Latest Creation By Dolby

 

The Three Kingdoms Come to Life on Blu-ray

The Lost Bladesman, featuring Dolby® TrueHD, follows the story of legendary Guan Yu (Donnie Yen), who crosses five passes and slays six generals to reach freedom.
In the final years of the Han Dynasty, the court is under the sway of Prime Minister Cao Cao (Jiang Wen). When Cao Cao's troops defeat those of rival king Liu Bei (Alex Fong), they take hostage Liu Bei's two wives, his future concubine Qilan (Betty Sun), and other members of his family, as well as Liu Bei's sworn brother Guan Yu.

The Lost Bladesman
Courtesy of Edko Films, Ltd.


Cao Cao greatly admires Guan and wishes to retain him, but Guan's loyalty is with Liu Bei. When Cao Cao finds out Guan was once in love with Qilan, he sets a trap to lead Guan to temptation and betrayal. Guan manages to escape with Qilan, but to get to Liu Bei they must cross five passes.
Guan, who is tired of killing, is forced to fight his way through, leaving a trail of corpses. At the final crossing, they fall into a deadly ambush. However, Cao Cao treats Guan with respect, and Guan is torn between emotional debt and righteousness.

 

Dolby TrueHD Creates the Ultimate Audio Experience

Dolby TrueHD, developed for high-definition entertainment, delivers powerful sound that is bit-for-bit identical to the original studio master.
A key component of Blu-ray Disc™ hardware and software as well as advanced digital A/V receivers, Dolby TrueHD helps transform your living room into a personal screening room.

 

Dolby TrueHD Benefits

Takes full advantage of Blu-ray Disc capabilities, with 7.1-channel playback
Offers the ability to support more than 16 channels of audio
Makes connecting your home theater easy, with a single-cable HDMI® audio and video digital connection

 

The Experience

With Dolby TrueHD, you experience a spacious soundstage, highly realistic effects, and unsurpassed dynamic range.




Surround Sound By Dolby




Surround sound changes the way you watch and listen to entertainment. Conventional stereo uses two speakers to create dimensional sound in front of you. Surround sound uses an array of speakers, placed around you, to create a complete, multidimensional sonic environment. Movies and concerts spring to life. You’re in the center of the action.

 

Dolby Defines Surround Sound

The first movie soundtracks were monaural (single-channel). Fifty years later, movie soundtracks were still mono. Then Dolby developed the first practical multichannel film sound format, and movie audio has never been the same.
Since then, over 25,000 movies using Dolby® technologies have been released. Dolby 3D presentations with Dolby Surround 7.1 sound provide the ultimate moviegoing experience.
Today, Dolby technologies bring the magic of surround sound to you anywhere. Settle in for a feature in your home theater. Watch on your PC. Enjoy music videos on the go on your mobile phone. Everywhere, you’ll get an unmatched, front-row audio experience from all your electronic entertainment.

 

Dolby Surround Sound Technologies

 

For Home Theaters

We have a wide range of technologies that offer up to 7.1 discrete surround channels and up to 9.1 channels using matrix processing.
Dolby TrueHD digitally duplicates the original studio master.
Dolby Digital Plus takes full advantage of the versatility and interactive capabilities of Blu-ray Discs.
Dolby Digital is found on every DVD and most HDTV broadcasts.
Dolby Pro Logic II, Pro Logic IIx, and Pro Logic IIz can create up to 9.1 channels of convincing surround sound from any source, including mono and stereo.

 

For PCs

Hear surround through your PC’s built-in speakers. Or make your PC the multimedia center of a full home theater system.
Dolby Home Theater v4 brings full multimedia surround sound to your PC.
Dolby Advanced Audio v2 offers a personal surround sound experience through any pair of headphones.

 

For Mobile Phones

Experience home theater in the palm of your hand.
Dolby Mobile brings you the most portable cinematic surround sound.

What is High Definition Audio ?

High Definition Audio, also known as HD Audio or by its codename, Azalia, is an audio standard created by Intel to be used on their chipsets, i.e., it is a standard for high-quality on-board audio. In this tutorial we will explain more about this feature.
All Intel chipsets based on PCI Express bus – like i915 and i925 – support High Definition Audio. This standard provides two new features: multi-streaming, which allows more than one audio signal to be sent to a different audio device – for example, to watch a DVD on your living room transferring the audio through a wireless network while talking through a voice over IP solution at the same time on your desktop in your office – and high quality audio.
Before HD Audio was released, on-board high quality audio was only available if your motherboard had a separated high quality audio controller – like Envy24 from VIA, for example. With HD Audio technology, the south bridge of the chipset produces high-quality audio itself, without the need of a separated controller chip, what would make the motherboard more expensive. The south bridge only needs an external codec (coder/decoder) chip to make the needed digital/analog and analog/digital conversions. This kind of chip is inexpensive compared to a ”full“ controller chip. One example of codec compatible with Intel’s HD Audio is C-Media 9880.
High Definition Audio provides 7.1 surround audio with 192 kHz sampling rate and up to 32-bit resolution. Other audio solutions embedded on the chipset support a maximum of 48 kHz sampling rate and 20-bit resolution, even when they support 5.1 configuration (”6-channel surround audio“).
Intel is promoting High Defition Audio together with Dolby Laboratories, who created three audio ”levels“ for PCs using HD Audio: Dolby Sound Room, Dolby Home Theater and Dolby Master Studio, which are targeted to the entry-level user, to the mid-range user and to the high-end user, respectively. The features of these ”levels“ are the following:
  • Dolby Sound Room: 2-channel audio supporting Dolby Virtual Speaker and Dolby Head Phones technologies. These two technologies simulate 5.1 audio using only 2 speakers, based on Dolby Pro Logic II technology. It has a signal-to-noise ratio of at least 75 dB.
  • Dolby Home Theater: 6-channel (5.1) audio with a signal-to-noise ratio of at least 85 dB, based on Dolby Pro Logic II technology.
  • Dolby Master Studio: 8-channel (7.1) audio with a signal-to-noise ratio of at leas 95 dB, based on Dolby Pro Logic IIx and Dolby Digital Live technologies.