it's also effective, but it can't cope with confused scenes or those with subtly differentiated depth (like a tracking shot through a jungle or a pan across a wide open prairie). Animated movies work the best, thanks to the clearly defined edges to objects. The results vary wildly depending on the source matter. ![]() It does this using a number of methods, such as looking for areas of the screen (objects) that are moving in front of other areas. Once activated, TrueTheater 3D analyses the DVD video and automatically makes choices about what should be in the foreground and the background. Disappointingly, it only works with DVDs at present, and not with Blu-ray movies or other video files. Its TrueTheater 3D technology is best described as 3D upscaling, taking 2D video content and turning it into 3D. Thankfully then, Cyberlink has come up with a clever technology to keep the owners of 3D displays happy in the meantime. Whenever 3D movies start shipping, CyberLink guarantees that PowerDVD 10 will play them with full support for all the various display technologies and methods. Avatar has just been released on Blu-ray, but only in 2D, and at present there's no 3D version scheduled for this year. Although there are plenty of 3D-compatible displays out there now, these are mainly monitors and projectors which also require Nvidia's 3D Vision Kit (costing £117 inc VAT).Įven if you have a 3D display, then there's precious little 3D content to watch. Here at Expert Reviews, we're still waiting for review samples from the deluge of 3D TVs announced in January at CES. However, getting 3D-compatible displays into homes has been slow going. All this hasn't been lost on CyberLink, with 3D playback being key to this latest version of PowerDVD. The box office success of Avatar proved to be irresistible to Hollywood as a whole, and a raft of other 3D features have quickly followed. The explosive popularity for 3D movies has been hard to ignore.
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