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OT-Warez

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  • OT-Warez

    On a recent trip to Malaysia and Thailand, I found there is some progress in the wholesale pirating, but not everywhere.

    In Malaysia, the outright, blatant, sale of pirated software, CDs and DVDs has been emasculated. I found no software, but it is still possible to find a few CDs and DVDs, but these have been driven underground, even in street markets. On two occasions, I was offered them but you were taken off to a hidden place to see them. However, console games are still openly available (perhaps the cops haven't caught on to these yet!): this is perhaps economically more damaging because the profit is in the sales of the games, not the consoles. Genuine imitation Rolexes and other quality watches, perfumes and clothes still abound.

    Thailand, though, is another story. I visited a mall in Bangkok which was almost exclusively devoted to IT over 6 floors with, perhaps 50 or so commerces on each floor. It seemed that every other shop was openly offering some form of pirated software. games, VCDs, DVDs (often porn) and so on. Most of the software was in Thai, but English versions were available in some shops (e.g. Windows XP Pro for ~ $10). The range was very limited, mainly the popular titles, although I did see AutoCad for the same price! There were also some home-grown titles.

    Many of the shops were offering build-it-yourself components, but the offering was typically what was on the market in the West 12 - 18 months ago at unimaginably low prices (obsolete stock?). It would be possible to build up a P4 1.5 computer with everything needed for DV work for about $300 or so. All good names, too.

    However, DVD burning has not yet caught on in a big way, although VCD burning is extremely popular.(there must have been over 100 shops selling nothing but blank media with a wide choice of the printing thereon, mostly of unknown make, for about 10 cents a go. Some of them also offered branded CD-R and CD-RW media. Very few shops offered DVD burners and fewer still the media. I found some with unknown brand DVD-Rs but only two offered branded ones, but not held in stock. The unknown ones were sold at about $2 each, individually. I could have got genuine Pioneer DVD-R blanks for about $3 but the lead time was longer than my scheduled stay in Bangkok.

    This leads me to a question: if they can sell them for that price there, why are they so damn expensive in the West, where they have a better economy of scale?

    Finally, you may ask what I bought? The answer is nothing in the way of software, but I do admit to having bought two DVDs of Hollywood blockbusters for $2 each, more out of curiosity to see whether they actually worked. They do, but both glitch very slightly for a fraction of a second on odd occasions: just sufficient to be noticeable but not enough to destroy the entertainment value.
    Brian (the devil incarnate)

  • #2
    If I notice a glitch it tends to destroy the entertainment value.

    That's a big reason I rarely go to the movies -- films seem to be handled very badly these days and all the scratches and dust flying by drives me nuts!

    Nothing PO's me more that paying $20 for a MPAA DVD that was made from a poor quality film stock!

    Obviously on the classic old movies we have to take what we can get, but thats no excuse for recent releases.

    --wally.

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    • #3
      What pisses me off is that in this city there are only two major Multiplexes, so they don't need to care about customers.

      Sometimes they have the AC turned all the way up so that you get the chills, on other occasions it's HOT, very often the movie is out of focus, etc.

      AZ
      There's an Opera in my macbook.

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      • #4
        Wally

        Guys like us are super-sensitive to the smallest fault, because we try to avoid them happening in our own work. After playing the Air Force One pirated copy, I had counted four glitches, each lasting perhaps two or three frames. My wife, who is quite critical but not technically sensitive, did not notice three of them at all and she vaguely thought she had seen one but it had not bothered her.

        What pisses me off with the cinema are other spectators fidgeting, digging into popcorn buckets, whispering the plot to their neighbour, going to the loo, noisily sucking toffees, coughing and sneezing (usually just behind me), blowing gum bubbles, snogging and suchlike. I have not been inside a cinema for at least 25 years and have no intention of subjecting myself to this misery and indignity again. I will watch an occasional film on TV, if it appeals to me and hasn't been shown 532 times before (cf Sound of Music and Singing in the Rain) and I have some classics on VHS (slowly converting them to DVD).
        Brian (the devil incarnate)

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        • #5
          Watching something on the TV is just not nearly the same as watching it on the big screen - even watching it on a BIG TV or a projector isn't.

          Luckily, when I go to the cinema, people tend to be quiet. The thing I hate though is that some people leave their cell phones on (happens very seldom though).

          There's a big difference though when you are watching a comedy: Newer german comedys tend to have something to do with marijuana, and sometimes there are people there having a joint RIGHT IN THE THEATER! (Note: smoking even cigarettes is prohibited there). Doesn't bother me too much because the air condition takes care of the smell, and those people are often really funny. Some bad joke happens (or no joke at all), and they start laughing all over the place. Makes everyone else laugh, too

          I just hate that theaters don't pay much attention to the technical side. I mean, it should be possible to open the curtain up ALL the way, not having the left and right side of the movie displayed on it. Likewise, one shouldn't turn the bass all the way up when the woofers can't handle it.

          Such big flaws are quite rare, but there are almost always some smaller problems (and I'm not even talking about scratches!).

          AZ
          There's an Opera in my macbook.

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          • #6
            The last time I went to the cinema, neither cell phones were invented nor marijuana openly smoked, so I omitted these from my list. I have never had withdrawal symptoms from the big screen and special effects bore me. It is the plot of a film that I like and I can see that perfectly well in the peace and quiet of my own living room, thanks, without being subjected to 587° wrap-round sound blasting out at far too many dB (or sometimes set inaudibly) and without cricking the neck because the screen is wider than my angle of vision. Although I've never used one, I imagine that video rental businesses thrive on kindred spirits to mine.
            Brian (the devil incarnate)

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