Xbox 360 HD DVD – on the iMac!!

For yes, I have caved to the might of HD DVD… or rather, some bloke I work with wanted to sell a drive he tried – and failed – to use with his PC (but works fine with my new iMac, mwahahaha).

For yes, 24 inches of sharp no compression artifact joy. Well, on The Matrix Trilogy anyway ;)

Hopefully, I will have even more fantastic movies to try soon. Oh, High Def!!! What was this Dee Vee Dee we believed in? Oh the shame!

:)

Mind you… it does mean using XP and PowerDVD Ultra… but the pain is worth it ;)

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  1. #1 by hpoom on October 16th, 2007 - 3:56 pm

    So have you tried any HD-DVD’s yet? What do you think?

  2. #2 by Mark on October 16th, 2007 - 7:27 pm

    I am still waiting for Play / Royal Mail to deliver my DVDs. One of which will be the new updated Blade Runner (that is not out yet of course, but I can’t wait for that one personally!!!)

    I watched the Matrix films as I said – they looked damn fine!! But I want to see something less obvious before I make a proper review…

    As you may remember, I am actually in the BluRay camp – so my HD DVD drive was a surprise buy… but when it only costs ¬£130 brand new (mine was less than that), I wonder if Microsoft may have had a moment of genius here… and that Sony might be undermined by this.

    Try and get a BluRay player for that price!!! (I’ve tried!!!)

  3. #3 by Kris on February 22nd, 2008 - 6:01 pm

    how did u connect ur xbox to ur imac?! I’ve been trying for ages!

  4. #4 by Mark on March 19th, 2008 - 9:15 pm

    Ah… now these are two separate things. I almost said “I didn’t” to that comment, but actually, I did… but on the OS X side.

    I have an app called Connect360 for sharing stuff between the iMac and 360. I have another one for the PS3 too (from the same guys, but not nearly as universal).

    I am guessing there must be PC versions of these apps – maybe not from the same people, or as elegant – but hey it’s Windows ;)

    As for the HD drive (which my ranting on this post was about), I did that through (i) connecting the USB cable to the machine, and (ii) installing PowerDVD Ultra (note the *Ultra* – normal PowerDVD won’t cut it).

    BUT… there is a major caveat here: you need to have a qualifying graphics card. And by qualifying, I mean has to (in hardware) support the encoding/DRM nonsense that HD-DVD requires.

    The iMac has a ATI 2600HD in it, the PC a 8600GT – the first works fine (and definitely supports the stuff for HD DVD), the PC card should too, but I haven’t tried it.

    However, someone I know tried with his 7600 nVidia card which (allegedly) should have worked – but didn’t. Seems the boards and chipsets are hit and miss for this :(

    But when it does work… it’s very nice indeed.

    Shame the format is pretty much dead now. Good job I now have my DVD player… oh sorry, I mean my PS3 ;)

    (Coz it aint worth shit for games :D )

  5. #5 by Mark on March 19th, 2008 - 9:26 pm

    Hmm, I should pay more attention before posting…

    The Xbox itself is connected over the network via my modem/router. The iMac too.
    This lets them talk to each other, sharing enabled through the (OS X) Connect 360.

    Watching HD DVDs is Windows XP only :( For some reason, Apple’s DVD player does not want to play ball (supposedly since they haven’t yet licensed the codecs / rights).

    So it depends which iMac you have, I reckon… The new Aluminium iMacs are (I think) all capable of working with the drive – that’s the one I have.

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