steve_at44
New member
Hello all, a new member here. I hope you don't think I am too wet behind the ears, but I have a multi format LG burner, and using DVDXcopy Platinum, have no probs whatsoever burning movies to $1.50 ($AU) DVD-Rs with perfect quality (archive only, but cuts right through the CSS protect).
I wondered why direct copies using such powerful software cannot be used in the PS2. The stock answer just seems to be "you need a mod chip" period! I sought the technological answer to this unanswered quesstion, and have found many different answers such as "Sony uses black disks which are otherwise unobtainable", "Sony burns code into the unused first track(s) which can't be duplicated", "Sony uses DVD-ROMs rather than any of the other 5 formats - -R, +R, -RW, +RW, RAM" etc etc. What I want to know is this:
1. What is the technology used by Sony on their DVDs, what type of DVDs are they, can blanks be purchased on the open market, if so where from and for how much
2. Precisely and accurately, why cannot copies be burnt using latest tech burners (such as the 4040B) and software (such as dvdXcopy plat)?
3. Why precisely are mod chips necessary?
All information will be gratefully appreciated
thank you
(actually thinking about this a little more, if the medium were identical and the burning software sufficiently powerful, then the copy would be practically a 1:1 copy and it would have to work. Hypothetically, a "thought experiment", if the copy were good down to the molecular level, then the PS2 coudln't discriminate, and the copy would certainly work. Therefore, it is either:
1. the medium cannot be duplicated (the probable cause); or
2. the software cannot be burnt identically no matter what burning software is used (don't believe this for a moment); or
3. a combination of the above.
There is nothing mystical about all this, we are talking about physical science here, not magic. I need however to have the science explained to me in a way that doesn't just throw in the red herring "you NEED a mod chip".
Thanks
I wondered why direct copies using such powerful software cannot be used in the PS2. The stock answer just seems to be "you need a mod chip" period! I sought the technological answer to this unanswered quesstion, and have found many different answers such as "Sony uses black disks which are otherwise unobtainable", "Sony burns code into the unused first track(s) which can't be duplicated", "Sony uses DVD-ROMs rather than any of the other 5 formats - -R, +R, -RW, +RW, RAM" etc etc. What I want to know is this:
1. What is the technology used by Sony on their DVDs, what type of DVDs are they, can blanks be purchased on the open market, if so where from and for how much
2. Precisely and accurately, why cannot copies be burnt using latest tech burners (such as the 4040B) and software (such as dvdXcopy plat)?
3. Why precisely are mod chips necessary?
All information will be gratefully appreciated
thank you
(actually thinking about this a little more, if the medium were identical and the burning software sufficiently powerful, then the copy would be practically a 1:1 copy and it would have to work. Hypothetically, a "thought experiment", if the copy were good down to the molecular level, then the PS2 coudln't discriminate, and the copy would certainly work. Therefore, it is either:
1. the medium cannot be duplicated (the probable cause); or
2. the software cannot be burnt identically no matter what burning software is used (don't believe this for a moment); or
3. a combination of the above.
There is nothing mystical about all this, we are talking about physical science here, not magic. I need however to have the science explained to me in a way that doesn't just throw in the red herring "you NEED a mod chip".
Thanks
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