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Home » Features » Home HiFi & TV » The DivX Player Shootout
The DivX Player Shootout
By: Siddharth Bhatia   |   Sep 15, 2009

People like the MPEG group of geniuses have devised a lot of useful data compression and transmission formats for us consumers, but as a side effect today we have to suffer the mild wrath of confusing formats. The whole blame, if there has to be one, should squarely rest on the shoulders of digital data compression, and its various avatars. To watch a video, we used to have only a black VHS tape, tracking lines galore. But now we have a DVD, a VCD, a DivX file, an MKV file, an FLV file and what have you.

Even the hardware has evolved like the female youth today - thinner and more fragile. Why? Because it's the in thing to do. I remember my old VHS player, it was one size XXL wielding monster. Today players are shaped as pebbles, literally. This is understandable and no one is complaining, as the electronics are reduced to slim DAC circuits and thin trays to hold our discs. I'm talking about budget player models, the ones that come below Rs. 5000. It is these players we are looking at today: the market's leading DVD/DivX players.  Our players these days come with USB ports to allow us insertion of a drive, facilitating  us to play DivX files, JPEG images, MP3s, and a wee bit more. Our Indian market is teeming with these players, as the demand is clearly there. Only a very few niche, snooty videophiles are riding the full HD/Blu-ray bandwagon, most consumers today are happy with SD footage upscaled into 1080p by their ubercool players.

We have players from Samsung, LG, Philips, Sony, Moser Baer and Mitashi all capable of playing DivX. Firstly the external physical aspects are looked at, stuff like good looks, footprint, weight etc. Then moving on to more important things: the connectivity offered. Some players have unique features, some don't. Thus anyone offering Karaoke or CD ripping is given a “shabaash”. The User interface is browsed through, to see what options are available, how easily they are accessible  etc. Then, moving on we have our video test Disc, the DVE test Disc. This has a range of patterns and test videos to check luminance dynamic range (brightness and contrast with only grey), then color accuracy and more importantly how the player handles interlaced motion video, fast scene changes and more.

For the Techie readers, the DivX file created was of I am Legend, ripped off our DVD using Gordian Knot; DivX 5 was used. The file was of a bitrate of 4800 kbps, with B frames. Resolution was 720x480 29.97fps NTSC. The audio was 5.1 channel AC3. I want to see how the payers decode surround sound (the ones that can). One copy was burnt on a DVD+R, and another on an 8 GB Transcend pen drive. NO extra setting in encoding were used. No QPEL, No Adaptive Quant, No GMC. I just wanted a simple yet heavy DivX file.


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DIVX PALYER ACCHA HAI ISHKA FUCHIER VERY NICE HAI
BODY ACHI HAI LOOK ACHA HAI
SURESH OJHA @ Dec 11, 2009
DVP3336 is the best
hitesh @ Oct 11, 2009
Thanks for the wonderful articles for people like me, illiterate in the world of DVD Players and such like. Just have 2 questions:

-Any idea on how soon USB 3.0 supported-players will be out?
-Have you authored articles on high-end players too? If so, a link would be appreciated.

Thanks and great work.
Vijay @ Oct 05, 2009
phillips DVP336 is winner but plz provide us features etc like u provided for oders
upscale etc many more in table.
thx in adv
dakshay desai @ Sep 17, 2009
You have written that the Philips player has CD rip function but in the table below it "No" is written in front of the CD rip.
A flaw in proof reading...may be.
Deepak @ Sep 15, 2009
A lot of people have been waiting for this article, for one i found it hard to resist and had to take longer break to go through it. Amidst all literary build up and nostalgia created my dear techie you have completely missed out on what we are out to achieve.... the best usb divx dvd player easily available in the indian market philips dvp 3996 im not out here to promote any brand infact ive bought this particular dvd player for 3200 rs from a grey market but this is why ive bought this player time n time again for friends and family to go along with their new hdtv even though i have a ps3 that can upscale divx-it comes with free hdmi cable and an hdmi slot that upcales brilliantly a usb 2.0 slot which u have failed to mention any where why it is better than usb1.1 it plays divx and xvid
Navin @ Sep 15, 2009
Or.... you could just buy a WDTV/XStreamer :) Yeah, I know, caters different group of people :)

Very good detailed shootout.
Sreenivas @ Sep 15, 2009
NO HDMI ???
Sagar Pednekar @ Sep 15, 2009
hey nice comparison...i like the test processes
manish @ Sep 15, 2009
Apologies for that..fixed it now.
Siddharth Bhatia @ Sep 15, 2009
Hi,

I feel the specification of Sony dvd player is pasted in Samsung DVD player review page, please rectify. Thanks.
Amit maurya @ Sep 15, 2009
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