I was able to change my Fisher DVD player to accept DVDs from all
regions by a combination of commands from the remote control. I don't
have any DVDs, other than Region 1 to test it with , though. There
are websites that have this info for the various DVD machines.
As far as the VHS goes, it's a PAL tape, and it needs to be converted to
NTSC to be seen on a domestic (North America) VHS deck, or it can be
viewed on a multi-system deck. Quite a few of the PAL decks in Europe
can play NTSC, but it doesn't work the other way around.
Good Luck!
/mel
Dave Phillips wrote:
Greetings:
While we were in Italy last week Ivy (a.k.a. my Better Half) purchased
two DVDs and a VHS video. I knew that I took a chance on the discs,
they're both region-encoded so I figured they wouldn't play in Ivy's
standalone DVD player. Sure enough, the player refused to recognize the
discs. However, I _am_ able to play them on my Linux box, so now even
Ivy agrees that Linux rules.
Now I have some questions:
Is there some way to change a hardware DVD player to accept another
region coding or is it necessary to buy a standalone player keyed to the
disc's region code ?
How does it happen that my Linux players recognize these discs with
no trouble ? Would a Windows or Mac player do as well ?
The VHS tape is still a problem. Our player doesn't seem to like it,
no picture appears but we can hear the audio moving along at something
like twice normal speed. Can anyone tell me what's up with that and if
there's some way to fix it ? TIA !
Best regards,
== dp