A Blu-ray burner drive...with no Blu-ray playback software *facepalm*

Tek7

CGA President, Tribe of Judah Founder & President
Staff member
So the one upgrade I did buy for my computer during Black Friday sales is an ASUS Blu-ray burner. (Well, that and a C310 webcam, but I think of that as adding a feature rather than a proper upgrade.) I received the drive, installed it, looked at the DVD that came with it, and saw no mention of programs that sounded like they would play back Blu-ray movies. I soon discovered that the drive--which came in a retail package--does not have ANY playback software bundled.

/facepalm

So does anyone know a free and legal way to play Blu-ray movies from a PC without dumping ~40GB of data to the hard drive first?

I tried the latest alpha version of MediaPortal, but when I try to play my Toy Story Blu-ray disc, it returns the error "Unable to play: index.bdmv."

:(
 
Bluray on PC is a racket.



tennis_racket-1017.jpg



/Hot Link.
 
I know there is a way to modify vlc to work with BD. I'm not sure how to do it, but I'm sure google knows. :)
 
The problem is decrypting commercial Blu-ray discs.

DAPlayer, a free video player, played my Toy Story Blu-ray disc, but I'm wary of a free player when so many options cost cash money. Also, the audio was slightly out of sync with the video and I didn't feel like messing with the Delay+/Delay- options late last night.

I'd also like to use something that plays nice with my Streamzap remote; MediaPortal would be preferred. Blu-ray playback is supported in 1.3.0 alpha, but there's still the issue of real-time Blu-ray decoding.

:(
 
PowerDVD is garbage!!! Grrrrr. I really wish there were legitimate alternatives.
 
VLC doesn't have blu-ray support yet!??!
Not without using a secondary program for decrypting commercial Blu-ray discs, from what I understand.

I hadn't checked out PotPlayer, but I'll give it a try!

If I can't find a free application to play Blu-ray discs on my PC (WITHOUT the need for an external decryption program), I'm considering returning the drive and buying one that DOES come bundled with PowerDVD.

EDIT: Nevermind. Back to the search for a legitimate AND free commercial Blu-ray disc player:

Since no one seemed to have any experience with the player, I decided to find out for myself. What I learned is that to play encrypted material will require an on-the-fly decrypter running in the background.
Source: http://www.missingremote.com/forums/potplayer-bluray-playback
 
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PowerDVD or corel WinDVD Pro are the only horrible solutions I've found. I don't think you'll find a free one since the BluRay decryption keys are illegal to use without a software license. Aka, no GPL code can use it unless it's an illegal program.
 
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VLC should support Blu ray, it does with the Linux version at least. just install the package, no hacking necessary. there is also a 64bit version of vlc for windows available. The support might only be for non encrypted though.
 
VLC should support Blu ray, it does with the Linux version at least. just install the package, no hacking necessary. there is also a 64bit version of vlc for windows available. The support might only be for non encrypted though.
And that's the main problem: Encryption. If I can get a free AND legitimate decryption application installed and working properly, I could pick any of several players, including MediaPortal (my personal preference), to play Blu-ray discs.

/sigh

Sony.
 
Remember HDDVD? yeah... Sony won that war. To the victor goes the spoils I guess.
 
I'm not suggesting that you do this, but what if you *hypothetically* ripped the bluray onto your PC?

Edit: I guess you'd still run into the encryption issue.

Edit again: Send it back and get a refund, lol.
 
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