It all depends. Players often are multi format allowing you to change
between region 1 and 2 up to seven times then stick on the last one used.
likewise computer DVD's but here it is both the software and the Physical
drive. On that bases and if you have never played a region 1 before you
should be alright as long as you dont keep playing it and reach the magic 7.
There is sometimes a cheat code you can tap in to your remote to make the
player ignore region codes These may be found at www.vcdhelp.com search for
your model
--
Trev
Nobody is perfect.
But Being a Yorkshire man is as close as you can get.
Slight correction, it's not the number of times a *given* region is
selected but the number of times the region is **changed** - on the
7th change the settings will become permanent, sort of some major OS
hacking or a HDD format and re-install...
>
> There is sometimes a cheat code you can tap in to your remote to
> make the player ignore region codes These may be found at
> www.vcdhelp.com search for your model
>
There is another problem, if a stand alone player (or the output from
a computer video card) is being feed to a TV, this is the fact that
the device needs to be able to cope with PAL60 [1] - rather that the
PAL standard of PAL50 [2], most modern should cope but other AV
equipment might not.
[1] 60 frames per second
[2] usually just referred to as PAL as 50fps is the standard, derived
from the power supply (mains) frequency of the recording equipment,
the UK being 50hz and the USA being 60hz
--
Wikipedia: the Internet equivalent of
Hyde Park and 'speakers corner'...
There are two main issues with discs bought in America: Region restriction
(they are region 1, we are region 2) and TV standard (they are NTSC, we are
PAL)
Do you know if it's region restricted? If you have a DVD burner, the easiest
way to fix it is to use DVD Decryptor or similar to copy the VIDEO_TS folder
to your hard drive, then just use Nero or similar to put it back on a DVDR.
Unless your TV and player are ancient, the original non-region disc, or your
new non-region copy of a region 1 disc, will work fine even thought they are
NTSC.