.iso is a disk image, DVD is an optical disc format, and MPV is a software media player. None of these really have anything to do with anything.
You’re probably dealing with MPEG-2 video (what was standard on DVD) with low frame rates and the player is trying (badly) to fill in the gaps. But let me be clear, I’m not besmirching MPV, it’s probably doing the best it can. It’s probably the source. If it’s from DVD, it’s max 720x480 (16:9; 640x480 for 4:3, not sure what these old Naruto eps are in). So you could do better with some webrip from Crunchy or whatever where it’s 1080p, either natively or, for the old Naruto, possibly upscaled. Or just find it in 720p (1280x720).
(Just checked mine, it’s 480p.) (Let me know what episode and time stamp this is and I’ll check mine.)
I bought .hack//SIGN like that. Except I think it was 4 per disc. Something like 24 episodes, it had six discs. But some had more than others. What was cool was if you put the DVD cases together, they had letters on them, and they spelled LOGOUT. So it was basically SAO before SAO was SAO… only it was one guy trapped in the game, not ten thousand. Ton of other similarities. Not that I like it more — SAO did almost everything better, even if it was completely derivative.
Back in the day, Star Trek episodes used to come on VHS, two episodes to a tape.
So, VHS tapes (for those who don’t know — not saying you don’t, but, for the benefit of others) were limited in how much video they could hold by the length of tape spooled up. That had a physical limit, but tape could be recorded at three speeds (possibly more, but home players could only play three speeds, so that was the standard). If you had 2 hours of tape at SP, you had 4 hours at LP, and either 6 or 8 at EP (I forget which). Not sure if they had formal names, but we called them Standard, Long, and Extended Play.
Some cheap tapes came with like half an hour at SP but were recorded at EP speeds so they could save pennies on the tape.
I imagine the Star Trek tapes were your bog standard 2 hour tapes, but they might have cut some off at the end as it wasn’t needed.
If you had extra tape, the tape would continue to play (with nothing to show) until it reached the end, so it was a waste for all involved, especially since some home players, when they reached the end, would automatically rewind the tape.
I miss cassettes. 8-tracks, VHS, Betamax, and audio cassette tapes. They just had a feel to them. The media quality sucked, but nostalgia is always rose tinted.
I love and cherish anything and everything that induces nostalgia. I also have a thing for avoiding automation as far as possible, in all aspects of my life.
I can unfortunately not tell you the episode or the timestamp since the files I’m playing are whole discs, containing several episodes each. Does this give you anything?
Well, it tells you I was right about the resolution (720x480) and it gives you the frame rate, 29.97 (effectively 30 but not quite, mathematically). And the audio is basically uncompressed 48khz at 1536kbps. And that you’re watching in Japanese (ja) and English (en) isn’t available.
It looks like you’re 14:20 into a 1:09:27 DVD which is like 3 episodes?
Yeah :D if you’re familiar with the story, then it’s Sakura’s and Ino’s duel.
While the aspect ratio is such that the picture is a square with some empty space on the sides, I don’t understand how a measly 720x480 can look this “unpixelated” on my 43 inch 4K TV screen…
I’m not. Naruto is on my server because my wife asked for it. But, she’s watching One Piece instead. It’s still on my server because I haven’t had to make room yet.
(One Piece is not on my server. She’s watching that on Netflix.)
.iso is a disk image, DVD is an optical disc format, and MPV is a software media player. None of these really have anything to do with anything.
You’re probably dealing with MPEG-2 video (what was standard on DVD) with low frame rates and the player is trying (badly) to fill in the gaps. But let me be clear, I’m not besmirching MPV, it’s probably doing the best it can. It’s probably the source. If it’s from DVD, it’s max 720x480 (16:9; 640x480 for 4:3, not sure what these old Naruto eps are in). So you could do better with some webrip from Crunchy or whatever where it’s 1080p, either natively or, for the old Naruto, possibly upscaled. Or just find it in 720p (1280x720).
(Just checked mine, it’s 480p.) (Let me know what episode and time stamp this is and I’ll check mine.)
As an anime fan, I once made the mistake of buying a video cd. Two episodes per disc, you can imagine.
I bought .hack//SIGN like that. Except I think it was 4 per disc. Something like 24 episodes, it had six discs. But some had more than others. What was cool was if you put the DVD cases together, they had letters on them, and they spelled LOGOUT. So it was basically SAO before SAO was SAO… only it was one guy trapped in the game, not ten thousand. Ton of other similarities. Not that I like it more — SAO did almost everything better, even if it was completely derivative.
Back in the day, Star Trek episodes used to come on VHS, two episodes to a tape.
Two episode a tape?! How long was one episode again?
Around 45 minutes an episode.
So, VHS tapes (for those who don’t know — not saying you don’t, but, for the benefit of others) were limited in how much video they could hold by the length of tape spooled up. That had a physical limit, but tape could be recorded at three speeds (possibly more, but home players could only play three speeds, so that was the standard). If you had 2 hours of tape at SP, you had 4 hours at LP, and either 6 or 8 at EP (I forget which). Not sure if they had formal names, but we called them Standard, Long, and Extended Play.
Some cheap tapes came with like half an hour at SP but were recorded at EP speeds so they could save pennies on the tape.
I imagine the Star Trek tapes were your bog standard 2 hour tapes, but they might have cut some off at the end as it wasn’t needed.
If you had extra tape, the tape would continue to play (with nothing to show) until it reached the end, so it was a waste for all involved, especially since some home players, when they reached the end, would automatically rewind the tape.
I miss cassettes. 8-tracks, VHS, Betamax, and audio cassette tapes. They just had a feel to them. The media quality sucked, but nostalgia is always rose tinted.
Thanks for imparting this knowledge! :D
I love and cherish anything and everything that induces nostalgia. I also have a thing for avoiding automation as far as possible, in all aspects of my life.
Damn that’s a lot of new information to me xD
I can unfortunately not tell you the episode or the timestamp since the files I’m playing are whole discs, containing several episodes each. Does this give you anything?
Well, it tells you I was right about the resolution (720x480) and it gives you the frame rate, 29.97 (effectively 30 but not quite, mathematically). And the audio is basically uncompressed 48khz at 1536kbps. And that you’re watching in Japanese (ja) and English (en) isn’t available.
It looks like you’re 14:20 into a 1:09:27 DVD which is like 3 episodes?
Yeah :D if you’re familiar with the story, then it’s Sakura’s and Ino’s duel.
While the aspect ratio is such that the picture is a square with some empty space on the sides, I don’t understand how a measly 720x480 can look this “unpixelated” on my 43 inch 4K TV screen…
I’m not. Naruto is on my server because my wife asked for it. But, she’s watching One Piece instead. It’s still on my server because I haven’t had to make room yet.
(One Piece is not on my server. She’s watching that on Netflix.)