I bought Star Wars the other day and tried to play it on the comp, but the comp doesn’t even acknowledge a Blu Ray DVD is in the drive, and it’s the same for my DVD player, however I put in Hangover Blu ray and it worked fine, on both, I even exchanged it because I thought the CD was faulty, but it happened again. What’s going on?
I’ve tried MakeMkv and various emulators, I’m outta luck.
I use a Playstation 3 for watching DVDs and Bluray titles and sometimes when I insert a new Bluray, the first thing the player does is to download a new encryption key. It seems that the companies behind Bluray are constantly improving the security on the standard. So perhaps that’s necessary for your computer or your “DVD player”.
You need a Blu Ray player or a Blu Ray disk drive in your PC to be able to read Blu Rays disks.
If your PC doesn’t have the Blu Ray icon, then it’s not a Blu Ray player. PC Laptop
(shown in the middle of the picture, location may vary) then it’s not a Blu Ray player.
A DVD player or the DVD drive on your PC is sadly not able to read Blu Ray disks.
Also note that if the “Hangover” disc is Blu-ray, the disc will display the Blu-ray logo on the disc label.
If that logo is not present, the disc is not Blu-ray. It’s the same logo as in the photos Doughbag listed.
As for the other posts, yeah Hangover was in a Blu Ray box and everything just like the star wars Blu Ray, I’m wondering now if it is something to do with encryption because if it wasn’t it’d of not worked with the Hangover film either.
Just checking: is there a BluRay logo on the Hangover disc itself? Sometimes a BluRay disc and a regular DVD will be packaged together in the same box, or even as separate sides of the same disc; or if you bought it used, the disc might not match the box.
Are the computer and the player connected to the network? If so, they may download updated security automatically. If not, check for firmware or other updates. (Even my PS3 needs periodic updates.)
The more typical sales format now seems to be both Blu-ray and DVD together in one case; especially for children’s shows (which, yes, Hangover is not). This allows you to have something to play in hi-def at home and also plays in those built-in car DVD players.