Originally posted by: funkymatt
yes this has been posted before. geekbabe? mentioned it was due to compression.
Originally posted by: Gibsons
It's even worse when a show has some dynamic range - you have to crank the sound to hear someone whispering, then the commercial comes on and blows your windows out. Thank Science for DVRs.
That is called "dynamic range" - supposed to be a good thing. It was really crazy on The Matrix. I almost never bought another DVD again because of it. Speech was whisper quiet, but then gunfire or music would start, and it was loud as hell.Originally posted by: PingSpike
Originally posted by: Gibsons
It's even worse when a show has some dynamic range - you have to crank the sound to hear someone whispering, then the commercial comes on and blows your windows out. Thank Science for DVRs.
That seems to happen with a lot of movies I rent. The actors mumble all their lines and maybe have a british accent for good measure. So I have to turn it way up to understand...then some one on the movie trips over a trash can or opens a door and it sounds like a nuclear bomb went off.
I don't care if gunshots are way louder then voices IRL, I'm watching a movie and I want all the sounds normalized so I don't have to adjust the volume 500 times while I'm watching a show.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
That is called "dynamic range" - supposed to be a good thing. It was really crazy on The Matrix. I almost never bought another DVD again because of it. Speech was whisper quiet, but then gunfire or music would start, and it was loud as hell.Originally posted by: PingSpike
Originally posted by: Gibsons
It's even worse when a show has some dynamic range - you have to crank the sound to hear someone whispering, then the commercial comes on and blows your windows out. Thank Science for DVRs.
That seems to happen with a lot of movies I rent. The actors mumble all their lines and maybe have a british accent for good measure. So I have to turn it way up to understand...then some one on the movie trips over a trash can or opens a door and it sounds like a nuclear bomb went off.
I don't care if gunshots are way louder then voices IRL, I'm watching a movie and I want all the sounds normalized so I don't have to adjust the volume 500 times while I'm watching a show.
I've heard that if you've got a DVD player with dynamic range control, you can set it to "Night Mode" or something like that, and it compresses the dynamic range, keeping everything at nearly the same volume. Gunshots are still loud, but not like someone's fired a blank right past your eardrum.
They probably want the volume boosted so that you'll still hear the advertisement once you've left the room to go fill up on snacks in the kitchen.
But yes, thank Science for DVRs. Of course, there's backlash - now they'll embed the ads within the show, popping up stupid little animations that cover 20% of the viewable screen. It's just one more reason why I opted out of the "basic extended" cable option. I realized that I keep paying more money to see more and more ads. I'll just buy the DVD if I really want to see a show. No ads (save product placement BS embedded within the show itself), special features, and better audio/video quality.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
That is called "dynamic range" - supposed to be a good thing. It was really crazy on The Matrix. I almost never bought another DVD again because of it. Speech was whisper quiet, but then gunfire or music would start, and it was loud as hell.
I've heard that if you've got a DVD player with dynamic range control, you can set it to "Night Mode" or something like that, and it compresses the dynamic range, keeping everything at nearly the same volume. Gunshots are still loud, but not like someone's fired a blank right past your eardrum.
They probably want the volume boosted so that you'll still hear the advertisement once you've left the room to go fill up on snacks in the kitchen.
But yes, thank Science for DVRs. Of course, there's backlash - now they'll embed the ads within the show, popping up stupid little animations that cover 20% of the viewable screen. It's just one more reason why I opted out of the "basic extended" cable option. I realized that I keep paying more money to see more and more ads. I'll just buy the DVD if I really want to see a show. No ads (save product placement BS embedded within the show itself), special features, and better audio/video quality.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Yeah. My TV has a feature that's supposed to get rid of the problem, but it doesn't seem to work.
Originally posted by: nakedfrog
Yeah. My TV has a feature that's supposed to get rid of the problem, but it doesn't seem to work.
Originally posted by: ch33zw1z
FUCKING HATE IT. it causes disturbance with the wife, ie "WTF, WHY'S IT SO LOUD...ITS TIME FOR BED ANYWAYS OMG WTF"
Originally posted by: KB
It annoyed me for a while until I got a DVR and skip the commercials now.