DivX Buying Guide
Overview
DivX from the Comfort of Your Living
Room
DivX Certification
DivX
is often affectionately referred to as "the MP3 of video" and, like MP3, its
purpose is to produce high-quality files that are as small as possible. Using
clever data-compression techniques, DivX files manage to squeeze some of the
highest-quality digital video available into a format that can allow in excess
of 100 minutes of material to be fitted on a single CD-ROM.
This guide aims to let you find out more about DivX and how you can
use it, highlighting along the way some of the exciting products that are now
supporting this increasingly talked-about technology.
OverviewDivX is based around state-of-the-art MPEG-4 compression
techniques and can be used to produce high-quality full-screen video files
about an eighth of the size of the MPEG-2 files used by DVDs.
The beauty of DivX lies not just in the quality of the video or
the size of the files it produces, but also in the fact that basic DivX
software is available to download from the Internet and use for free. This
combination of wide availability, good-quality video and frugal use of disc
space has led to an explosion of material becoming available that uses the
format. Professionals and amateurs alike have seen how useful DivX can be and
are using the software to prepare everything from movie trailers to home videos
for viewing across the Internet, from CD-ROM or directly from their hard
drives.
DivX from the Comfort of Your Living
RoomAlthough DivX files can be viewed on your Windows, Mac or Linux
computer using the downloadable player, you can now also watch in the comfort
of your living room using one of a range of DivX-compatible DVD-players that
are now starting to become available. Players such as the
DP-450 from Kiss is a
good example, allowing you to view DivX files burnt onto a CD as easily as if
they were on a standard DVD.
As demand for DivX technology integrated into home-entertainment
products increases, it is likely that we will see the introduction of more
players such as the
Kiss DP-500, which also
includes Ethernet connectivity. This feature is perfect for those with a
library of DivX material stored on their PC. Using home-networking technology,
this machine lets you play files directly from any computer without needing to
copy them to CD first. Other DivX devices starting to appear include palmtop
computers and handheld media jukeboxes, fitted with tiny LCD screens designed
to let you take your music, photos and videos with you wherever you go.
DivX CertificationTo help consumers find DivX-compatible devices, DivXNetworks
Inc, the company behind the technology, have created a program to identify
products that have been officially tested and verified as being DivX
compatible. Three categories exist to represent the minimum performance
standards expected of various types of DivX device. These are: Handheld (mobile
phones, low-end cameras and PDAs), Portable (multimedia jukeboxes, video
cameras and still cameras) and Home Theatre (DVD players, PVRs and some types
of video camera). Although not all devices that play DivX material use these
relatively new certifications they do provide a useful guide for consumers to
look out for.