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I do believe that the average consumer should be able to play a US Blu-ray Disc without being forced to install additional software. However, it is part of a legal contract that I have with the creators of Blu-ray discs and the people that make Blu-rays and DVDs that all software that is offered can be legally enabled on (or disabled from) any computer that is playing Blu-ray discs or DVD's.
Understanding how the DVD region system works. The DVD region system is composed of a physical and logical system. The physical DVD regions are the tiny little \"Bar Codes\" and Table Of Contents (TOC) that contain information about the region/country. (When the DVD region system first appeared, some people were confused about the term \"region\" and called it \"CD region\"... after realising the real thing used in the CD region was called \"region\" they changed the name, but we'll stick with the name they used).
What you see when you look at the DVD on a DVD player is actually the Region Manager recognizing and reading that region and writing it to the drive. This all happens in the video drivers. When you play a Blu-ray Disc, things usually happen until you think that you are actually playing a region free DVD.
Blu-ray discs have 32 more pixels to work with. 32x32x096=about 260,000,000 pixels, (vs 50,000,000 pixels for a DVD) that gives you a bigger \"window\" for each pixel, so if the difference is very small, that difference's eye is only going to see it as one \"tiny\" difference, but if the difference was a lot bigger like a large object in the sky vs. a small satellite, the difference is going to be much more obvious. d2c66b5586