When Microsoft launched its Xbox 360 HD DVD Drive at the beginning of
December for £130, it was by far the cheapest drive with a blue laser to read
high definition discs.
Although designed to work with an Xbox 360 games console, we wanted to get
the HD DVD Drive working on a PC.
The drive is made by Toshiba and uses a very standard Universal Disk Format
(UDF)
file system. After a bit of hunting around and some tweaking we finally managed
to get HD DVDs playing on a range of PC hardware.
The Xbox 360 HD DVD has a mini USB 2.0 port that connects to the Xbox 360.
The cable used is the same type that most digital cameras use and one is
included in the box.
After connecting the drive to a USB 2.0 port on your computer, the Windows XP
hardware wizard will pop up. Close this and
download
the 2.5MB Toshiba driver instead.
Extract the driver using winrar and then right click on thdudf.inf and select
install. Once installed reboot your computer. If you're an early bird using
Windows Vista you don't need to install a driver.
Ignore all requests to install the USB memory device, since this cannot be
installed and has no relevance to HD DVD playback.
You now have full access to the files on an HD DVD. While it ran HD DVDs
fine, out of curiosity we put a standard ordinary DVD into the drive, but as
expected, it failed to read it. This is because the driver is udf 2.5 and DVD's
use a 1.5 file system as standard.
Getting hold of playback software was the tricky bit, since neither Cyberlink
nor InterVideo sold retail software supporting Blu-ray or HD DVD at the time of
writing.
Cyberlink provided us with an original equipment manufacturer version of
PowerDVD 6.5 for HD DVD use (OEM means it comes bundled with drives and can't be
bought in the shops). However, all is not lost because Cyberlink informed us
PowerDVD 7 Ultra will be released later this week. It should be the first retail
software to support Blu-ray and HD DVD playback out of the box.
The resulting video quality will depend on how your PC is setup. Cyberlink
offers a free program for
download
called CyberLink BD/HD DVD Advisor, which will show you how ready your
system is. The software is only in beta form and in our experience you don't
need as fast a processor as Cyberlink recommends.
Our test system used a Pentium D 3.2GHz with 2GB of memory and an
Nvidia 7900GT graphics card. We also successfully used an Nvidia 7600GT and an
ATI x1600Pro graphics card.
In the first instance we used an Nvidia 7950GT and the latest Nvidia driver
at the time of writing (93.71). This driver offers some hardware decoding which
removes some of the burden from the processor.
When using a VGA cable the picture looked fantastic. Cyberlink claims
PowerDVD 6.5 does not downscale the video over a VGA connection and only applies
Macrovision to the analogue signal to avoid copying.
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