3-270-912-11(1)
B D P - S 2 0 0 0 E S
B l u - r a y D i s c P l a y e r
O p e r a t i n g I n s t r u c t i o n s
TM
3-270-912-11 (1)
Printed on 70% or more recycled paper
using VOC (Volatile Organic Compound)-
free vegetable oil based ink.
Printed in Malaysia
©2007 Sony Corporation
Note
WARNING
Notes About the
Discs
This equipment has been tested and found to comply
with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant
to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are
designed to provide reasonable protection against
harmful interference in a residential installation.
This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used
in accordance with the instructions, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will
not occur in a particular installation. If this
equipment does cause harmful interference to radio
or television reception, which can be determined by
turning the equipment off and on, the user is
encouraged to try to correct the interference by one
or more of the following measures:
To reduce the risk of fire or electric
shock, do not expose this apparatus to
rain or moisture.
To avoid electrical shock, do not open
the cabinet. Refer servicing to qualified
personnel only.
• To keep the disc clean, handle the disc
by its edge. Do not touch the surface.
Dust, fingerprints, or scratches on the
disc may cause it to malfunction.
– Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
– Increase the separation between the equipment and
receiver.
– Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit
different from that to which the receiver is
connected.
Batteries or batteries installed apparatus
shall not be exposed to excessive heat
such as sunshine, fire or the like.
– Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV
technician for help.
CAUTION
The use of optical instruments with this
product will increase eye hazard. As the
laser beam used in this Blu-ray Disc
player is harmful to eyes, do not attempt
to disassemble the cabinet.
For customers in the U.S.A
If this product is not working properly, please call 1-
800-222-7669.
• Do not expose the disc to direct
sunlight or heat sources such as hot air
ducts, or leave it in a car parked in
direct sunlight as the temperature may
rise considerably inside the car.
Owner’s Record
The model and serial numbers are located at the rear
of the unit. Record the serial number in the space
provided below. Refer to them whenever you call
upon your Sony dealer regarding this product.
Refer servicing to qualified personnel
only.
Model No. BDP-S2000ES
Serial No.______________
• After playing, store the disc in its case.
• Clean the disc with a cleaning cloth.
Wipe the disc from the center out.
For Customers in Canada
If this product is not working properly, please call 1-
877-602-2008 for Peace of Mind Warranty
Replacement service.
For other product related questions please contact
our Customer Information Service Center at
1-877-899-7669 or write to us at: Customer
Information Service 115 Gordon Baker Road,
Toronto, Ontario, M2H 3R6
This label is located on the laser
• Do not use solvents such as benzine,
thinner, commercially available disc/
lens cleaners, or anti-static spray
intended for vinyl LPs.
protective housing inside the enclosure.
• If you have printed the disc’s label, dry
the label before playing.
This symbol is intended to alert the
user to the presence of uninsulated
“dangerous voltage” within the
product’s enclosure that may be of
sufficient magnitude to constitute a risk
of electric shock to persons.
This symbol is intended to alert the
user to the presence of important
operating and maintenance (servicing)
instructions in the literature
accompanying the appliance.
CAUTION
You are cautioned that any changes or modifications
not expressly approved in this manual could void
your authority to operate this equipment.
2
On operation
• If the player is brought directly from a
cold to a warm location, or is placed in
a very damp room, moisture may
condense on the lenses inside the
player. Should this occur, the player
may not operate properly. In this case,
remove the disc and leave the player
turned on for about half an hour until
the moisture evaporates.
Important Safety Precautions
Instructions
1) Read these instructions.
On safety
2) Keep these instructions.
3) Heed all warnings.
• To prevent fire or shock hazard, do not
place objects filled with liquids, such
as vases, on the apparatus.
• Should any solid object or liquid fall
into the cabinet, unplug the player and
have it checked by qualified personnel
before operating it any further.
4) Follow all instructions.
• When you move the player, take out
any discs. If you don’t, the disc may be
damaged.
• Do not move the player with the sliding
panel down.
5) Do not use this apparatus near water.
6) Clean only with dry cloth.
7) Do not block any ventilation
openings. Install in accordance with
the manufacturer’s instructions.
8) Do not install near any heat sources
such as radiators, heat registers,
stoves, or other apparatus (including
amplifiers) that produce heat.
9) Do not defeat the safety purpose of
the polarized or grounding-type
plug. A polarized plug has two
blades with one wider than the other.
A grounding type plug has two
blades and a third grounding prong.
The wide blade or the third prong are
provided for your safety. If the
provided plug does not fit into your
outlet, consult an electrician for
replacement of the obsolete outlet.
10) Protect the power cord from being
walked on or pinched particularly at
plugs, convenience receptacles, and
the point where they exit from the
apparatus.
• Do not apply a strong shock to the
sliding panel.
On power sources
• The player is not disconnected from the
AC power source as long as it is
connected to the wall outlet, even if the
player itself has been turned off.
• If you are not going to use the player
for a long time, be sure to disconnect
the player from the wall outlet. To
disconnect the AC power cord, grasp
the plug itself; never pull the cord.
On adjusting volume
Do not turn up the volume while
listening to a section with very low level
inputs or no audio signals. If you do, the
speakers may be damaged when a peak
level section is played.
On placement
• Place the player in a location with
adequate ventilation to prevent heat
build-up in the player.
• Do not place the player on a soft
surface such as a rug that might block
the ventilation holes.
• Do not place the player in a location
near heat sources, or in a place subject
to direct sunlight, excessive dust, or
mechanical shock.
• Do not install the player in an inclined
position. It is designed to be operated
in a horizontal position only.
• Keep the player and the discs away
from equipment with strong magnets,
such as microwave ovens, or large
loudspeakers.
• Do not place heavy objects on the
player.
• The transparent part on the front panel
surface is made of glass. Handle with
care.
• Do not install this player in a confined
space, such as a bookshelf or similar
unit.
• Install this player so that the power
cord can be unplugged from the wall
socket immediately in the event of
trouble.
On cleaning
Clean the cabinet, panel, and controls
with a soft cloth slightly moistened with
a mild detergent solution. Moreover,
wipe the glass part on the front panel
with a soft, dry cloth. Do not use any
type of abrasive pad, scouring powder or
solvent such as alcohol or benzine.
11) Only use attachments/accessories
specified by the manufacturer.
12) Use only with the cart, stand, tripod,
bracket, or table specified by the
manufacturer, or sold with the
apparatus. When a cart is used, use
caution when moving the cart/
apparatus combination to avoid
injury from tip-over.
On cleaning discs, disc/lens
cleaners
Do not use cleaning discs or disc/lens
cleaners (including wet or spray types).
These may cause the apparatus to
malfunction.
13) Unplug this apparatus during
lightning storms or when unused for
long periods of time.
14) Refer all servicing to qualified
service personnel. Servicing is
required when the apparatus has
been damaged in any way, such as
power-supply cord or plug is
damaged, liquid has been spilled or
objects have fallen into the
On replacement of parts
In the events that this player is repaired,
repaired parts may be collected for reuse
or recycling purposes.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Caution: This player is capable of
holding a still video image or on-screen
display image on your television screen
indefinitely. If you leave the still video
image or on-screen display image
displayed on your TV for an extended
period of time you risk permanent
damage to your television screen.
Plasma display panel televisions and
projection televisions are susceptible to
this.
apparatus, the apparatus has been
exposed to rain or moisture, does not
operate normally, or has been
dropped.
3
Adjusting the Pictures ......................................28
Table of Contents
WARNING ...............................................................2
Notes About the Discs ........................................2
Important Safety Instructions ...........................3
Precautions ...........................................................3
Table of Contents .................................................4
Searching for a Title ..........................................34
Discs and Files ................................................5
About playback of discs recorded in AVCHD
format .............................................................6
Cord .................................................................10
A Connecting to a video input jack ...................10
B Connecting to an S VIDEO input jack ...........10
C Connecting to component video input jacks
(Y, PB, PR) ....................................................10
About the ‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync features
Browsing by Date, Quicklist, or Folder ........42
Searching for a Photo .......................................42
(Quicklist) .......................................................43
(for HDMI connections only) .........................11
Audio Setup .........................................................47
Language .............................................................49
Speakers ...............................................................51
Options .................................................................52
Resetting the Player ..........................................53
Step 3: Connecting the Audio Cords ............12
Connecting to a stereo amplifier (receiver)
and 2 speakers .............................................13
Connecting to an AV amplifier (receiver)
and 3 to 6 speakers ......................................14
Connecting to an AV amplifier (receiver)
with 5.1ch input jacks and 6 speakers .........14
with a digital input jack and 6 speakers ........15
Connecting to an AV amplifier (receiver)
Troubleshooting .................................................54
Self-Diagnosis Function ...................................57
Index to Parts and Controls ............................58
Front panel .........................................................58
Glossary ...............................................................66
Specifications .....................................................67
Index ......................................................................70
with an HDMI input jack and 8 speakers ......15
If you want to control your TV with the supplied
remote ..........................................................17
Step 7: Additional Adjustments .....................19
Guide to Displays ...............................................22
Checking the Disc Information .......................26
(Audio DRC) ...................................................27
4
About this manual
Instructions in this manual describe the controls on the remote.
You can also use the controls on the player if they have the same
or similar names as those on the remote.
The meanings of the icons used in this manual are described
below:
This Player Can Play the
Following Discs and Files
Disc Format
Icon
Meaning
Blu-ray Disc
Functions available for BD-ROMs and
BD-REs/BD-Rs* , including DL discs.
BD
1
Functions available for DVD VIDEOs and
DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs in +VR mode or
DVD-RWs/DVD-Rs in video mode,
including 8 cm discs.
DVD
DVD VIDEO
DVD-RW/-R
Functions available for DATA DVDs
(DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs/DVD-RWs/DVD-
Rs containing MPEG-2 PS movie files,
MP3* audio tracks, and JPEG image
files).
DATA DVD
DVD+RW/+R
CD
2
Functions available for music CDs or CD-
Rs/CD-RWs in music CD Format.
CD
1
2
*
*
BD-REs/BD-Rs in BDMV mode only.
MP3 (MPEG-1 Audio Layer III) is a standard format defined by ISO
(International Organization for Standardization)/IEC (International
Electrotechnical Commission) MPEG which compresses audio data.
“Blu-ray Disc” is a trademark.
“Blu-ray Disc,” “DVD+RW,” “DVD-RW,” “DVD+R,” “DVD-
R,” “DVD VIDEO,” and “CD” logos are trademarks.
Note
Supported file formats (DATA DVD only)
DVD+RWs/DVD-RWs/DVD+Rs/DVD-Rs are called “DATA
DVD” in this manual when the discs contain playable files. The
following file formats are supported:
The on-screen display illustrations used in this manual may not match
the graphics displayed on your TV screen.
• MPEG-2 PS movie files.
• MP3 music files.
• JPEG* image files.
* JPEG format conforming to UDF (Universal Disk Format).
Notes about BD-ROM compatibility
This player supports BD-ROM Profile 1 only. Playback of later
versions and BDs other than BD-ROM is not guaranteed. Since
the Blu-ray Disc specifications are new and evolving, some discs
may not play depending on the disc type and the version.
The audio output differs depending on the source, connected
,continued
5
Examples of discs that the player
cannot play
About playback of discs recorded in
AVCHD format
The player cannot play the following discs:
This player can play AVCHD format discs.
• BDs with cartridge.
TM
• DVD-RWs/DVD-Rs of VR mode.
• DVD-RAMs.
• HD DVDs.
• DVD Audio discs.
What is the AVCHD format?
• DATA CDs (CD-Rs/CD-RWs other than music CD format).
• CD-ROMs recorded in PHOTO CD format.
• Data part of CD-Extras.
• VCDs/Super VCDs.
• HD layer on Super Audio CDs.
The AVCHD format is a high definition digital video camera
format used to record SD (standard definition) or HD (high
1
definition) signals of either the 1080i specification* or the 720p
2
specification* on DVDs, using efficient data compression
coding technology. The MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 format is adopted
to compress video data, and the Dolby Digital or Linear PCM
system is used to compress audio data. The MPEG-4 AVC/
H.264 format is capable of compressing images at higher
efficiency than that of the conventional image compressing
format. The MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 format enables a high
definition (HD) video signal shot on a digital video camera
recorder to be recorded on DVD discs, in the same way as it
would be for a standard definition (SD) television signal.
Also, the player cannot play the following discs:
• A BD-ROM/DVD VIDEO with a different region code.
• A disc recorded in a color system other than NTSC, such as
PAL (this player conforms to the NTSC color system).
• A disc that has a non-standard shape (e.g., card, heart).
• A disc with paper or stickers on it.
• A disc that has the adhesive of cellophane tape or a sticker still
left on it.
Notes
“AVCHD” and the AVCHD logo are trademarks of Matsushita Electric
Industrial Co., Ltd. and Sony Corporation.
• Notes about BD-REs/BD-Rs, DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs, DVD-RWs/
DVD-Rs, or CD-Rs/CD-RWs
1
*
*
A high definition specification which utilizes 1080 effective scanning
lines and the interlace system.
Some BD-REs/BD-Rs, DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs, DVD-RWs/
DVD-Rs, or CD-Rs/CD-RWs cannot be played on this player
due to the recording quality or physical condition of the disc,
or the characteristics of the recording device and authoring
software.
2
A high definition specification which utilizes 720 effective scanning
lines and the progressive system.
The DVD disc will not play if it has not been correctly
finalized. For more information, refer to the operating
instructions for the recording device. Note that some playback
functions may not work with some DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs, even
if they have been correctly finalized. In this case, view the disc
by normal playback.
Notes
• Some AVCHD format discs may not play, depending on the recording
condition.
• The AVCHD format disc will not play if it has not been correctly
finalized.
• Music discs encoded with copyright protection technologies
This product is designed to playback discs that conform to the
Compact Disc (CD) standard. Recently, various music discs
encoded with copyright protection technologies are being
marketed by some record companies. Please be aware that
among those discs, there are some that do not conform to the
CD standard and may not be playable by this product.
• Note on DualDiscs
A DualDisc is a two sided disc product which mates DVD
recorded material on one side with digital audio material on the
other side.
However, since the audio material side does not conform to the
Compact Disc (CD) standard, playback on this product is not
guaranteed.
• Note about double-layer DVDs
The playback pictures and sound may be momentarily
interrupted when the layers switch.
• Note about 8 cm BD-REs/8 cm BD-Rs
Some 8 cm BD-REs/8 cm BD-Rs cannot be played on this
player.
6
BD/DVD region code
Your player has a region code printed on the back of the unit and
only will play BD-ROM/DVD VIDEOs (playback only) labeled
with identical region codes. This system is used to protect
copyrights.
Main Features
ALL
DVD VIDEOs labeled
will also play on this player.
Experience the high definition (HD) quality audio/video output
and the library function of this Blu-ray Disc Player.
Depending on the BD-ROM/DVD VIDEO, there may be no region
code indication, even though playing the BD-ROM/DVD VIDEO is
prohibited by area restrictions.
BD-ROM playback
BD-ROM is a next generation optical disc format in the HD era.
Featuring massive storage capacity of 25 to 50 GB (five times
larger than a DVD) and a high-speed transfer rate of up to 54
Mbps, the format offers not only uncompromised HD quality
1
1 2
video* * , but also enables rich bonus content on a single disc
and HD quality audio up to 8ch, and interactive operability.
COMPONENT
1
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
1
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
*
A compatible HD display device is necessary to enjoy the same
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
quality.
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
2
*
Some discs allow viewing only with an HDMI connection.
24p True Cinema
Movies shot with a film camera consist of 24 frames per second.
Since conventional televisions (both CRT and flat panels)
display frames either at 1/60 or 1/50 second intervals, the 24
frames do not appear at an even pace.
When connected to a TV with 24p capabilities, the player
displays each frame at 1/24 second intervals — the same interval
originally shot with the film camera, thus faithfully reproducing
the original cinema image.
Note on playback operations of BDs/
DVDs
Some playback operations of BDs/DVDs may be intentionally
set by software producers. Since this player plays BDs/DVDs
according to the disc contents the software producers designed,
some playback features may not be available. Also, refer to the
instructions supplied with the BDs/DVDs.
HDMI Control (‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync)
‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync Function makes operations simple by
connecting Sony components that are compatible with the
HDMI Control function with an HDMI cord.
Copyrights
This product incorporates copyright protection technology that
is protected by U.S. patents and other intellectual property rights.
Use of this copyright protection technology must be authorized
by Macrovision, and is intended for home and other limited
viewing uses only unless otherwise authorized by Macrovision.
Reverse engineering or disassembly is prohibited.
BD-J application
The BD-ROM format supports Java for interactive functions.
“BD-J” offers content providers almost unlimited functionality
when creating interactive BD-ROM titles*.
Java and all Java-based trademarks and logos are trademarks or
registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and
other countries.
Esmertec and Jbed are trademarks or registered trademarks of
Esmertec AG.
© 2000-2007 Esmertec AG
* This player does not support downloadable BD-J content.
Support of uncompressed multi-channel Linear
PCM
In combination with a compatible AV amplifier, the player can
output up to 8ch Linear PCM surround sound*. With a non-
compatible amplifier, the player can output 5.1ch analog signals
from its 5.1CH OUTPUT jack for high quality audio enjoyment.
* Note that the DIGITAL OUT (COAXIAL or OPTICAL) jack does not
output 8ch signals. You will need an HDMI cord and an HDMI-
compatible device that support 8ch signals.
Support of “Dolby TrueHD” and “DTS-HD” —
7.1 Channel Surround Sound
The player supports the bitstream output functionality of Dolby
TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus, and DTS-HD High Resolution
Audio bitstream via HDMI. It also supports the decoding
functionality of Dolby TrueHD and Dolby Digital Plus to Linear
PCM via HDMI.
,continued
7
AVCHD format disc playback
The player supports AVCHD format files–high definition
recordings made on AVCHD-compatible camcorders. Your high
definition personal archive is readily playable in HD quality.
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface)
digital interface
When connected to an HDMI-equipped display device using a
single HDMI cord, the player can output both SD to HD video
and multi-channel audio signals, in digital form without
degradation.
The HDMI specification supports HDCP (High-bandwidth
Digital Content Protection), a copy protection technology that
incorporates coding technology for digital video signals.
Library function for recorded files (For JPEG
image, MP3 audio, MPEG-2 PS movie files
only)
With DATA DVDs created on other DVD devices, three
separate movie/music/photo Title List-browsers allow for easy
sorting, searching and playback including a slideshow.
x.v.Color compatibility
This player supports playback of video contents on discs
recorded with “x.v.Color” technology. To watch this video
content with the “x.v.Color” space, a TV or other display device
supporting both video image reproduction using “x.v.Color”
standard and capability of manual switching of its color space
setting is required. Please consult your owner’s manual of your
display device for further information.
◆About x.v.Color
–x.v.Color is a more familiar term for the xvYCC standard
proposed by Sony, and is a trademark of Sony Corporation.
–xvYCC is an international standard for color space in video.
This standard can express a wider color range than the
currently used broadcast standard.
8
Step 1: Unpacking
Check that you have the following items:
• Video cord (phono plug × 1) (1)
• Stereo audio cord (phono plug × 2) (1)
• Power cord (1)
• Remote commander (remote) (1)
• Size AA (R6) batteries (2)
Getting Started
Follow steps 1 to 7 to hook up and adjust the
settings of the player.
For jack and button names, see “Index to
Notes
• Plug cords securely to prevent unwanted noise.
• Refer to the instructions supplied with the components to
be connected.
• You cannot connect this player to a TV that does not have
a video input jack.
• Be sure to disconnect the power cord of each component
before connecting.
• Do not apply too much pressure on the connecting cords.
Pushing against the cabinet wall, etc., may damage the
cord.
• Step 2: Connecting the Video Cords/
9
B Connecting to an S VIDEO input jack
Connect using an S VIDEO cord (not supplied). You will enjoy
high quality images.
Step 2: Connecting the
Video Cords/HDMI Cord
Blu-ray Disc player
Connect this player to your TV monitor, projector or AV
amplifier (receiver) using a video cord. Select one of the patterns
A through D, according to the input jack on your TV monitor,
projector or AV amplifier (receiver).
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
In order to view 1080p progressive signals with a compatible
TV, projector, or monitor with an HDMI input jack, you must
select pattern D. You can use pattern C to view 480p/720p
progressive signals or 1080i interlace signals on a compatible
device with component video input jacks.
to S VIDEO
S VIDEO cord (not supplied)
VIDEO
OUT
VIDEO
S VIDEO
INPUT
S VIDEO
A Connecting to a video input jack
Connect the supplied video cord (yellow) to the yellow (video)
jack. You will enjoy standard quality images.
TV, projector, or AV
amplifier (receiver)
: Signal flow
Blu-ray Disc player
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
C Connecting to component video
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
input jacks (Y, PB, PR)
to VIDEO OUT
(yellow)
VIDEO
Connect the component via the COMPONENT VIDEO OUT jacks
using a component video cord (not supplied) or three video cords
(not supplied) of the same kind and length. You will enjoy accurate
color reproduction and high quality images. You can also enjoy
higher quality pictures from 480p/720p progressive signals or 1080i
interlace signals, if your TV, projector or AV amplifier (receiver) is
compatible.
OUT
VIDEO
INPUT
VIDEO
(yellow)
S VIDEO
Video cord (supplied)
L
AUDIO
Blu-ray Disc player
R
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
TV, projector, or AV
amplifier (receiver)
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
: Signal flow
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
to COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
COMPONENT
(green)
(blue)
(red)
(green)
(blue)
(red)
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
VIDEO IN
Y
When connecting to a standard 4:3 screen TV
Depending on the disc, the image may not fit your TV screen. To
Y
PB/CB
PR/CR
P
P
B
R
Note
Do not connect a VCR, etc., between your TV and the player. If you pass
the player signals via the VCR, you may not receive a clear image on the
TV screen. If your TV has only one audio/video input jack, connect the
player to this jack.
TV, projector, or AV
amplifier (receiver)
Component video
cord (not supplied)
: Signal flow
VCR
Blu-ray Disc player
TV
Connect
directly
10
About indicators for HDMI connection
D Connecting to an HDMI input jack
After the player is turned on, the HD indicator on the front panel
lights up when outputting 720p/1080i/1080p video signals. The
HDMI indicator lights up when an HDMI device is connected.
Use a certified Sony HDMI cord (not supplied) to enjoy high
quality digital pictures and sound through the HDMI OUT jack.
You will enjoy higher quality pictures from 480p/1080i, or
1080p (highest among the player output), if your TV, projector
or AV amplifier (receiver) is compatible.
Notes
• Consumers should note that not all high definition television sets are
fully compatible with this product and may cause artifacts to be
displayed in the picture. In the case of 480p/720p/1080i/1080p scan
picture problems, it is recommended that the user switch the
connection to the ‘standard definition’ output. If there are questions
regarding our TV set compatibility with this model 480p/720p/1080i/
1080p Blu-ray Disc player, please contact our customer service center.
• If the picture is not clear, not natural or not to your satisfaction, change
• Be sure to use only an HDMI cord that bears the HDMI logo.
Blu-ray Disc player
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
HDMI
OUT
to HDMI OUT
If your TV has a CONTROL S jack
HDMI cord (not supplied)
You can control the player by operating the remote, pointing it
toward the TV (convenient when the player and TV are placed
away from each other).
After connecting the player to your TV, connect also the
CONTROL S IN/IR IN jack to your TV’s control S (output) jack
using a control S cord (not supplied). Refer to the instructions
supplied with the TV.
TV, projector, or AV
amplifier (receiver)
HDMI IN
About the ‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync
features (for HDMI connections only)
By connecting Sony components that are compatible with the
HDMI Control function with an HDMI cord (not supplied),
operation is simplified as below:
This Blu-ray Disc player incorporates High-Definition
Multimedia Interface (HDMI™) technology. HDMI, the HDMI
logo and High-Definition Multimedia Interface are trademarks
or registered trademarks of HDMI Licensing LLC.
• One-Touch Play (page 21)
You can turn on the player and TV/AV receiver, set the TV/AV
receiver’s input to the player, and start playback with one touch
of the H button.
Notes on connecting to the HDMI OUT jack
Observe the following as improper handling may damage the
HDMI OUT jack and the connector.
• Carefully align the HDMI OUT jack on the back of the player
and the HDMI connector by checking their shapes. Make sure
the connector is not upside down or tilted.
• System Power-Off
When you turn the TV off by using the POWER button on the
TV’s remote, the HDMI compatible components turn off
automatically.
I
To prepare for the ‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync
HDM
OUT
features
I
HDM
OUT
Note
• Be sure to disconnect the HDMI cord when moving the player.
Depending on the connected component, the HDMI Control function
may not work. Refer to the operating instructions supplied with the
component.
• If you place the player on the cabinet with the HDMI cord
connected, do not apply too much pressure to the cabinet wall.
It may damage the HDMI OUT jack or the HDMI cord.
• When connecting or disconnecting, do not screw in or rotate
the HDMI connector.
11
Notes about the HDMI OUT jack
• When you connect the player to an AV amplifier (receiver)
using an HDMI cord, you will need to do one of the following:
–Connect the AV amplifier (receiver) to a TV with the HDMI
cord.
Step 3: Connecting the
Audio Cords
–Connect the player to the TV with a video cord other than an
HDMI cord (component video cord, S VIDEO cord, or video
cord).
• When connecting to the HDMI OUT jack, carefully align the
HDMI connector with the jack. Do not bend or apply pressure
to the HDMI cord.
Select the connection that best suits your system. Be sure to read
the instructions for the components you wish to connect.
• If you change the component connected to the HDMI OUT
jack, change “Audio (HDMI)” in “Audio Setup” to match the
settings for up to five components.
• The HDMI connection is compatible with 2ch Linear PCM
signals (48 to 192 kHz, 16/20/24 bit), and 6 to 8ch Linear PCM
signals (48 to 96 kHz, 16/20/24 bit), in addition to Dolby
Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD, DTS (include
DTS-ES, DTS96/24) and DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
bitstream.
Connection
Your setup
A
TV
B
Stereo amplifier (receiver) and
two speakers
Note
If you connect a component that does not conform to the selected audio
signal, a loud noise (or no sound) will come out from the speakers, which
could damage your ears or speakers.
C
AV amplifier (receiver) having a
*1
Dolby Surround (Pro Logic)
decoder and 3 to 6 speakers
• Surround effects: Dolby Surround
(Pro Logic)
D-1
AV amplifier (receiver) with
5.1ch input jacks and 6 speakers
• Surround effects: Dolby Digital
(5.1ch), DTS (5.1ch)
D-2
AV amplifier (receiver) with a
digital input jack having a Dolby
*2
Digital or DTS decoder and 6
speakers
• Surround effects: Dolby Digital
(5.1ch), DTS (5.1ch)
D-3
AV amplifier (receiver) with an
HDMI input jack having a Dolby
Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD, or
DTS-HD High Resolution Audio
decoder, and 8 speakers
• Surround effects: Linear PCM
(7.1ch), Dolby Digital Plus,
Dolby TrueHD, DTS-HD High
Resolution Audio bitstream
*1
Manufactured under license from Dolby laboratories.
Dolby, Pro Logic, and the double-D symbol are trademarks of Dolby
Laboratories.
Manufactured under license under U.S. Patent #: 5,451,942 & other
U.S. and worldwide patents issued & pending. DTS is a registered
trademark and the DTS logos, Symbol, DTS-HD and DTS-HD Digital
Out are trademarks of DTS, Inc. © 1996-2007 DTS, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
*2
12
B
A
Connecting to your TV
Connecting to a stereo amplifier
This connection will use your TV’s speakers for sound.
(receiver) and 2 speakers
If your stereo amplifier (receiver) only has audio input jacks L
and R, use B-1 . If your amplifier (receiver) has a digital input
jack, use B-2 .
Blu-ray Disc player
Blu-ray Disc player
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
P
B
L
L
P
B
DIGITAL
OUT
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
to AUDIO OUT L/R
(white)
AUDIO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
B-2
B-1
L
L
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
R
DIGITAL
OUT
R
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
(red)
TV
INPUT
Stereo audio cord
(supplied)
to DIGITAL OUT
(COAXIAL or
OPTICAL)
to AUDIO OUT
L/R
VIDEO
(white)
(red)
L
(white)
(white)
(red)
AUDIO
Optical digital
cord
(not supplied)
R
or
Stereo audio
cord (supplied)
: Signal flow
Coaxial digital
cord
(not supplied)
(red)
to coaxial or optical
digital input
to audio input
[Speakers]
Front (L)
Stereo amplifier (receiver)
Front (R)
: Signal flow
,continued
13
C
D-1
Connecting to an AV amplifier
Connecting to an AV amplifier
(receiver) having a Dolby Surround (Pro
Logic) decoder and 3 to 6 speakers
If your AV amplifier (receiver) only has L and R audio input
jacks, use C-1 . If your amplifier (receiver) has a digital input
jack, use C-2 .
(receiver) with 5.1ch input jacks and 6
speakers
If your AV amplifier (receiver) has 5.1 channel inputs, use
D-1 .
You can enjoy surround effects only when playing Dolby
Surround audio or multi-channel audio (Dolby Digital or DTS)
discs.
Blu-ray Disc player
Blu-ray Disc player
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
Y
VIDEO
VIDEO
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
L
L
L
L
P
B
P
B
DIGITAL
OUT
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PR
WOOFER
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
S
VIDEO
AUDIO
OUT
D-1
C-2
C-1
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT
REAR CENTER
L
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
DIGITAL
OUT
L
R
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
WOFER
to DIGITAL OUT
(COAXIAL or
OPTICAL)
to AUDIO OUT
L/R
to 5.1CH
OUTPUT
(white)
(red)
Optical digital
cord
(not supplied)
or
Stereo audio
cord (one is
supplied)
Monaural
audio cord
(not supplied)
Stereo audio
cord (supplied)
Coaxial digital
cord
(not supplied)
(white)
(red)
to audio input
[Speakers]
to coaxial or optical
digital input
to audio input
[Speakers]
[Speakers]
[Speakers]
AV amplifier
(receiver) with
5.1ch inputs
AV Amplifier
(receiver) with a
decoder
Rear (L)
Center
Front (R)
Rear (L) Rear (R)
Rear (R)
Front (R)
Center
Front (L)
Subwoofer
Subwoofer
: Signal flow
Front (L)
Rear (mono)
: Signal flow
z Hint
z Hint
For correct speaker location, see the operating instructions of the
For correct speaker location, see the operating instructions of the
connected components.
connected components.
Note
When connecting 6 speakers, you do not need the “Rear (mono)” speaker
above.
14
D-2
D-3
Connecting to an AV amplifier
Connecting to an AV amplifier
(receiver) with a digital input jack and
6 speakers
If you want to use the Dolby Digital, or DTS decoder function
on your AV amplifier (receiver), connect to its digital jack using
(receiver) with an HDMI input jack and
8 speakers
If your AV amplifier (receiver) accepts 8ch Linear PCM input
with an HDMI connection, you can enjoy the surround sound
. You can enjoy a more realistic audio presence.
using
.
D-2
D-3
Blu-ray Disc player
Blu-ray Disc player
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
CONTROL
IR IN
S
IN/
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
Y
VIDEO
VIDEO
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
OPTICAL
L
L
L
L
P
B
R
P
B
R
DIGITAL
OUT
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
R
P
P
WOOFER
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
S
VIDEO
D-3
D-2
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
HDMI
OUT
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
GITAL
to HDMI OUT
to DIGITAL OUT
(COAXIAL
to HDMI OUT
or OPTICAL)
HDMI cord
(not supplied)
Coaxial digital cord
(not supplied)
or
or
HDMI cord
(not supplied)
Optical digital cord
(not supplied)
to HDMI input
[Speakers]
to coaxial or optical
digital input
to HDMI input
[Speakers]
[Speakers]
[Speakers]
AV amplifier
AV amplifier
(receiver) having a
decoder
(receiver) with 8ch
outputs
Rear (L)
Rear (R)
Center
Rear1 (L)
Center
Subwoofer
Front (R)
Rear1 (R) Rear2 (R)
Rear2 (L)
Front (R)
Subwoofer
: Signal flow
Front (L)
Front (L)
z Hint
z Hint
For correct speaker location, see the operating instructions of the
For correct speaker location, see the operating instructions of the
connected components.
connected components.
Note
Not all HDMI-compatible AV amplifiers (receivers) accept 8ch Linear
PCM signals. See also the operating instructions supplied with the
connected AV amplifier (receiver).
15
Step 4: Connecting the
Power Cord
Step 5: Preparing the
Remote
After all of the other connections are complete, connect the
supplied power cord to the AC IN terminal of the player. Then
plug the player and TV power cords into the AC outlet.
You can control the player using the supplied remote. Insert two
Size AA (R6) batteries by matching the 3 and # ends on the
batteries to the markings inside the battery compartment. When
using the remote, point it at the remote sensor on the player
to AC IN
AC IN
to AC outlet
Notes
• Do not leave the remote in an extremely hot or humid place.
• Do not drop any foreign object into the remote casing, particularly
when replacing the batteries.
• Do not expose the remote sensor to direct sunlight or a lighting
apparatus. Doing so may cause a malfunction.
• If you do not use the remote for an extended period of time, remove the
batteries to avoid possible damage from battery leakage and corrosion.
16
To control other TVs with the remote
If you want to control your TV with the
supplied remote
You can control the volume, input source, and power switch of
your Sony TV with the supplied remote.
You can control the volume, input source, and power switch of non-
Sony TVs as well.
If your TV is listed in the table below, set the appropriate
manufacturer’s code.
1
While holding down TV [/1, press the number
buttons to select your TV manufacturer’s code
(see the table below).
OPEN/
CLOSE
TV
TV \/1
DIMMER DISPLAY TV/VIDEO
TV/VIDEO
2
Release TV [/1.
1
4
2
5
8
0
3
6
9
Number
buttons
◆Code numbers of controllable TVs
If more than one code number is listed, try entering them one at
a time until you find the one that works with your TV.
7
VIDEO
FORMAT
CLEAR
AUDIO
SUBTITLE ANGLE
Manufacturer
Sony
Code number
01 (default)
22, 04
14
RED GREEN BLUE YELLOW
SYSTEM
TOP
MENU
MENU
Daewoo
Emerson
GE
06
POP UP/
MENU
Hitachi
02, 04
09
RETURN
PREV
SLOW/STEP
PLAY
NEXT
JVC
SCAN
SCAN
LG/Gold star
MGA/Mitsubishi
NEC
03, 17, 04
13, 04
04, 12
19
PAUSE
STOP
PLAY MODE
VOL
CH
MUTING
Panasonic
Philips
CH +/–
MUTING
VOL +/–
08, 21
16
Pioneer
RCA
10, 04
05
R.Shack
Samsung
Sanyo
04, 12, 20
11
Sharp
05, 18
07, 18
15
Toshiba
Zenith
By pressing
You can
TV [/1
Turn the TV on or off.
◆To return the remote to its default settings
VOL +/–
TV/VIDEO
Adjust the volume of the TV.
1
2
Remove the batteries from the remote.
Switch the TV’s input source between the
TV and other input sources.
Re-insert the batteries while pressing down 1, 2,
and 3 of the number buttons.
CH +/–
Select the channel up and down.
Mute the sound (for Sony TV only).
MUTING
3
Wait for a few seconds.
Note
Depending on the connected unit, you may not be able to control your
TV using all or some of the buttons on the supplied remote.
17
e Select “Start,” and press ENTER to start
“Easy Setup.”
Step 6: Easy Setup
Easy Setup
Before using, make some simple
settings for the BD player.
Start
Cancel
Follow the steps below to make the minimum number of basic
adjustments for using the player. If you do not complete Easy
Setup, it will appear each time you turn on your player.
Make the settings below in the following order.
Please use the Initial Setup if you
want to make more detailed settings.
When turned on for the first time
Wait about 90 seconds before the player turns on and starts
Easy Setup. The start-up time will be much shorter once Easy
Setup is completed.
◆If the above display does not appear
Go to step 6. This display appears only when the player is turned
on for the first time.
f Select the video output format for the
connected TV, and press ENTER.
OPEN/
CLOSE
TV
"/1
◆ When using the HDMI OUT jack
DIMMER DISPLAY TV/VIDEO
1
4
2
5
8
0
3
6
9
Easy Setup
Output Video Format
7
VIDEO
FORMAT
Auto
CLEAR
480i
480p
AUDIO
SUBTITLE ANGLE
720p
1080i
RED GREEN BLUE YELLOW
1080p
Source Direct
SYSTEM
MENU
TOP
MENU
</M/m/,,
ENTER
Select from “Auto,” “480i,” “480p,” “720p,”
“1080i,” “1080p,” or “Source Direct,” then go to
step 8. “TV Type” in step 7 will be set to “16:9”
(wide screen).
POP UP/
MENU
RETURN
PREV
SLOW/STEP
NEXT
◆ When using the jacks other than the HDMI OUT
a Turn on the TV.
jack
b Press [/1 to turn on the player.
Easy Setup
The player turns on after a moment.
Output Video Format
S-Video/Video only
480i
480p
720p
c Switch the input selector on your TV so that
the signal from the player appears on your
TV screen.
1080i
Don't Know
If the display for OSD language selection does not
appear, select “Start” of “Easy Setup” in “Options”
Select from “S-Video/Video only,” “480i,”
“480p,” “720p,” “1080i” or “Don’t Know.” If
you select “720p” or “1080i,” go to step 8. “TV
Type” in step 7 will be set to “16:9” (wide
screen).
d Select the OSD language you want to display,
and press ENTER.
Easy Setup
Language
English
Français
This will determine the Audio, Subtitle and BD/
DVD menu languages as well.
18
g Select the aspect ratio that matches your TV,
and press ENTER.
Step 7: Additional
Adjustments
Easy Setup
TV Type
16:9
4:3
The following settings and adjustments are necessary when your
connection applies.
For video connection
◆When using the COMPONENT VIDEO OUT jacks
• Select the video output resolution for your TV by pressing
◆ If you have a wide screen TV or a 4:3 standard TV
with a wide screen mode
◆When using the HDMI OUT jack
◆ If you have a 4:3 standard TV
• Select the video output resolution for your TV by pressing
• Select the type of video output from the HDMI OUT jack in
h Select “Finish Setup,” and press ENTER.
Easy Setup
For audio connection
◆When using the DIGITAL OUT (OPTICAL or COAXIAL) jack
Setup is complete!
Enjoy using your BD player!
Finish Setup
Go Back
(Connection B-2 , C-2 ,
D-2
• Set “Dolby Digital” and “DTS” in “Audio Setup” (page 47)
according to your AV amplifier’s (receiver’s) decoder.
◆When using the HDMI OUT jack
(HDMI connection of
,
D-2
D-3
• Set “Dolby Digital” and “DTS” in “Audio Setup” (page 47)
according to your AV amplifier’s (receiver’s) decoder.
• Select the audio output method from the HDMI OUT jack in
z Hints
◆When using the AUDIO OUT (L/R) jacks
• If you want to reset these settings to their factory defaults, see
◆When using the 5.1CH OUTPUT jacks
(Connection
D-1
• Set “Audio Output Mode” to “5.1 Channel” in “Speakers”
your system.
Notes
• If you connect a component that does not conform to the selected audio
signal, a loud noise (or no sound) will come out from the speakers,
which could damage your ears or speakers.
• If you connect using the HDMI OUT jack or COMPONENT VIDEO
OUT jacks and the picture does not appear clearly, the connected
display device may not be compatible with the progressive signals. In
this case, connect the display device to the S VIDEO jack or the
additional adjustment is required.
19
Playing a Disc
Basic
BD
DVD
CD
Operations
OPEN/
CLOSE
TV
Z
\/1
Most of the BD playback operations are
common to DVD. This section covers BD/
DVD/CD playback in general, together with
the basic operation of the player.
DIMMER DISPLAY TV/VIDEO
1
4
2
5
8
0
3
6
9
Number buttons
7
VIDEO
FORMAT
CLEAR
For browsing recorded files on DATA
DVDs*, a separate library function is
For operations using the remote, a complete
AUDIO
SUBTITLE ANGLE
RED GREEN BLUE YELLOW
Color buttons
SYSTEM
MENU
TOP
MENU
SYSTEM MENU
RETURN
TOP MENU
</M/m/,, ENTER
POP UP/MENU
POP UP/
MENU
RETURN
PREV
*
DVD+RWs/DVD+Rs/DVD-RWs/DVD-Rs containing
MPEG-2 PS movie, MP3 audio, or JPEG image files.
SLOW/STEP
PLAY
NEXT
SCAN
SCAN
H
x
PAUSE
STOP
PLAY MODE
X
VOL
CH
MUTING
a Press \/1.
The player turns on after a moment.
b Switch the input selector on your TV so that
the signal from the player appears on your
TV screen.
c Press Z to open the disc tray.
The sliding panel shifts down and the disc tray opens.
To open the sliding panel, press UP/DOWN on the
player.
d Place a disc on the disc tray with the playback
side facing down.
Playback side facing down
20
e Press Z to close the disc tray.
Wait a short while until the disc type appears on the
front panel display.
About the screen saver function
To prevent damage to your display device (ghosting), a screen
saver image appears when the player is left unattended, has no
disc inserted, or no title/slideshow is displayed for 15 minutes.
To cancel, press any button on the remote or the player.
f Press H to start playback.
For more information about the remote’s operations,
About One-Touch Play (for ‘BRAVIA’ Theatre
Sync only)
Buttons
Details
With one touch of the H button, the player and your TV/AV
receiver automatically turn on and the TV/AV receiver’s input is
switched to the player. Playback starts automatically. To use this
function, set “HDMI Control” of “Options” setup to “On”
X
Pauses playback, or restarts playback from the same
point.
x
Stops playback, or cancels the resume point when
pressed twice.
The TV/AV receiver’s input will also switch to the player
automatically, in the following cases:
H
Starts or restarts playback from the previous stop
point.
–You press H, SYSTEM MENU, TOP MENU, or POP UP/
MENU buttons on the remote.
–A disc with auto playback function is loaded.
g When you finish playing, press Z to open the
disc tray.
h Remove the disc, and press Z again to close
the disc tray.
i Press \/1 to turn off the player.
To use the BD’s or DVD’s menu
When you play a BD-ROM, DVD VIDEO, or a finalized
DVD+RW, DVD-RW (Video mode), DVD+R, or DVD-R
(Video mode), you can display the disc’s menu by pressing TOP
MENU or POP UP/MENU. Some BDs/DVDs display the menu
automatically. Either cases, navigate through the menu using
</M/m/,, ENTER, or the number buttons and the color
buttons as indicated by the disc’s on-screen instructions. The BD
menu is operable without interrupting playback.
To play restricted BDs
To play restricted DVDs
For a restricted DVD, the display asks for the password. For
1
2
Enter your four-digit password using the number
buttons.
Press ENTER to confirm.
Notes about Resume Play
• Playback starts from the beginning if the title has not been
played or the previous stop point is canceled.
• The stop point is canceled when:
–you change the settings on the player.
–you turn off the player (BD-ROM and DATA DVD only).
–you press x twice.
–you open the disc tray.
–you use a search function.
• The player remembers the stop point for one title/track/file
only. On a music CD, playback resumes from the beginning of
the track.
• Depending on the disc, the Resume function may not work.
21
Title List
For DATA DVDs, this display leads further to the Title Lists of
content type. The three Title Lists appear similar and are
operable in a similar way.
Guide to Displays
Title List
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
CD
Movies
Photos
Music
When ‘Select an item, and press ENTER’ appears in this manual,
press the </M/m/, keys on the remote to select the item then
the entry button in the middle. You can operate the player
likewise using displays.
System Menu
Select the Title List you want to view; from “Movies,” “Photos,”
or “Music,” and press ENTER.
Title List
A/V Control
Setup
◆Movies
◆Photos
◆Music
A/V Control (page 27)
a Press SYSTEM MENU to turn on the above
“System Menu.”
Adjusts the audio/video settings. Select either “Video Control,”
or “Audio Control,” and press ENTER.
The player’s start menu appears, with entries to all of
the functions.
A/V Control
b Select an item, and press ENTER.
Each item leads to the following function displays.
See the pages in parentheses for operations. When
you want to return to the previous display, press
RETURN.
Video Control
Audio Control
Setup (page 44)
Enters the Setup displays for changing the player’s settings.
Select the related Setup display, and press ENTER.
Setup
Video Setup
Audio Setup
Language
TV Type
16:9
4:3 Video Out
DVD Aspect Ratio
YCbCr/RGBPC(HDMI)
24p Output
Normal
Letter Box
Y, Cb, Cr
Off
Parental Control
Speakers
Options
22
Entering characters
DATA DVD
When an on-screen keyboard appears (e.g., when searching for a
title), enter the characters as follows.
s_
A
K
B C D E F G H
L M N O P Q R S
I
J
T
;
U V W X
1
_
Y
5
Z
6
,
7
.
8
:
9
2
3
(
4
)
0
SHFT
SPC
DEL
CLR
DONE
CANCEL
a Select the character you want to enter, and
press ENTER.
The character appears in the entry field. If necessary,
select the following items, and press ENTER.
Items
Details
SHFT
Switches between upper and lower case
characters. Select this before entering the
character.
SPC
DEL
CLR
Inserts a space.
Deletes the last character input.
Clears all input characters.
b Repeat step 1 to complete the entry.
c Select “DONE,” and press ENTER to close
the on-screen keyboard.
Note
You cannot use the extended character set.
23
Guide to the Remote
– Opens/closes the disc tray.
– Turns the TV on or to standby mode.
The following covers all of the remote’s functions. Refer to the
list when necessary.
– Turns on, or sets the player to standby mode.
– Changes the brightness of the front panel display
on the player (when completely darkened,
indicators on the front panel are also turned off
and the FL OFF indicator lights up).
OPEN/
CLOSE
TV
DIMMER DISPLAY TV/VIDEO
DISPLAY (page 26)
– Displays the disc information on the screen.
1
4
2
5
8
0
3
6
9
TV/VIDEO (page 17)
– Switches between TV and other input sources.
7
VIDEO
FORMAT
– Enters the title/chapter numbers, etc.
CLEAR
CLEAR
– Clears the entry field.
AUDIO
SUBTITLE ANGLE
RED GREEN BLUE YELLOW
– Changes the video output resolution from the
HDMI OUT jack and the COMPONENT VIDEO
OUT jacks. Press this button repeatedly if no
picture appears.
SYSTEM
MENU
TOP
MENU
E AUDIO*1 (page 49)
– Selects the sound track or the language track on a
BD/DVD.
1
*
When playing MPEG-2 movie files or MP3 music files on a
POP UP/
MENU
DATA DVD, or a music CD, you cannot use this button.
RETURN
PREV
SLOW/STEP
PLAY
NEXT
SUBTITLE (page 49)
– Selects the subtitle language on a BD/DVD.
SCAN
SCAN
ANGLE
PAUSE
STOP
– Switches to other viewing angles when available.
PLAY MODE
F Color buttons (RED/GREEN/BLUE/YELLOW)
– Short cut keys for selecting items on some BD’s
menus (can also be used for BD’s Java interactive
operations).
VOL
CH
MUTING
Number 5, AUDIO, CH+, and H buttons have a tactile dot. Use the
tactile dot as a reference when operating the player.
24
– Enters/exits the player’s start menu (“System
Menu”).
I For TVs operable with the following buttons, see
MUTING (page 17)
TOP MENU (page 20)
– Mutes the TV sound.
– Opens/closes the BD’s or DVD’s top menu.
VOL (volume) +/– (page 17)
POP UP/MENU (page 20)
– Adjusts the TV volume.
– Opens/closes the BD’s pop up menu, or the
DVD’s disc menu.
CH (channel) +/– (page 17)
– Selects the TV channels up and down.
– Returns to the previous display.
Playing in various play mode
– Moves the highlight to select a displayed item.
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
CD
– Enters the selected item.
a During playback, press PLAY MODE
repeatedly.
H ./> PREV/NEXT
Available items differ depending on the current title/
track/file or the disc type. To cancel the Play Mode,
press PLAY MODE again.
– Skips to the previous/next chapter, track, or file.
c/ C SLOW/STEP*2
– Plays in slow motion or stop motion. To return to
◆When playing a video or movie title
normal play, press H.
• To play in slow motion
Items
Details
Time Search
Press
play starts, press
C during playback. When slow motion
C repeatedly to change the
Title Search
speed : 1/16 t 1/8 t 1/4 t 1/2 of normal playback
speed.
(BD-ROM/DVD VIDEO
only)
• To play in stop motion (step by step)
Press X during playback, then press c or
repeatedly.
Repeat Chapter
(BD-ROM/DVD VIDEO
only)
Repeats the current chapter.
Repeats the current title.
C
Repeat Title
m/M SCAN*2
– Scans backwards or forward. The speed changes
when pressed repeatedly.
◆When playing a music track
Items
Details
2
*
Depending on the disc or file type, the function may not work
or the scan speeds may differ.
Repeat Track
Repeat All
Repeats the current track.
Repeats all the tracks on the disc or the
“Music” Title List.
H PLAY
– Starts or re-starts playback.
Random
Plays all the tracks on the disc or the
“Music” Title List in a random order.
PLAY MODE
◆When playing a photo image
– Switches to other play modes (Repeat Play, etc.)
when pressed during playback.
Items
Details
Repeat All
Repeats all the files on the disc or
“Photos” Title List.
X PAUSE
– Pauses/re-starts playback.
Random
Plays all the files on the disc or “Photos”
Title List in a random order.
x STOP
– Stops playback.
– Clears the resume point when pressed twice. The
resume point for a title is the last point you
played, the last track for an audio file, or the last
photo for a photo file.
,continued
25
Searching using the remote
Checking the Disc
Information
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
CD
You can search by entering the title/chapter/track number or the
time code (elapsed time from the beginning of the disc).
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
CD
OPEN/
CLOSE
TV
You can check the title/chapter/track information including
video transmission rate etc., by pressing DISPLAY. The
information differs depending on the disc type and the player
status.
DIMMER DISPLAY TV/VIDEO
1
4
2
5
8
0
3
6
9
Number buttons
7
VIDEO
FORMAT
CLEAR
a Press DISPLAY.
AUDIO
SUBTITLE ANGLE
RED GREEN BLUE YELLOW
Example: When playing a DVD VIDEO.
SYSTEM
MENU
TOP
MENU
ENTER
Play
DVD-VIDEO
1-1 2.01.23
Chapters 12
Title Total
Repeat Title
2h15m34s
POP UP/
MENU
RETURN
PREV
SLOW/STEP
PLAY
NEXT
SCAN
SCAN
PAUSE
STOP
PLAY MODE
PLAY MODE
VOL
CH
MUTING
The following information appears:
1 Playback status
2 Disc type
3 Title information
• Currently playing title number/currently playing
chapter number.
• Total number of chapters within the title.
• Total playback time of the title.
To search for a title, chapter, or track (BD-
ROM, DVD VIDEO, CD only)
4 Elapsed time of the current title
5 Play mode
1
Enter the title number using the number buttons
while the player is in stop mode.
To search for a chapter, enter the chapter number
during playback. To search for a track, enter the track
number during playback. If you make a mistake,
press CLEAR once and re-enter.
b Press DISPLAY again.
Play
1-1 2.01.23
Chapter Time
Chapter Total
Repeat Title
DVD-VIDEO
01.11.56
2h15m34s
10.03 Mbps
2
Press ENTER to start playback.
To search for a specific point (BD-ROM, DVD
VIDEO, DATA DVD only)
1
During playback, press PLAY MODE repeatedly
until “Time Search” appears.
2
Enter the time code using the number buttons.
Enter the time in minutes and seconds (e.g., ‘12030’
for 1 hour, 20 minutes and 30 seconds). If you make
a mistake, press CLEAR once and re-enter.
The display switches to show the following
information:
1 Chapter information
3
Press ENTER to start playback.
• Elapsed time of the current chapter.
• Total playback time of the current chapter.
Note
2 Video transmission rate and the stream
Depending on the DVD VIDEO/BD-ROM/DATA DVD/CD, these
search functions may not work.
information
26
z Hints
• You can also check disc information on the front panel display
• You can check the audio information by pressing AUDIO.
Clarifying Low Volume
Sounds (Audio DRC)
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
Even at low volume, you can make low sounds such as dialogs
more audible.
Audio Control
Audio DRC
Off
Max
Convenient when you cannot turn up the volume (e.g., at
night)
a Press SYSTEM MENU during playback.
b Select “A/V Control,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Audio Control,” and press ENTER to
turn on the above display.
d While “Audio DRC” is highlighted, select
from “Max” to “Off” by pressing </,.
e Press ENTER.
Note
“Audio DRC” is effective only when the disc is a Dolby Digital Blu-ray
Disc or DVD, and:
– “Dolby Digital” in “Audio Setup” is set to “Downmix PCM” (page 47)
and the audio signals are output from the DIGITAL OUT (OPTICAL
or COAXIAL) jack or the HDMI OUT jack.
audio signals are output from the HDMI OUT jack.
– The audio signals are output from the AUDIO OUT (L/R) jacks or the
5.1CH OUTPUT jacks.
27
Fine-tuning the picture to your
preference
Adjusting the Pictures
Memory1
Min
Min
Max
Max
Red
Max
White Adjust
Black Adjust
Hue
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
Green
Min
Color Level
The “cinema tuned” picture preset setting will allow you to
maximize the visual impact of the BD or DVD you are watching
by optimizing the picture settings for different lighting
environments. “Memory” allows you to make your own detailed
adjustments.
a Select from “Memory 1” to “Memory 3” in
b Select “Detailed Settings,” and press ENTER
to turn on the above display.
To switch to another “Memory,” press RETURN.
c Select each of the picture elements, and
Standard
adjust using </,.
Detailed Settings
◆ To adjust while previewing the effect
Select a setting and press ENTER to switch the
display for the setting. Press </, to adjust
while checking the effect on the background
playback picture. Then press ENTER to save the
adjustment.
a Press SYSTEM MENU during playback.
b Select “A/V Control,” and press ENTER.
Underlined are the default settings for “Memory.”
c Select “Video Control,” and press ENTER to
turn on the above display.
Items
Details
White Adjust
(Min~(mid)~Max)
Adjusts the brightness of white
colors.
d Press </, to select a setting.
Black Adjust
Adjusts the richness of dark colors.
Items
Details
(Min~(mid)~Max)
Brighter Room
Theater Room
For a room brighter than normal.
Hue
Balances the green and the red
colors.
(Green~(mid)~Red)
For a dark room such as a home
theater.
Color Level
Adjusts the color saturation.
(Min~(mid)~Max)
Standard (default)
Memory (1-3)
Normally, select this.
Select a setting when you want to
use the detailed picture adjustments
you previously made, or when you
want to make a new set. The player
remembers up to three sets (see
page 28).
d Press RETURN.
e Press ENTER.
z Hint
The above description applies when the picture setting of your TV (if
any) is set to ‘Standard.’
28
Setting/changing the password
Locking a Disc
BD
DVD
Setup
BD
DVD
Video Setup
Change Password
Next Screen
Next Screen
Next Screen
Audio Setup
Language
DVD Parental Control
BD Parental Control
Parental Control
Speakers
By setting the password and your limit in “Parental Control”
Setup, you can control playback of inappropriate discs.
Options
BD PLAYER
Parental Control
Use the number keys to
enter the password to
turn off the parental
lock.
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
Current Level
Disc Level
3
5
b Select “Setup,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Parental Control,” and press ENTER
to turn on the above “Parental Control”
Setup.
The password is required when the DVD exceeds the
level you set.
d Select “Change Password (Set Password),”
Notes
and press ENTER.
• You cannot limit playback if the DVD VIDEO/BD-ROM does not
have the “Parental Control” function.
• If you forget the password, you will have to return all of the player
• The above display does not appear for BD-ROM. If you cannot play a
BD-ROM because of Parental Control, reset “Change Age Restriction”
e Select “Next Screen,” and press ENTER to
turn on the password display.
◆ When you have not yet registered a password
Enter a four-digit password using the number
buttons, and press m. Re-enter it for
confirmation, and press ENTER.
◆ When you have already registered a password
Enter the four-digit password using the number
buttons, and press ENTER. Enter a new password
and press m, then re-enter it for confirmation, and
press ENTER.
z Hint
To continue to set “DVD Parental Control,” go to step 4 of “Setting the
,continued
29
Setting the Parental Control for DVD
VIDEOs
Setting the Parental Control for BD-
ROMs
DVD
BD
Setup
Setup
Change Level
Change Age Restriction
Video Setup
Audio Setup
Language
Video Setup
Audio Setup
Language
Password
Level
Password
Parental Control
Speakers
Parental Control
Speakers
Age Restriction
Off
255
Options
Options
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Setup,” and press ENTER.
b Select “Setup,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Parental Control,” and press ENTER
c Select “Parental Control,” and press ENTER
to turn on the “Parental Control” Setup.
to turn on the “Parental Control” Setup.
d Select “DVD Parental Control,” and press
d Select “BD Parental Control,” and press
ENTER.
ENTER.
e Select “Change Level,” and press ENTER to
turn on the above display.
e Select “Change Age Restriction,” and press
ENTER to turn on the above display.
For BD-ROMs, the restriction is set by age, not by
level.
This will set the playback limitation level.
f Enter the password using the number
f Enter the password using the number
buttons, and press ENTER.
buttons, and press ENTER.
g Press </, to select the limitation level
from “Off” to “Level 8,” and press ENTER.
Note that the lower the value, the stricter the
limitation.
g Press </, to select the age from “0” to
“255,” and press ENTER.
h When the display returns to the “Parental
Control” Setup, select “BD Parental
Control,” and press ENTER.
h When the display returns to the “Parental
Control” Setup, select “DVD Parental
Control,” and press ENTER.
i Select “BD Country Code,” and press
ENTER.
i Select “DVD Country Code,” and press
ENTER.
This ensures that you see the scenes intended for
This ensures that you see the scenes intended for
your residential area.
your residential area.
j On the “BD Country Code” display, enter the
password using the number buttons, and
press ENTER.
j On the “DVD Country Code” display, enter
the password using the number buttons, and
press ENTER.
k Press </, to select your country code (see
your area using the number buttons.
k Press </, to select your country code (see
your area using the number buttons.
l Press ENTER.
l Press ENTER.
z Hint
To continue to set “BD Parental Control,” go to step 4 of “Setting the
30
31
Viewing All Titles
Watching Movie
Files
DATA DVD
The “Movies” Title List first displays all titles on the disc.
All Movies
1214 items
Use the “Movies” Title List to browse
through and sort MPEG-2 PS movie files on
DATA DVDs.
Spider
Smoother
Sideway
Home
Alpinist
Electricity
Lemon Grove
Bridget
All Movies
Browse
Search
Sort
Finding Never-Ever Land
Meet My Mom
The Browse menu appears when you press <
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Movies,” and press ENTER.
The above “All Movies” display appears, showing
all titles (scrollable by pressing m). From “All
Movies” you can apply items to all titles using the
Browse menu (see below).
To use the Browse menu
Press < after step 3 to display the items for the “Movies” Title
List. For operations, see the pages in parentheses. Available
items differ depending on the display.
Items
Details
All Movies
Browse
Lists all titles (as above).
Displays a list of genres, Quicklist, or
Search
Sort
Searches for a title using the on-screen
Reorders the titles by date or alphabet (see
below).
◆Example: To apply “Sort” to all titles
A Select “Sort,” and press ENTER.
B Select the setting you want to sort by; “Recent first,”
“Oldest first,” “By title (AtZ),” “By title (ZtA),” and
press ENTER.
32
About the “Movies” (All Movies) Title List
display
Playing a title
select the title you want to play, and press
ENTER.
All Movies
1214 items
Spider
Smoother
Sideway
The title starts playing. You can apply other playback
settings to the selected title using the “Options”
menu (see below).
Home
Date
: 2006
Alpinist
Electricity
Lemon Grove
Bridget
Genre : Adventure
Format : MPEG
Finding Never-Ever Land
Meet My Mom
All Movies
1214 items
Spider
Options
Smoother
Sideway
Play from Beginning
Add to Quicklist
Home
Date
: 2006
Alpinist
Electricity
Lemon Grove
Bridget
Genre : Adventure
Format : MPEG
1 Detailed information
Displays details about the selected title.
• Date: Displays the recording year.
• Genre: Displays the genre name.
Finding Never-Ever Land
Meet My Mom
• Format: Displays the coding format.
The “Options” menu appears when you select a title and
2 List area
Displays the title names of all content.
press ,
To use the “Options” menu
Press , instead of ENTER in the above step to display the
“Options” menu settings applicable to the title in the given
situation. In the above example, the following items are
available.
Items
Details
Play from Beginning
Starts playing the title you selected from
the beginning.
Add to Quicklist
Adds the selected title to the Quicklist.
◆Example: To apply “Play from Beginning” to the selected title
A Select “Play from Beginning,” and press ENTER.
To play in other play mode
During playback, press PLAY MODE repeatedly. The selected
“Repeat Title” — “Repeat Off”
z Hint
33
Browsing by Genre,
Quicklist, or Folder
Searching for a Title
DATA DVD
DATA DVD
Narrow down the list of titles by selecting the category type (e.g.,
“Folders”), then the category.
You can find the exact title, or titles with a similar name.
Search Results
5 items
Folders
2 items
Say No
Sea
Winter games 2006
Interviews
Sideway
Spider
Stay Alive
s_
A
B
L
V
2
C
M
W
3
D
N
X
4
)
E
O
Y
5
F
P
Z
6
G
Q
,
H
R
.
I
S
:
J
T
;
K
U
1
7
8
9
0
_
(
SHFT
SPC
DEL
CLR
DONE
CANCEL
Search results are narrowed down as more characters
are entered
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Movies,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Movies,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “Search,” and press ENTER to turn on
f Select the list you want to view from
“Genres,” “Quicklist,” or “Folders,” and
press ENTER.
the above display.
f Enter the title name using the on-screen
The list of genres/Quicklist/folders appears as above.
For details about the Quicklist, see “Programming
z Hint
You can select a title and start playback by pressing ENTER, or using the
“Options” menu (press ,).
g Select the genre/Quicklist/folder you want to
view, and press ENTER.
z Hint
You can select a title and start playback by pressing ENTER, or using the
“Options” menu (press ,).
34
To remove the title from the “Quicklist”
Programming Playback
(Quicklist)
1
Select the title you want to remove from the
displayed “Quicklist,” and press ,.
2
Select “Remove,” and press ENTER.
z Hint
You can play the “Quicklist” content in other play modes by pressing
DATA DVD
Play your favorite titles in the order you like by making your
own “Quicklist.”
Note
The “Quicklist” may be cleared after some operations (e.g., displaying
the Title List, opening the disc tray, turning off the player, etc.).
Quicklist
14 items
Spider
Smoother
Sideway
Home
Date
: 2006
Alpinist
Electricity
Lemon Grove
Bridget
Genre : Adventure
Format : MPEG
Finding Never-Ever Land
Meet My Mom
The “Quicklist” does not affect the original recording on
the disc
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Movies,” and press ENTER.
d When the “All Movies” Title List appears,
select the title you want to add to the top of
the “Quicklist,” and press ,.
e Select “Add to Quicklist” from the “Options”
menu, and press ENTER.
f Repeat step 4 and 5 to select all the desired
titles.
Select in the order you want to play. You can add the
same title multiple times.
The “Quicklist” can contain up to 25 titles.
g Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
h Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
i Select “Quicklist,” and press ENTER to turn
on the above display.
The “Quicklist” Title List appears with the
programmed content.
j Select the title you want to start playback,
and press ENTER.
35
Viewing All Artists
Listening to
Music Files
DATA DVD
The “Music” Title List first displays a list of the artist names on
the disc.
Use the “Music” Title List to browse
through and play the MP3 track files on
DATA DVDs. You can make a “Quicklist”
of your favorites and play in various play
modes.
A
r
t
i
s
t
s
7
items
A
l
l
Artis
A
n
g
e
l
a
S
i
on
6
Albums
B
l
u
e
Glas
5
Albums
B
o
h
e
m
i
a
n
t
6
Albums
Cela
4
Albums
C
l
a
s
s
i
c
x
5
Albums
Commotion
2
Albums
C
o
u
n
t
Drala
2
Albums
The Browse menu appears when you press <
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Music,” and press ENTER.
The above “Artists” display appears, showing all
artist names (scrollable by pressing m). From
“Artists” you can apply items to all tracks using the
Browse menu (see below).
To use the Browse menu
Press < after step 3 to display the items for the “Music” Title
List. For operations, see the pages in parentheses. Available
items differ depending on the display.
Items
Details
All Songs
Browse
Displays a list of artists, albums, genres,
Search
Searches for a track using the on-screen
Sort
Reorders the tracks by alphabet, or year,
etc. (see below).
Now Playing
Displays the track information and the
playback information during playback.
◆Example: To apply “Sort” to all tracks
A To display the list of tracks, select “All Songs” from the
Browse menu and press ENTER.
B Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
C Select “Sort,” and press ENTER.
D Select the setting you want to sort by; “Recent first,”
“Oldest first,” “By title (AtZ),” “By title (ZtA),” “By
artist (AtZ),” “By artist (ZtA),” and press ENTER.
• Browsing by Artist, Album, Genre, Quicklist,
36
About the “Music” (All Songs) Title List display
Playing a track
All Songs
1214 items
narrow down the list of tracks by selecting
the artist, then the album.
Never Let Me Down (Split Mix)
9:31
8:00
7:31
3:55
6:33
5:26
4:57
9:36
6:18
6:18
Policies of Truth
Shout in Rio
Home
Artist:DeepGreen
Album:Splash!
Genre:Alternative
Format:MP3
Strangled
To list all tracks, press < and select “All Songs”
from the Browse menu.
Rash (Spiritual Mix)
I Feel You (Remix)
Route 57 (Beatmasters Mix)
Free (DJ Remix)
Personal Note
b Select the track you want to play, and press
ENTER.
The title starts playing. You can apply other playback
settings to the selected track using the “Options”
menu (see below).
1 Detailed information
Displays details about the selected track.
• Artist: Displays the artist name.
All Songs
1214 items
• Album: Displays the album name.
• Genre: Displays the genre name.
• Format: Displays the coding format.
Never Let Me Down (Split Options
Policies of Truth
Shout in Rio
Play Song
Add to Quicklist
Home
Artist : Deep Green
Album : Splash!
Genre : Alternative
Format : MP3
Strangled
5:26
4:57
9:36
6:18
6:18
Rash (Spiritual Mix)
I Feel You (Remix)
Route 57 (Beatmasters Mix)
Free (DJ Remix)
Personal Note
2 List area
Displays overall content.
• Main area: Displays the track names.
• Sub area: Displays the total playback time of each
track.
The “Options” menu appears when you select a track
and press ,
About unplayable audio track files
The player does not play the file if:
–The DATA DVD is not recorded in an MP3 format that
conforms to UDF (Universal Disk Format).
–The audio track file does not have the extension “.MP3.”
–The data is not formatted properly even though it has the
extension “.MP3.”
–The data is not MPEG-1 Audio Layer III data.
–The data is recorded in mp3PRO format.
–The file name contains characters other than numbers and
English alphabet.
To use the “Options” menu
Press , instead of ENTER in the above step to display the
“Options” menu settings applicable to the track in the given
situation. In the above example, the following items are
available.
Items
Details
Play Song
Starts playing the track you selected from
the beginning.
Add to Quicklist
Adds the selected track to the Quicklist.
◆Example: To apply “Play Song” to the selected track
A Select “Play Song,” and press ENTER.
To play in other play mode
During playback, press PLAY MODE repeatedly. The selected
item changes with each press: “Repeat Track” — “Repeat All”
— “Random” — “Repeat Off”
z Hints
• Even after stopping playback, the player resumes playback from the
last track you played.
• Depending on the writing software used, the displayed track or album
names may be different from the characters you input.
Notes
• Playback time of MP3 audio tracks may not be displayed correctly.
• If you put an extension “.MP3” to a non-MP3 file, the file may
accidentally play on the player. Note that such output may cause the
connected device to malfunction.
• Playback may not start immediately after skipping to another album.
• When using the Resume function on MP3 tracks, playback starts from
the beginning of the track.
37
Browsing by Artist, Album, Searching for a Track
Genre, Quicklist, or Folder
DATA DVD
DATA DVD
Narrow down the list of tracks by selecting the category type
(e.g., “Genres”), then the category.
You can find the exact track, or tracks with a similar name.
Search Results
7 items
9:31
Genres
20 items
Raga
All Genres
Raging Plants
Ragamufin
Ree
Alternative
Blues
8:00
7:31
7:32
6:33
6:34
6:35
2876 Songs
195 Songs
16 Songs
304 Songs
841 Songs
32 Songs
2 Songs
Books And Spoken
Celtic
Rise
R
Rose Bed
Rule the World
Classical
Comedy
A
B
L
V
2
C
M
W
3
D
N
X
4
)
E
O
Y
5
F
P
Z
6
G
Q
,
H
R
.
I
S
:
J
T
;
K
U
1
Country
Dance
460 Songs
60 Songs
7
8
9
0
Dark
_
(
SHFT
SPC
DEL
CLR
DONE
CANCEL
Search results are narrowed down as more characters
are entered
Genres without content do not appear in the list
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Music,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Music,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “All Songs,” and press ENTER.
f Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
f Select the list you want to view from
“Artists,” “Albums,” “Genres,” “Quicklist”
or “Folders,” and press ENTER.
The list of artists/albums/genres/Quicklist/folders
appears as above.
g Select “Search,” and press ENTER to turn on
the above display.
For details about the Quicklist, see “Programming
h Enter the track name using the on-screen
g Select the artist/album/genre/Quicklist/
z Hints
folder you want to view, and press ENTER.
• You can select a track from the search result, and start playback by
pressing ENTER, or using the “Options” menu (press ,).
• You can search for a genre, artist, album, or folder name from each
Title List (e.g., “Genres”).
z Hint
You can select a track from the list of tracks, and start playback by
pressing ENTER, or using the “Options” menu (press ,).
38
To remove the title from the “Quicklist”
Programming Playback
(Quicklist)
1
Select the track you want to remove from the
displayed “Quicklist,” and press ,.
2
Select “Remove,” and press ENTER.
z Hint
You can play the “Quicklist” content in other play modes by pressing
DATA DVD
Play your favorite tracks in the order you like by making your
own “Quicklist.”
Note
The “Quicklist” may be cleared after some operations (e.g., displaying
the Title List, opening the disc tray, turning off the player, etc.).
Quicklist
3 items
9:31
Never Let Me Down (Split Mix)
Policies of Truth
Shout in Rio
8:00
7:31
Artist : Deep Green
Album : Splash!
Genre : Alternative
Format : MP3
The “Quicklist” does not affect the original recording on
the disc
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Music,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “All Songs,” and press ENTER.
f When the “All Songs” Title List appears,
select the track you want to add to the top of
the “Quicklist,” and press ,.
g Select “Add to Quicklist” from the “Options”
menu, and press ENTER.
h Repeat step 6 and 7 to select all the desired
tracks.
Select in the order you want to play. You can add the
same track multiple times.
The “Quicklist” can contain up to 25 tracks.
i Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
j Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
k Select “Quicklist,” and press ENTER to turn
on the above display.
The “Quicklist” Title List appears with the
programmed content.
l Select the track you want to start playback,
and press ENTER.
39
Viewing All Folders
Viewing Photo
Files
DATA DVD
The “Photos” Title List first displays all the folders on the disc.
Use the “Photos” Title List to view the
JPEG images on DATA DVDs. You can
reorder the files and start playing a
slideshow.
Folders
2 items
Kurobe-dam 2005
Jungfraujoch 2006
The Browse menu appears when you press < while on
the leftmost row
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Photos,” and press ENTER.
The above “Folders” display appears, showing all
folders (scrollable by pressing m). From “Folders”
you can apply items to all files using the Browse
menu (see below).
To use the Browse menu
Press < after step 3 to display the items for “Photos” Title List.
For operations, see the pages in parentheses. Available items
differ depending on the display.
Items
Details
All Photos
Displays all files in alphabetical order
Browse
Search
Sort
Displays a list of dates, Quicklist, or
Searches for a file using the on-screen
Reorders the files by date or alphabet (see
below).
◆Example: To apply “Sort” to all files
A To display the list of all files, select “All Photos” from the
Browse menu and press ENTER.
B Move the highlight to the left most row, and press < to
turn on the Browse menu.
C Select “Sort,” and press ENTER.
D Select the setting you want to sort by; “Recent first,”
“Oldest first,” “By title (AtZ),” “By title (ZtA),” and
press ENTER.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
40
About the “Photos” (All Photos) Title List
display
Playing a slideshow
press < and select “All Photos” from the
Browse menu.
All Photos
1214 items
File:DSC00434.jpg
Date:7/23/2006
Resolution:293x196
Format:JPEG
b Select the file you want to start from, and
press ENTER to turn on the “Options”
menu.
c Select “Slideshow,” and press ENTER.
Slideshow starts.
You can apply other playback settings to the selected
file using the “Options” menu (see below).
1 Detailed information
Displays details about the selected file.
• File: Displays the file name.
All Photos
1214 items
• Date: Displays the shooting date.
• Resolution: Displays the picture resolution in width ×
height.
Options
Slideshow
Add to Quicklist
File : DSC00434.jpg
Date : 12/10/2007
Resolution: 293 x 196
Format: JPEG
• Format: Displays the recording format.
2 List area
Displays overall photo content in thumbnail.
About unplayable photo files
The “Options” menu appears when you select a file and
press ENTER
The player does not play the file if:
–The DATA DVD is not recorded in a JPEG format that
conforms to UDF (Universal Disk Format).
–The photo file is not recorded in a format that conforms to the
DCF*.
–The file has an extension other than “.JPEG.”
–The image is larger than 4,096 (width) × 4,096 (height) in
normal mode, or progressive JPEG.
To use the “Options” menu
Available “Options” menu settings differ depending on the
situation. In the above example of the use of the “Options”
menu, the following items are available.
–The image does not fit the screen (the image is reduced).
–The file name contains characters other than numbers and
English alphabet.
• Even when the above are not applicable, some files may not
play depending on the recording condition or the method (e.g.,
writer software).
Items
Details
Slideshow
Add to Quicklist
Starts playing a slideshow as above.
Adds the selected file to the Quicklist for
later slideshow playback.
• Files may not play on this player if edited on a PC.
* “Design rule for Camera File system”: Image standards for digital
cameras regulated by JEITA (Japan Electronics and Information
Technology Industries Association).
To play in other play mode
During playback, press PLAY MODE repeatedly. The selected
item changes with each press:
“Repeat All” — “Random” — “Repeat Off”
Note that in Random mode, only files in the list area (20 files
maximum) are randomly played.
z Hints
• Even after stopping playback, the player resumes playback from the
last file you played.
Note
The photos may appear slowly depending on the size and the number of
files.
41
Browsing by Date,
Quicklist, or Folder
Searching for a Photo
DATA DVD
DATA DVD
Narrow down the list of files by selecting the category type (e.g.,
“Date”), then the category.
You can find the exact file, or files with a similar name.
10 items
Search Results
7 items
Year
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
R_
A
B
L
V
2
C
M
W
3
D
N
X
4
)
E
O
Y
5
F
P
Z
6
G
Q
,
H
R
.
I
S
:
J
T
;
K
U
1
7
8
9
0
_
(
SHFT
SPC
DEL
CLR
DONE
CANCEL
Search results are narrowed down as more characters
are entered
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Photos,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Photos,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “All Photos,” and press ENTER.
f Select the list you want to view from “Date,”
“Quicklist,” or “Folders” and press ENTER.
The list of date/Quicklist/folders appears as above.
For details about the Quicklist, see “Programming a
f Move the highlight to the leftmost row, and
press < to turn on the Browse menu.
g Select “Search,” and press ENTER to turn on
the above display.
g Select the date/Quicklist/folder you want to
view, and press ENTER.
h Enter the file name using the on-screen
z Hint
You can select a file and start slideshow by using “Options” menu (press
,).
z Hint
You can select a file and start slideshow by using “Options” menu (press
,).
42
m Select “Slideshow” from the “Options”
menu, and press ENTER.
Programming a Slideshow
Playback (Quicklist)
To remove from the “Quicklist”
1
Select the file you want to remove from the
displayed “Quicklist,” and press ENTER.
DATA DVD
2
Select “Remove,” and press ENTER.
Play a slideshow in the order you like by making your own
“Quicklist.”
z Hint
You can play the “Quicklist” content in other play modes by pressing
Quicklist
22 items
Note
The “Quicklist” may be cleared after some operations (e.g., displaying
the Title List, opening the disc tray, turning off the player, etc.).
File : DSC00434.jpg
Date
:
7/23/2006
Resolution: 293 x 196
Format: JPEG
The “Quicklist” does not affect the original recording on
the disc
a Press SYSTEM MENU.
b Select “Title List,” and press ENTER.
c Select “Photos,” and press ENTER.
d Press < to turn on the Browse menu.
e Select “All Photos,” and press ENTER.
f When the “All Photos” Title List appears,
select the file you want to add to the top of the
“Quicklist,” and press ENTER.
g Select “Add to Quicklist” from the “Options”
menu, and press ENTER.
h Repeat step 6 and 7 to select all the desired
files.
Select in the order you want to play. You can add the
same file multiple times.
The “Quicklist” can contain up to 25 files.
i Move the highlight to the leftmost row, and
press < to turn on the Browse menu.
j Select “Browse,” and press ENTER.
k Select “Quicklist,” and press ENTER to turn
on the above display.
The “Quicklist” Title List appears with the
programmed content.
l Select the file you want to start playback, and
press ENTER.
43
Using the Setup Displays
Changing the
BD
DVD
DATA DVD
CD
From the “System Menu,” enter the “Setup” displays to change
the settings of the player.
Initial Settings
Select “Setup” from the “System Menu”
when you need to change the settings of the
player (e.g., when changing the connected
device or the audio/video output, etc.).
The last part of this section explains how to
return all of these settings to their factory
defaults.
Setup
Video Setup
Audio Setup
Language
TV Type
16:9
4:3 Video Out
DVD Aspect Ratio
YCbCr/RGBPC(HDMI)
24p Output
Normal
Letter Box
Y, Cb, Cr
Off
Parental Control
Speakers
Options
Note
Playback settings described in this section may not work
when there is any preset playback setting in the disc. The
disc’s playback settings take priority over the player’s
playback settings.
a Press SYSTEM MENU while the player is
stopped.
b Select “Setup,” and press ENTER.
c Select the “Setup” display you want to use,
from “Video Setup,” “Audio Setup,”
“Language,” “Parental Control,”
“Speakers,” or “Options,” and press
ENTER.
The “Setup” display appears with the related items.
Note that the display switches to the screen saver if
you do not operate for 15 minutes.
d Select the item you want to change, and press
ENTER.
Refer to the explanations in the following sections.
To return to the previous display
Press RETURN.
44
Video Setup
Underlined items are the default settings.
TV Type
4:3
–4:3 screen TV.
–Select your TV type.
16:9
–Wide-screen TV, or a TV with a wide mode function.
4:3 Video Out
Full
–Displays a 4:3 screen picture in 16:9 aspect ratio.
–Select the display configuration for a 4:3
screen picture on a 16:9 wide screen TV.
Normal
–Displays a 4:3 screen picture in 4:3 aspect ratio with black bands on the sides. Select
this if your TV does not have a 4:3 screen mode.
DVD Aspect Ratio
Letter Box
–Displays a wide picture with black bands on the top and
bottom.
–Select the display configuration for a 16:9
DVD picture on a 4:3 screen TV (selectable
when “TV Type” is set to “4:3”).
Note that the aspect ratio is fixed on some
discs. For example, a 4:3 letterbox picture
may appear even when “Pan & Scan” is
selected.
Pan & Scan
–Displays a full-height picture on the entire screen, with
trimmed sides.
YCbCr / RGBPC (HDMI)
Y, Cb, Cr
–Select this when connecting to an HDMI device.
–Select the type of output from the HDMI
OUT jack.
RGB (16-235)
–Select this when connecting to a device with an HDCP-compliant DVI jack.
RGB (0-255)
–Select this when connecting to an RGB (0-255) device.
24p Output
On
–Sends 1920 × 1080p/24 Hz video signals when playing Film-based materials on BD-
ROMs (720p/24 Hz or 1080p/24 Hz). Select this when the connection applies.
–For connection to a 1080/24p-compatible TV
using the HDMI OUT jack.
Off
–Select this for any other connection.
Note
“TV Type” and “DVD Aspect Ratio” can be set when video output resolution is 480i/480p.
,continued
45
To set the video output resolution
Press VIDEO FORMAT repeatedly to select the desired resolution. Note that the resolution differs depending on the display device,
connecting jack and the source material as below.
Connecting
HDMI OUT
COMPONENT VIDEO OUT
VIDEO/S VIDEO
jack
Settings
Auto
Automatically selects the
recommended resolution acceptable
for your TV.
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480i
480p
480p
480p
3
720p
720p
BD:720p, DVD:480p*
3
1080i
1080i
BD:1080i, DVD:480p*
1080p
Source Direct
1080p
480p
Output differs depending on source
material*
Output differs depending on source
material*
1
2
1
* Outputs in the same resolution and frequency as recorded on the disc.
2
* 1080/24p video signals are not output from the COMPONENT VIDEO OUT jacks.
3
* Outputs in the resolution of the original setting (720p or 1080i) when the DVD is not copy guarded.
Notes
• If the picture is not clear, natural or to your satisfaction, try another resolution that suits the disc and your TV/projector, etc. For the details, refer also
to the instruction manual supplied with the TV/projector, etc.
• 480i or 480p video signals may be output when you connect to the COMPONENT VIDEO OUT jacks and play some copy-guarded BDs/DVDs. To
enjoy the HD quality resolution in this case, connect the display device to the HDMI OUT jack using an HDMI cord.
• Even when you select a setting other than “Auto,” the player automatically adjusts the video signals if the TV cannot accept the set resolution.
To output the 1080/24p video signals
A 1080/24p-compatible TV is required for this setting.
1
2
Press VIDEO FORMAT repeatedly to select “Auto” or “Source Direct.”
Note
If there is no picture, press VIDEO FORMAT repeatedly until the picture appears correctly.
46
Audio Setup
Underlined items are the default settings. Since many factors
affect the type of audio output, see also “About the audio output
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital
–Select this when connecting to a device with a built-in Dolby Digital decoder.
–Select the audio signals output when playing
Dolby Digital discs. This setting affects the
output from the DIGITAL OUT (COAXIAL
or OPTICAL) jack.
Downmix PCM
–Converts to output Linear PCM signals. Select this when connecting to a device
without a built-in Dolby Digital decoder.
DTS
DTS
–Select this when connecting to a device with a built-in DTS decoder.
–Select the audio signals output when playing
DTS discs. This setting affects the output
from the DIGITAL OUT (COAXIAL or
OPTICAL) jack.
Downmix PCM
–Converts to output Linear PCM signals. Select this when connecting to a device
without a built-in DTS decoder.
DTS Downmix
Stereo
–Downmixes multi-channel audio signals for two channel stereo.
–Select the type of 2-channel signals when
down-mixed from multi-channel DTS
sources (effective for audio connections
when “DTS” is set to “Downmix PCM”).
Lt/Rt
–Allows you to hear surround sound when the connected device has a built-in Dolby
Pro Logic decoder.
Audio (HDMI)
Auto
–Normally, select this. Outputs audio signals according to the status of the connected
HDMI device.
–Select the output method from the HDMI
OUT jack.
PCM
–Converts all audio signals to Linear PCM.
,continued
47
About the audio output signals
The audio output differs as follows, depending on the source, output jack, and the selected settings.
Jacks/
settings
DIGITAL OUT (OPTICAL/
COAXIAL) jacks*
1
3
AUDIO OUT L/R jacks*
HDMI OUT jack*
2
Disc/source
4
4
2ch
5.1ch
PCM
Bitstream
PCM*
Auto*
BD-
ROM
Linear PCM 2ch
2ch
2ch
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
2ch Downmix 2ch Downmix
LPCM LPCM
2ch Downmix 2ch Downmix
LPCM
5
5.1ch
*
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
5.1ch LPCM
7.1ch LPCM
5.1ch LPCM
7.1ch LPCM
Dolby Digital
5.1ch
Downmix LPCM
7.1ch
2ch Downmix
2ch Downmix
LPCM
Dolby Digital
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
Dolby Digital 5.1ch LPCM
7.1ch LPCM
2ch Downmix
LPCM
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital Plus
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
Dolby Digital (Dolby Digital
8
Plus*
6
Plus)
*
7.1ch LPCM
Dolby Digital (Dolby
TrueHD) *
2ch Downmix
LPCM
Dolby
TrueHD
Dolby TrueHD
DTS
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
8
*
7
2ch Downmix
LPCM
DTS
5.1ch LPCM
DTS
7.1ch LPCM
(DTS-HD High
Resolution
DTS-HD High
DTS-HD High
Resolution Audio
2ch Downmix
LPCM
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
DTS
Resolution
8
Audio
*
9
Audio) *
DTS-HD Master
Audio
2ch Downmix
LPCM
DTS
5.1ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
DTS
DVD
Linear PCM
Dolby Digital
DTS
2ch
2ch
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
Dolby Digital
DTS
2ch Downmix
LPCM
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
Dolby Digital 5.1ch LPCM
2ch Downmix
LPCM
DTS
5.1ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
5.1ch LPCM
MPEG
2ch
2ch
2ch
2ch
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
—
2ch LPCM
2ch LPCM
DTS
CD
Linear PCM 2ch
DTS
2ch LPCM
DTS
2ch Downmix
LPCM
2ch Downmix 5.1ch
1
*
*
“2 Channel” and “5.1 Channel” are selectable under “Audio Output Mode” in “Speakers” Setup (page 51).
Bitstream : when “Dolby Digital” or “DTS” in “Audio Setup” is set to “Dolby Digital” or “DTS” (page 47).
Selectable under “Audio (HDMI)” in “Audio Setup” (page 47). Resulting output may differ depending on the connected HDMI device.
When the sampling frequency is 192 kHz, the player downmixes to 2ch signals even if the disc or source is 5.1ch.
Outputs 7.1ch LPCM signals decoded from Dolby Digital Plus audio stream.
2
3
4
5
6
7
*
*
*
*
*
Outputs 7.1ch LPCM signals decoded from Dolby TrueHD audio stream.
The player outputs up to 7.1ch LPCM when the source sampling frequency is 48 kHz; up to 5.1ch at 96 kHz; up to 2ch at 192 kHz.
Outputs Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD or DTS-HD High Resolution Audio bitstream from the HDMI OUT jack respectively when using the
AV amplifier compatible with Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby TrueHD or DTS-HD.
8
*
*
9
Outputs 7.1ch LPCM signals decoded from DTS-HD High Resolution Audio stream.
The player outputs up to 7.1ch LPCM when the source sampling frequency is 48 kHz; up to 5.1ch at 96 kHz.
48
Language
Underlined items are the default settings.
Notes
• When you select a language in “Audio,” “Subtitles,” “BD/DVD Menu”
that is not recorded on the disc, one of the recorded languages is
automatically selected.
• Playback settings stored in the disc take priority over these settings.
OSD
English
–Displays the menus and messages in English.
–Select your language for the player on-screen
displays.
Français
–Displays the menus and messages in French.
Audio
English
–Plays the soundtrack in English.
–Select the default soundtrack language for
BD-ROMs/DVD VIDEOs.
French
–Plays the soundtrack in French.
Other
Subtitles
English
–Displays the subtitles in English.
–Select the default subtitle language for BD-
ROMs/DVD VIDEOs.
French
–Displays the subtitles in French.
Other
BD/DVD Menu
w/Subtitle
–Displays BD’s/DVD’s menus in the same language as the subtitle language.
–Select the default menu language for BD-
ROMs/DVD VIDEOs.
English
–Displays BD’s/DVD’s menus in English.
French
–Displays BD’s/DVD’s menus in French.
Other
Subtitle Display
On
–Turns on the subtitles.
Off
–Turns off the subtitles.
49
Parental Control
This function limits playback of DVD VIDEOs and BD-ROMs.
The default settings are underlined.
Notes
• You cannot limit playback if the disc does not have the Parental Control
function.
• If you forget the password for “Parental Control,” you will need to reset
their defaults.
Change Password (Set Password)
Next Screen
–Set or change the password for the “Parental Control” function. You will be asked for
the password when playing restricted discs or when changing the control level.
DVD Parental Control
Change Level
–Set the control level. The display asks for the password if the disc’s pre-determined
level exceeds the limit you set. The default setting is “Off.”
DVD Country Code
–This ensures that you see the scenes intended for your residential area. The default
setting is “us” (2119).
BD Parental Control
Change Age Restriction
–Set the control level. The display asks for the password if the disc’s pre-determined
age restriction is higher than the age you set. The default setting is “255.”
BD Country Code
–This ensures that you see the scenes intended for your residential area when playing
BD-ROMs. The default setting is “us” (2119).
50
Speakers
The following items are necessary when using the 5.1CH
OUTPUT jacks.
The default settings are underlined.
Audio Output Mode
2 Channel
–Select this when connecting to an AV amplifier (receiver) using the AUDIO OUT (L/
R) jacks.
–For analog connection.
5.1 Channel
–Select this when connecting to an AV amplifier (receiver) using the 5.1CH OUTPUT
jacks.
Speaker Setup
Next Screen
1 Select the speaker setting that needs adjusting by pressing M/m.
• “C” (center speaker): “Yes” or “No”
• “Ls/Rs” (left surround speaker/right surround speaker): “Yes” or “No”
• “L/R” (left front speaker/right front speaker): “Large” or “Small”
2 Adjust the setting by pressing </,.
–This setting affects the output from the
5.1CH OUTPUT jacks.
• For “C” and “Ls/Rs,” select whether the speakers are included in your system.
• For “L/R,” select the size. This setting is disabled if either of “C” or “Ls/Rs” is set
to “No.”
3 Press ENTER to save the adjustments.
51
Options
Underlined items are the default settings.
On Screen Display
On
–Displays playback status.
–Select whether to display the playback status
on the screen (Stop, Play, etc.).
Off
–Playback status is not displayed.
Auto Power Off
On
–Turns off the player when the player is left in stop or pause mode without operation
for 30 minutes.
Off
–Select whether to activate the “Auto Power
Off” function of the player.
–The player remains turned on with or without operation.
Easy Setup
Start
–Re-runs the Easy Setup to make the basic
settings.
HDMI Control
On
–Activates the function.
Off
–Turns off the function.
–Select whether to activate the HDMI Control
function of the player (“About the ‘BRAVIA’
Hybrid Disc Playback Layer
BD
–Plays BD layer.
DVD
–Plays DVD layer.
CD
–Select the layer priority when playing a
Hybrid Disc. Remove the disc when you
change the setting.
–Plays CD layer.
52
Resetting the Player
You can return all of the player settings to their factory defaults.
@/1
A OPEN/CLOSE
HDMI
HD
FL OFF
x
a Press A OPEN/CLOSE to open the disc tray.
b Hold down x on the player, and press @/1.
c After you check the disc tray closes, release
both the buttons.
The sliding panel closes, the player turns off and all
of the settings return to their factory defaults.
53
Troubleshooting
If you experience any of the following difficulties while using
the player, use this troubleshooting guide to help remedy the
problem before requesting repairs. Should any problem persist,
consult your nearest Sony dealer (For customers in the USA
only).
Additional
Information
Power
The power does not turn on.
, Check that the power cord is connected securely.
, It takes a short while before the player turns on.
Picture
There is no picture/picture noise appears.
, Re-connect the connecting cord securely.
, The connecting cords are damaged.
input selector on your TV so that the signal from the player
appears on the TV screen.
, The disc is dirty or flawed.
, If the picture output from your player goes through your
VCR to get to your TV or if you are connected to a
combination TV/VIDEO player, the copy-protection signal
applied to some BD/DVD programs could affect picture
quality. If you still experience problems even when you
connect your player directly to your TV, try connecting your
, The player is connected to an input device that is not HDCP-
compliant (the HDMI indicator on the front panel does not
, If the HDMI OUT jack or the COMPONENT VIDEO OUT
jacks are used for video output, changing the output
FORMAT repeatedly until the picture appears correctly.
, Depending on the disc, the picture quality may be poor when
the VIDEO FORMAT setting is set to other than “480i,”
even when the player is connected to a progressive or HD
TV using a component cord or an HDMI cord. If this
happens, press VIDEO FORMAT repeatedly to switch to
“480i.”
, When playing a double-layer DVD, the video and audio may
be momentarily interrupted at the point where the layers
switch.
There is no picture or picture noise appears
when connected to the HDMI OUT jack.
, Try the following: 1Turn the player off and on again.
2Turn the connected equipment off and on again.
3Disconnect and then connect the HDMI cord again.
, If the HDMI OUT jack is used for video output, changing the
Press VIDEO FORMAT repeatedly until the picture appears
correctly.
54
, The disc is skewed.
The picture does not fill the screen, even
though the aspect ratio is set in “TV Type”
, The region code on the BD/DVD does not match the player.
, The player cannot play a recorded disc that is not correctly
under “Video Setup.”
, The aspect ratio of the disc is fixed on your BD/DVD. See
, The movie file size exceeds 2 GB.
, The file on the DATA DVD contains characters other than
numbers and English alphabet.
The dark area of the picture is too dark/the
bright area is too bright or unnatural.
, Set “Video Control” in “A/V Control” to “Standard”
, Adjust each picture setting for “Memory” in “Video
The MP3 audio track file cannot be played
, The DATA DVD is not recorded in the MP3 format that
conforms to UDF (Universal Disk Format).
, The audio track file does not have the extension “.MP3.”
, The data is not formatted properly even though it has the
extension “.MP3.”
, The data is not MPEG-1 Audio Layer III data.
, The player cannot play audio tracks in mp3PRO format.
, Characters other than numbers and English alphabet are
contained in the file name.
Sound
There is no sound.
, The disc is dirty or flawed.
, Re-connect the connecting cord securely.
, The connecting cord is damaged.
, The player is connected to the wrong input jack on the
, The amplifier (receiver) input is not correctly set.
, The player is in pause mode or in Slow-motion Play mode.
, The player is in scan mode.
, If the audio signal does not come through the DIGITAL
OUT (OPTICAL or COAXIAL)/HDMI OUT jack, check
, The disc is dirty or flawed.
, The DATA DVD is not recorded in a JPEG format that
conforms to UDF (Universal Disk Format).
, The file has an extension other than “.JPEG” or “.JPG.”
, The image is larger than 4,096 (width) × 4,096 (height) in
normal mode. (Some progressive JPEG files cannot be
displayed even if the file size is within this specified
capacity.)
, The image does not fit the screen (the image is reduced).
, Characters other than numbers and English alphabet are
contained in the file name.
, The equipment connected to the HDMI OUT jack does not
conform to the audio signal format, in this case set “Audio
* “Design rule for Camera File system”: Image standards for digital
cameras regulated by JEITA (Japan Electronics and Information
Technology Industries Association).
The sound is not output correctly.
, Check the “Audio Output Mode” in “Speakers” Setup
(page 51) if the AUDIO OUT (L/R) jacks or the 5.1CH
OUTPUT jacks are used for audio connection.
The file name is not correctly displayed.
, The player can only display numbers and alphabet. Other
characters may be displayed differently.
, Depending on the writing software used, the input characters
may be displayed differently.
No sound is output from the HDMI OUT jack
, Try the following: 1Turn the player off and on again.
2Turn the connected equipment off and on again.
3Disconnect and then reconnect the HDMI cord.
, The HDMI OUT jack is connected to a DVI device (DVI
jacks do not accept audio signals).
The disc does not start playing from the
beginning.
The sound volume is low.
, The sound volume is low on some BDs/DVDs. The sound
volume may improve if you adjust the “Audio Control”
The player starts playing the disc
automatically.
, The disc features an auto playback function.
Operation
Playback stops automatically.
The remote does not function.
, While playing discs with an auto pause signal, the player
stops playback at the auto pause signal.
, There are obstacles between the remote and the player.
, The distance between the remote and the player is too far.
, The remote is not pointed at the remote sensor on the player.
The disc does not play.
, The disc is turned over. Insert the disc with the playback side
facing down.
,continued
55
Some functions such as Stop, Search, Slow-
motion Play, Repeat Play, or Random Play
The disc tray does not open and “LOCK”
appears on the front panel display.
, Contact your Sony dealer or local authorized Sony service
facility.
cannot be performed.
, Depending on the disc, you may not be able to do some of
the operations above. Refer to the operating manual that
comes with the disc.
The disc tray does not open and you cannot
remove the disc even after you press Z.
, Try the following: 1Turn the player off and on again, and
immediately press UP/DOWN to open the sliding panel.
2As soon as “POWER ON” appears on the front panel
display, press x on the player (not the remote) repeatedly
until the tray opens. Repeat the above procedure several
times if the tray does not open on the first try.
The language for the soundtrack cannot be
changed.
, Try using the BD’s or DVD’s menu instead of the direct
, Multi-lingual tracks are not recorded on the BD/DVD being
played.
, The BD/DVD prohibits the changing of the language for the
sound track.
An error message appears and the file cannot
be played when playing a DATA DVD.
, The MP3 audio track/JPEG image file you want to play/view
is damaged.
, The data is not MPEG-1 Audio Layer III data.
, The JPEG image file format does not conform to DCF*
The subtitle language cannot be changed or
turned off.
, Try using the BD’s or DVD’s menu instead of the direct
, Multi-lingual subtitles are not recorded on the BD/DVD
being played.
, The BD/DVD prohibits the changing of subtitles.
, The JPEG image file has the extension “.JPG” or “.JPEG,”
but is not in JPEG format.
* “Design rule for Camera File system”: Image standards for digital
cameras regulated by JEITA (Japan Electronics and Information
Technology Industries Association).
The angles cannot be changed.
, Try using the BD’s or DVD’s menu instead of the direct
, Multi-angles are not recorded on the BD/DVD being played.
, The BD/DVD prohibits changing of the angles.
The player does not accept any button.
, Hold down \/1 on the player for more than five seconds
until the indicators on the front panel display turn off. Wait
more than 10 seconds before you turn on the player again.
The HDMI Control function does not work.
, If the HDMI indicator on the front panel does not light up,
, Make sure that the connected component is compatible with
the HDMI Control function. Refer to the operating
instructions of the component for details.
, Check that the power cord of the connected component is
connected securely.
, Check the connected component’s setting for the HDMI
Control function. Refer to the operating instructions of the
component.
, If you change the HDMI connection, connect and disconnect
the power cord, or if power failure occurs, set “HDMI
Control” to “Off,” then set “HDMI Control” to “On”
The display language on the screen switches
automatically.
language on the screen automatically switches according to
the language setting of the connected TV (if you change the
setting on your TV, etc).
The player does not operate properly.
, When static electricity, etc., causes the player to operate
abnormally, unplug the player.
56
Self-Diagnosis Function
When the self-diagnosis function is activated to prevent the
player from malfunctioning, the “ERR” error code appears on
the front panel display indicating the cause.
Error code
Cause and/or corrective
action
AACS ERR
AACS read failure.
tRemove the protected disc.
LSI1 ERR
LSI2 ERR
LSI3 ERR
MEM ERR
FLASH ERR
ROM ERR
tContact your nearest Sony dealer
or local authorized Sony service
facility and give the error code.
57
Index to Parts and Controls
Buttons on the remote and the player have the same function if they have the same or similar name.
For details, see the pages in parentheses.
Front panel
HDMI
HD
FL OFF
– Turns on the player, or sets to standby mode.
– Lights up in white while the power is on.
– Lights up when an HDMI device is connected.
HD indicator (11)
– Lights up when outputting 720p/1080i/1080p
video signals.
– Starts, pauses, or stops playback.
– Lights up when the front panel display and other
indicators on the front panel are turned off.
– Shifts the sliding panel up and down.
– Lights up in white while the power is on.
I Blu-ray Disc indicator
– Lights up when a BD/AVCHD is recognized.
– Lights up for a few seconds when the player is
turned on.
– Opens or closes the disc tray.
– Lights up in white while the power is on.
– Skips to the previous/next chapter or track.
– Scans forward or backwards when held down.
58
Front panel display
The playback information is displayed as follows.
A H
Example: When playing a DVD VIDEO or a BD-ROM
– Lights up during playback.
B Playback information
z Hint
You can change the brightness of the front panel display by pressing
A Current title number
B Current chapter number
Note that the chapter number is not displayed if the
title’s elapsed time exceeds 10 hours.
C Elapsed time of the title
Rear panel
COMPONENT
VIDEO OUT
CONTROL S IN/
IR IN
VIDEO
OUT
AUDIO
OUT
5.1CH OUTPUT
FRONT REAR CENTER
Y
VIDEO
OPTICAL
COAXIAL
L
L
PB
DIGITAL
OUT
HDMI
OUT
AC IN
PCM/DTS/
DOLBY
DIGITAL
R
PR
R
WOOFER
S
VIDEO
H 5.1CH OUTPUT (FRONT L/R, REAR L/R, CENTER,
WOOFER) jacks (14)
59
we have made it clear that any patent must be
licensed for everyone’s free use or not licensed at
all.
The precise terms and conditions for copying,
distribution and modification follow.
Program, the distribution of the whole must
be on the terms of this License, whose
permissions for other licensees extend to the
entire whole, and thus to each and every part
regardless of who wrote it.
Thus, it is not the intent of this section to
claim rights or contest your rights to work
written entirely by you; rather, the intent is
to exercise the right to control the
GNU License
Information
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING,
DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License applies to any program or
other work which contains a notice placed
by the copyright holder saying it may be
distributed under the terms of this General
Public License. The “Program”, below,
refers to any such program or work, and a
“work based on the Program” means either
the Program or any derivative work under
copyright law: that is to say, a work
containing the Program or a portion of it,
either verbatim or with modifications and/or
translated into another language.
distribution of derivative or collective
works based on the Program.
Regarding the GNU General
Public License
In addition, mere aggregation of another
work not based on the Program with the
Program (or with a work based on the
Program) on a volume of a storage or
distribution medium does not bring the other
work under the scope of this License.
3. You may copy and distribute the Program
(or a work based on it, under Section 2) in
object code or executable form under the
terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided
that you also do one of the following:
a) Accompany it with the complete
corresponding machine-readable
The software programs used on this component
include the GNU/Linux system.
The GNU/Linux system contains software
licensed for use based on the terms of a GNU
General Public License. If necessary, the user
may request the source code for this licensed
software. The source code is available on our
website. Access the following URL to download:
Please refrain from making inquiries about the
source code content.
(Hereinafter, translation is included without
limitation in the term “modification”.) Each
licensee is addressed as “you”.
Activities other than copying, distribution
and modification are not covered by this
License; they are outside its scope. The act
of running the Program is not restricted, and
the output from the Program is covered only
if its contents constitute a work based on the
Program (independent of having been made
by running the Program). Whether that is
true depends on what the Program does.
1. You may copy and distribute verbatim
copies of the Program’s source code as you
receive it, in any medium, provided that you
conspicuously and appropriately publish on
each copy an appropriate copyright notice
and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all
the notices that refer to this License and to
the absence of any warranty; and give any
other recipients of the Program a copy of
this License along with the Program.
You may charge a fee for the physical act of
transferring a copy, and you may at your
option offer warranty protection in
source code, which must be distributed
under the terms of Sections 1 and 2
above on a medium customarily used
for software interchange; or,
Details of the GNU General Public License can
be found at the GNU website
(http://www.gnu.org).
b) Accompany it with a written offer,
valid for at least three years, to give any
third party, for a charge no more than
your cost of physically performing
source distribution, a complete
GNU General Public License
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software
Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-
1307, USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute
verbatim copies of this license document, but
changing it is not allowed.
machine-readable copy of the
corresponding source code, to be
distributed under the terms of Sections
1 and 2 above on a medium customarily
used for software interchange; or,
c) Accompany it with the information you
received as to the offer to distribute
corresponding source code. (This
◆Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to
take away your freedom to share and change it.
By contrast, the GNU General Public License is
intended to guarantee your freedom to share and
change free software-to make sure the software is
free for all its users. This General Public License
applies to most of the Free Software
alternative is allowed only for
noncommercial distribution and only if
you received the program in object
code or executable form with such an
offer, in accord with Subsection b
exchange for a fee.
2. You may modify your copy or copies of the
Program or any portion of it, thus forming a
work based on the Program, and copy and
distribute such modifications or work under
the terms of Section 1 above, provided that
you also meet all of these conditions:
a) You must cause the modified files to
carry prominent notices stating that you
changed the files and the date of any
change.
above.)
The source code for a work means the
preferred form of the work for making
modifications to it. For an executable work,
complete source code means all the source
code for all modules it contains, plus any
associated interface definition files, plus the
scripts used to control compilation and
installation of the executable.
However, as a special exception, the source
code distributed need not include anything
that is normally distributed (in either source
or binary form) with the major components
(compiler, kernel, and so on) of the
operating system on which the executable
runs, unless that component itself
Foundation’s software and to any other program
whose authors commit to using it. (Some other
Free Software Foundation software is covered by
the GNU Lesser General Public License instead.)
You can apply it to your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring
to freedom, not price. Our General Public
Licenses are designed to make sure that you have
the freedom to distribute copies of free software
(and charge for this service if you wish), that you
receive source code or can get it if you want it,
that you can change the software or use pieces of
it in new free programs; and that you know you
can do these things.
b) You must cause any work that you
distribute or publish, that in whole or in
part contains or is derived from the
Program or any part thereof, to be
licensed as a whole at no charge to all
third parties under the terms of this
To protect your rights, we need to make
License.
accompanies the executable.
restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these
rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These
restrictions translate to certain responsibilities
for you if you distribute copies of the software, or
if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a
program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must
give the recipients all the rights that you have.
You must make sure that they, too, receive or can
get the source code. And you must show them
these terms so they know their rights.
We protect your rights with two steps: (1)
copyright the software, and (2) offer you this
license which gives you legal permission to
copy, distribute and/or modify the software.
Also, for each author’s protection and ours, we
want to make certain that everyone understands
that there is no warranty for this free software. If
the software is modified by someone else and
passed on, we want its recipients to know that
what they have is not the original, so that any
problems introduced by others will not reflect on
the original authors’ reputations.
c) If the modified program normally reads
commands interactively when run, you
must cause it, when started running for
such interactive use in the most
If distribution of executable or object code
is made by offering access to copy from a
designated place, then offering equivalent
access to copy the source code from the
same place counts as distribution of the
source code, even though third parties are
not compelled to copy the source along with
the object code.
ordinary way, to print or display an
announcement including an
appropriate copyright notice and a
notice that there is no warranty (or else,
saying that you provide a warranty) and
that users may redistribute the program
under these conditions, and telling the
user how to view a copy of this License.
(Exception: if the Program itself is
interactive but does not normally print such
an announcement, your work based on the
Program is not required to print an
4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or
distribute the Program except as expressly
provided under this License. Any attempt
otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or
distribute the Program is void, and will
automatically terminate your rights under
this License.
However, parties who have received copies,
or rights, from you under this License will
not have their licenses terminated so long as
such parties remain in full compliance.
5. You are not required to accept this License,
since you have not signed it. However,
nothing else grants you permission to
modify or distribute the Program or its
derivative works. These actions are
prohibited by law if you do not accept this
License. Therefore, by modifying or
distributing the Program (or any work based
announcement.)
These requirements apply to the modified
work as a whole. If identifiable sections of
that work are not derived from the Program,
and can be reasonably considered
independent and separate works in
themselves, then this License, and its terms,
do not apply to those sections when you
distribute them as separate works. But when
you distribute the same sections as part of a
whole which is a work based on the
Finally, any free program is threatened
constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid
the danger that redistributors of a free program
will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect
making the program proprietary. To prevent this,
60
on the Program), you indicate your
acceptance of this License to do so, and all
its terms and conditions for copying,
distributing or modifying the Program or
works based on it.
Software Foundation, write to the Free
Software Foundation; we sometimes make
exceptions for this. Our decision will be
guided by the two goals of preserving the
free status of all derivatives of our free
software and of promoting the sharing and
reuse of software generally.
If the program is interactive, make it output a
short notice like this when it starts in an
interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C)
year name of author
6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or
any work based on the Program), the
recipient automatically receives a license
from the original licensor to copy, distribute
or modify the Program subject to these
terms and conditions. You may not impose
any further restrictions on the recipients’
exercise of the rights granted herein. You
are not responsible for enforcing
compliance by third parties to this License.
7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or
allegation of patent infringement or for any
other reason (not limited to patent issues),
conditions are imposed on you (whether by
court order, agreement or otherwise) that
contradict the conditions of this License,
they do not excuse you from the conditions
of this License. If you cannot distribute so as
to satisfy simultaneously your obligations
under this License and any other pertinent
obligations, then as a consequence you may
not distribute the Program at all. For
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY
NO WARRANTY; for details type ‘show
w’. This is free software, and you are
welcome to redistribute it under certain
conditions; type ‘show c’ for details.
The hypothetical commands ‘show w’ and ‘show
c’ should show the appropriate parts of the
General Public License. Of course, the
commands you use may be called something
other than ‘show w’ and ‘show c’; they could
even be mouse-clicks or menu items-whatever
suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work
as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign
a “copyright disclaimer” for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright
interest in the program ‘Gnomovision’ (which
makes passes at compilers) written by James
Hacker.
◆NO WARRANTY
11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS
LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE
IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE
PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT
PERMITTED BYAPPLICABLE LAW.
EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED
IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
PROVIDE THEPROGRAM “AS IS”
WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY
AND PERFORMANCE OF THE
PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD
THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE,
YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL
NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIROR
CORRECTION.
signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
example, if a patent license would not
permit royalty-free redistribution of the
Program by all those who receive copies
directly or indirectly through you, then the
only way you could satisfy both it and this
License would be to refrain entirely from
distribution of the Program.
If any portion of this section is held invalid
or unenforceable under any particular
circumstance, the balance of the section is
intended to apply and the section as a whole
is intended to apply in other circumstances.
It is not the purpose of this section to induce
you to infringe any patents or other property
right claims or to contest validity of any
such claims; this section has the sole
purpose of protecting the integrity of the
free software distribution system, which is
implemented by public license practices.
Many people have made generous
contributions to the wide range of software
distributed through that system in reliance
on consistent application of that system; it is
up to the author/donor to decide if he or she
is willing to distribute software through any
other system and a licensee cannot impose
that choice.
This section is intended to make thoroughly
clear what is believed to be a consequence
of the rest of this License.
This General Public License does not permit
incorporating your program into proprietary
programs. If your program is a subroutine
library, you may consider it more useful to
permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the
GNU Lesser General Public License instead of
this License.
12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY
APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN
WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT
HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY
WHOMAY MODIFY AND/OR
REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS
PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO
YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING
ANY GENERAL,SPECIAL,
GNU Lesser General Public
License
Version 2.1, February 1999
INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE
OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM
(INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES
SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD
PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE
PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY
OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH
HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS
BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGES.
Copyright (C) 1991, 1999 Free Software
Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-
1307, USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute
verbatim copies of this license document, but
changing it is not allowed.
[This is the first released version of the Lesser
GPL. It also counts as the successor of the GNU
Library Public License, version 2, hence the
version number2.1.]
◆Preamble
◆END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
The licenses for most software are designed to
take away your freedom to share and change it.
By contrast, the GNU General Public Licenses
are intended to guarantee your freedom to share
and change free software-to make sure the
software is free for all its users. This license, the
Lesser General Public License, applies to some
specially designated software packages-typically
libraries-of the Free Software Foundation and
other authors who decide to use it. You can use it
too, but we suggest you first think carefully about
whether this license or the ordinary General
Public License is the better strategy to use in any
particular case, based on the explanations below.
When we speak of free software, we are referring
to freedom of use, not price. Our General Public
Licenses are designed to make sure that you have
the freedom to distribute copies of free software
(and charge for this service if you wish); that you
receive source code or can get it if you want it;
that you can change the software and use pieces
of it in new free programs; and that you are
informed that you can do these things.
◆How to Apply These Terms to Your
New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to
be of the greatest possible use to the public, the
best way to achieve this is to make it free
software which everyone can redistribute and
change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the
program. It is safest to attach them to the start of
each source file to most effectively convey the
exclusion of warranty; and each file should have
at least the “copyright” line and a pointer to
where the full notice is found.
8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program
is restricted in certain countries either by
patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
original copyright holder who places the
Program under this License may add an
explicit geographical distribution limitation
excluding those countries, so that
distribution is permitted only in or among
countries not thus excluded. In such case,
this License incorporates the limitation as if
written in the body of this License.
9. The Free Software Foundation may publish
revised and/or new versions of the General
Public License from time to time. Such new
versions will be similar in spirit to the
present version, but may differ in detail to
address new problems or concerns.
<one line to give the program’s name and an
idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) yyyy name of author
This program is free software; you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will
be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU
General Public License along with this program;
if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA
02111-1307, USA.
Each version is given a distinguishing
version number. If the Program specifies a
version number of this License which
applies to it and “any later version”, you
have the option of following the terms and
conditions either of that version or of any
later version published by the Free Software
Foundation. If the Program does not specify
a version number of this License, you may
choose any version ever published by the
Free Software Foundation.
To protect your rights, we need to make
restrictions that forbid distributors to deny you
these rights or to ask you to surrender these
rights. These restrictions translate to certain
responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of
the library or if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of the
library, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give
the recipients all the rights that we gave you. You
must make sure that they, too, receive or can get
the source code. If you link other code with the
library, you must provide complete object files to
the recipients, so that they can relink them with
the library after making changes to the library
10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the
Program into other free programs whose
distribution conditions are different, write to
the author to ask for permission. For
Also add information on how to contact you by
electronic and paper mail.
software which is copyrighted by the Free
,continued
61
and recompiling it. And you must show them
these terms so they know their rights.
“this License”). Each licensee is addressed
as “you”.
reasonably considered independent and
separate works in themselves, then this
License, and its terms, do not apply to those
sections when you distribute them as
separate works. But when you distribute the
same sections as part of a whole which is a
work based on the Library, the distribution
of the whole must be on the terms of this
license, whose permissions for other
licensees extend to the entire whole, and
thus to each and every part regardless of
who wrote it.
Thus, it is not the intent of this section to
claim rights or contest your rights to work
written entirely by you; rather, the intent is
to exercise the right to control the
distribution of derivative or collective
works based on the Library. In addition,
mere aggregation of another work not based
on the Library with the Library (or with a
work based on the Library) on a volume of a
storage or distribution medium does not
bring the other work under the scope of this
License.
We protect your rights with a two-step method:
(1) we copyright the library, and (2) we offer you
this license, which gives you legal permission to
copy, distribute and/or modify the library.
To protect each distributor, we want to make it
very clear that there is no warranty for the free
library. Also, if the library is modified by
someone else and passed on, the recipients
should know that what they have is not the
original version, so that the original author’s
reputation will not be affected by problems that
might be introduced by others.
Finally, software patents pose a constant threat to
the existence of any free program. We wish to
make sure that a company cannot effectively
restrict the users of a free program by obtaining a
restrictive license from a patent holder.
Therefore, we insist that any patent license
obtained for a version of the library must be
consistent with the full freedom of use specified
in this license. Most GNU software, including
some libraries, is covered by the ordinary GNU
General Public License. This license, the GNU
Lesser General Public License, applies to certain
designated libraries, and is quite different from
the ordinary General Public License. We use this
license for certain libraries in order to permit
linking those libraries into non-free programs.
When a program is linked with a library, whether
statically or using a shared library, the
combination of the two is legally speaking a
combined work, a derivative of the original
library. The ordinary General Public License
therefore permits such linking only if the entire
combination fits its criteria of freedom. The
Lesser General Public License permits more lax
criteria for linking other code with the library.
We call this license the “Lesser” General Public
License because it does Less to protect the user’s
freedom than the ordinary General Public
License. It also provides other free software
developers Less of an advantage over competing
non-free programs. These disadvantages are the
reason we use the ordinary General Public
License for many libraries. However, the Lesser
license provides advantages in certain special
circumstances.
For example, on rare occasions, there may be a
special need to encourage the widest possible use
of a certain library, so that it becomes a de facto
standard. To achieve this, non-free programs
must be allowed to use the library.
A more frequent case is that a free library does
the same job as widely used non-free libraries. In
this case, there is little to gain by limiting the free
library to free software only, so we use the Lesser
General Public License.
In other cases, permission to use a particular
library in non-free programs enables a greater
number of people to use a large body of free
software. For example, permission to use the
GNU C Library in non-free programs enables
many more people to use the whole GNU
operating system, as well as its variant, the GNU/
Linux operating system.
Although the Lesser General Public License is
Less protective of the users’ freedom, it does
ensure that the user of a program that is linked
with the Library has the freedom and the
wherewithal to run that program using a
modified version of the Library.
A “library” means a collection of software
functions and/or data prepared so as to be
conveniently linked with application
programs (which use some of those
functions and data) to form executables.
The “Library”, below, refers to any such
software library or work which has been
distributed under these terms. A “work
based on the Library” means either the
Library or any derivative work under
copyright law: that is to say, a work
containing the Library or a portion of it,
either verbatim or with modifications and/or
translated straightforwardly into another
language. (Hereinafter, translation is
included without limitation in the term
“modification”.)
“Source code” for a work means the
preferred form of the work for making
modifications to it. For a library, complete
source code means all the source code for all
modules it contains, plus any associated
interface definition files, plus the scripts
used to control compilation and installation
of the library.
3. You may opt to apply the terms of the
ordinary GNU General Public License
instead of this License to a given copy of the
Library. To do this, you must alter all the
notices that refer to this License, so that they
refer to the ordinary GNU General Public
License, version 2, instead of to this
License. (If a newer version than version 2
of the ordinary GNU General Public
License has appeared, then you can specify
that version instead if you wish.) Do not
make any other change in these notices.
Once this change is made in a given copy, it
is irreversible for that copy, so the ordinary
GNU General Public License applies to all
subsequent copies and derivative works
made from that copy. This option is useful
when you wish to copy part of the code of
the Library into a program that is not a
library.
4. You may copy and distribute the Library (or
a portion or derivative of it, under Section 2)
in object code or executable form under the
terms of Sections1 and 2 above provided
that you accompany it with the complete
corresponding machine-readable source
code, which must be distributed under the
terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a
medium customarily used for software
interchange.
Activities other than copying, distribution
and modification are not covered by this
License; they are outside its scope. The act
of running a program using the Library is
not restricted, and output from such a
program is covered only if its contents
constitute a work based on the Library
(independent of the use of the Library in a
tool for writing it). Whether that is true
depends on what the Library does and what
the program that uses the Library does.
1. You may copy and distribute verbatim
copies of the Library’s complete source
code as you receive it, in any medium,
provided that you conspicuously and
appropriately publish on each copy an
appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer
of warranty; keep intact all the notices that
refer to this License and to the absence of
any warranty; and distribute a copy of this
License along with the Library.
You may charge a fee for the physical act of
transferring a copy, and you may at your
option offer warranty protection in
exchange for a fee.
2. You may modify your copy or copies of the
Library or any portion of it, thus forming a
work based on the Library, and copy and
distribute such modifications or work under
the terms of Section 1 above, provided that
you also meet all of these conditions:
a) The modified work must itself be a
software library.
If distribution of object code is made by
offering access to copy from a designated
place, then offering equivalent access to
copy the source code from the same place
satisfies the requirement to distribute the
source code, even though third parties are
not compelled to copy the source along with
the object code.
b) You must cause the files modified to
carry prominent notices stating that you
changed the files and the date of any
change.
5. A program that contains no derivative of
any portion of the Library, but is designed to
work with the Library by being compiled or
linked with it, is called a “work that uses the
Library”. Such a work, in isolation, is not a
derivative work of the Library, and
c) You must cause the whole of the work
to be licensed at no charge to all third
parties under the terms of this License.
d) If a facility in the modified Library
refers to a function or a table of data to
be supplied by an application program
that uses the facility, other than as an
argument passed when the facility is
invoked, then you must make a good
faith effort to ensure that, in the event
an application does not supply such
function or table, the facility still
therefore falls outside the scope of this
License. However, linking a “work that uses
the Library” with the Library creates an
executable that is a derivative of the Library
(because it contains portions of the Library),
rather than a “work that uses the library”.
The executable is therefore covered by this
License. Section 6 states terms for
The precise terms and conditions for copying,
distribution and modification follow. Pay close
attention to the difference between a “work based
on the library” and a “work that uses the library”.
The former contains code derived from the
library, whereas the latter must be combined with
the library in order to run.
operates, and performs whatever part of
its purpose remains meaningful.
distribution of such executables.
When a “work that uses the Library” uses
material from a header file that is part of the
Library, the object code for the work may be
a derivative work of the Library even
though the source code is not. Whether this
is true is especially significant if the work
can be linked without the Library, or if the
work is itself a library. The threshold for this
to be true is not precisely defined by law.
If such an object file uses only numerical
parameters, data structure layouts and
accessors, and small macros and small
inline functions (ten lines or less in length),
(For example, a function in a library to
compute square roots has a purpose that is
entirely well-defined independent of the
application. Therefore, Subsection 2d
requires that any application-supplied
function or table used by this function must
be optional: if the application does not
supply it, the square root function must still
compute square roots.) These requirements
apply to the modified work as a whole. If
identifiable sections of that work are not
derived from the Library, and can be
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING,
DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
0. This License Agreement applies to any
software library or other program which
contains a notice placed by the copyright
holder or other authorized party saying it
may be distributed under the terms of this
Lesser General Public License (also called
62
then the use of the object file is unrestricted,
regardless of whether it is legally a
derivative work. (Executables containing
this object code plus portions of the Library
will still fall under Section 6.)
component itself accompanies the
executable.
It is not the purpose of this section to induce
you to infringe any patents or other property
right claims or to contest validity of any
such claims; this section has the sole
purpose of protecting the integrity of the
free software distribution system which is
implemented by public license practices.
Many people have made generous
contributions to the wide range of software
distributed through that system in reliance
on consistent application of that system; it is
up to the author/donor to decide if he or she
is willing to distribute software through any
other system and a licensee cannot impose
that choice.
It may happen that this requirement
contradicts the license restrictions of
other proprietary libraries that do not
normally accompany the operating
system. Such a contradiction means
you cannot use both them and the
Otherwise, if the work is a derivative of the
Library, you may distribute the object code
for the work under the terms of Section 6.
Any executables containing that work also
fall under Section 6, whether or not they are
linked directly with the Library itself.
6. As an exception to the Sections above, you
may also combine or link a “work that uses
the Library” with the Library to produce a
work containing portions of the Library, and
distribute that work under terms of your
choice, provided that the terms permit
modification of the work for the customer’s
own use and reverse engineering for
debugging such modifications.
Library together in an executable that
you distribute.
7. You may place library facilities that are a
work based on the Library side-by-side in a
single library together with other library
facilities not covered by this License, and
distribute such a combined library, provided
that the separate distribution of the work
based on the Library and of the other library
facilities is otherwise permitted, and
provided that you do these two things:
a) Accompany the combined library with
a copy of the same work based on the
Library, uncombined with any other
library facilities. This must be
This section is intended to make thoroughly
clear what is believed to be a consequence
of the rest of this License.
12. If the distribution and/or use of the Library
is restricted in certain countries either by
patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
original copyright holder who places the
Library under this License may add an
explicit geographical distribution limitation
excluding those countries, so that
You must give prominent notice with each
copy of the work that the Library is used in
it and that the Library and its use are covered
by this License. You must supply a copy of
this License. If the work during execution
displays copyright notices, you must include
the copyright notice for the Library among
them, as well as a reference directing the
user to the copy of this License.
distributed under the terms of the
Sections above.
b) Give prominent notice with the
combined library of the fact that part of
it is a work based on the Library, and
explaining where to find the
distribution is permitted only in or among
countries not thus excluded. In such case,
this License incorporates the limitation as if
written in the body of this License.
Also, you must do one of these things:
a) Accompany the work with the
complete corresponding machine-
readable source code for the Library
including whatever changes were used
in the work (which must be distributed
under Sections 1 and 2 above); and, if
the work is an executable linked with
the Library, with the complete
accompanying uncombined form of the
same work.
13. The Free Software Foundation may publish
revised and/or new versions of the Lesser
General Public License from time to time.
Such new versions will be similar in spirit to
the present version, but may differ in detail
to address new problems or concerns.
Each version is given a distinguishing
version number. If the Library specifies a
version number of this License which
applies to it and “any later version”, you
have the option of following the terms and
conditions either of that version or of any
later version published by the Free Software
Foundation. If the Library does not specify
a license version number, you may choose
any version ever published by the Free
Software Foundation.
8. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, link
with, or distribute the Library except as
expressly provided under this License. Any
attempt otherwise to copy, modify,
sublicense, link with, or distribute the
Library is void, and will automatically
terminate your rights under this License.
However, parties who have received copies,
or rights, from you under this License will
not have their licenses terminated so long as
such parties remain in full compliance.
9. You are not required to accept this License,
since you have not signed it. However,
nothing else grants you permission to
modify or distribute the Library or its
derivative works. These actions are
prohibited by law if you do not accept this
License. Therefore, by modifying or
distributing the Library(or any work based
on the Library), you indicate your
machine-readable “work that uses the
Library”, as object code and/or source
code, so that the user can modify the
Library and then relink to produce a
modified executable containing the
modified Library. (It is understood that
the user who changes the contents of
definitions files in the Library will not
necessarily be able to recompile the
application to use the modified
14. If you wish to incorporate parts of the
Library into other free programs whose
distribution conditions are incompatible
with these, write to the author to ask for
permission. For software which is
definitions.)
b) Use a suitable shared library
mechanism for linking with the
Library. A suitable mechanism is one
that (1) uses at run time a copy of the
library already present on the user’s
computer system, rather than copying
library functions into the executable,
and (2) will operate properly with a
modified version of the library, if the
user installs one, as long as the
acceptance of this License to do so, and all
its terms and conditions for copying,
distributing or modifying the Library or
works based on it.
copyrighted by the Free Software
Foundation, write to the Free Software
Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions
for this. Our decision will be guided by the
two goals of preserving the free status of all
derivatives of our free software and of
promoting the sharing and reuse of software
generally.
10. Each time you redistribute the Library (or
any work based on the Library), the
recipient automatically receives a license
from the original licensor to copy,
modified version is interface-
compatible with the version that the
work was made with.
distribute, link with or modify the Library
subject to these terms and conditions. You
may not impose any further restrictions on
the recipients’ exercise of the rights granted
herein. You are not responsible for
enforcing compliance by third parties with
this License.
◆NO WARRANTY
15. BECAUSE THE LIBRARY IS LICENSED
FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO
WARRANTY FOR THE LIBRARY, TO
THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY
c) Accompany the work with a written
offer, valid for at least three years, to
give the same user the materials
APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING
THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR
OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE
LIBRARY “AS IS” WITHOUT
specified in Subsection 6a, above, for a
charge no more than the cost of
performing this distribution.
11. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or
allegation of patent infringement or for any
other reason (not limited to patent issues),
conditions are imposed on you (whether by
court order, agreement or otherwise) that
contradict the conditions of this License,
they do not excuse you from the conditions
of this License. If you cannot distribute so as
to satisfy simultaneously your obligations
under this License and any other pertinent
obligations, then as a consequence you may
not distribute the Library at all.
d) If distribution of the work is made by
offering access to copy from a
WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED,
designated place, offer equivalent
access to copy the above specified
materials from the same place.
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
THE IMPLIED WARRANTIESOF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY
AND PERFORMANCE OF
THELIBRARY IS WITH YOU. SHOULD
THE LIBRARY PROVE DEFECTIVE,
YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL
NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR
CORRECTION.
e) Verify that the user has already
received a copy of these materials or
that you have already sent this user a
copy.
For an executable, the required form of
the “work that uses the Library” must
include any data and utility programs
needed for reproducing the executable
from it. However, as a special
For example, if a patent license would not
permit royalty-free redistribution of the
Library by all those who receive copies
directly or indirectly through you, then the
only way you could satisfy both it and this
License would be to refrain entirely from
distribution of the Library. If any portion of
this section is held invalid or unenforceable
under any particular circumstance, the
balance of the section is intended to apply,
and the section as a whole is intended to
apply in other circumstances.
exception, the materials to be
16. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY
APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN
WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT
HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY
WHOMAY MODIFY AND/OR
distributed need not include anything
that is normally distributed (in either
source or binary form) with the major
components (compiler, kernel, and so
on) of the operating system on which
the executable runs, unless that
REDISTRIBUTE THE LIBRARY AS
PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO
YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING
,continued
63
ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL,
3. All advertising materials mentioning
features or use of this software must display
the following acknowledgment:
permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain
the copyright notice, this list of conditions
and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must
reproduce the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or
other materials provided with the
distribution.
3. All advertising materials mentioning
features or use of this software must display
the following acknowledgement:
“This product includes cryptographic
software written by Eric Young
INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE
OR INABILITY TO USE THE LIBRARY
(INCLUDING BUT NOTLIMITED TO
LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES
SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD
PARTIES OR A FAILURE OFTHE
LIBRARY TO OPERATE WITH ANY
OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF SUCH
HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS
BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGES.
“This product includes software developed
by the OpenSSL Project for use in the
OpenSSL Toolkit.
(http://www.openssl.org/)”
4. The names “OpenSSL Toolkit” and
“OpenSSL Project” must not be used to
endorse or promote products derived from
this software without prior written
permission.
For written permission, please contact
5. Products derived from this software may not
be called “OpenSSL” nor may “OpenSSL”
appear in their names without prior written
permission of the OpenSSL Project.
6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever
must retain the following acknowledgment:
“This product includes software developed
by the OpenSSL Project for use in the
OpenSSL Toolkit
◆END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
◆How to Apply These Terms to Your
New Libraries
The word 'cryptographic' can be left out if
the rouines from the library being used are
not cryptographic related :-).
If you develop a new library, and you want it to
be of the greatest possible use to the public, we
recommend making it free software that
everyone can redistribute and change. You can
do so by permitting redistribution under these
terms (or, alternatively, under the terms of the
ordinary General Public License).
To apply these terms, attach the following
notices to the library. It is safest to attach them to
the start of each source file to most effectively
convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file
should have at least the “copyright” line and a
pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the library’s name and an
idea of what it does.>
4. If you include any Windows specific code
(or a derivative thereof) from the apps
directory (application code) you must
include an acknowledgement:
(http://www.openssl.org/)”
“This product includes software written by
Tim Hudson ([email protected])”
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE
OpenSSL PROJECT “AS IS” AND ANY
EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC
YOUNG ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT
NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR
PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
EVENT SHALL THE OpenSSL PROJECT OR
ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
Copyright (C) year name of author
This library is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1
of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will
be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU
Lesser General Public License along with this
library; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59Temple Place, Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.
This product includes cryptographic software
written by Eric Young ([email protected]).
This product includes software written by Tim
Hudson ([email protected]).
Also add information on how to contact you by
electronic and paper mail.
The licence and distribution terms for any
publically available version or derivative of this
code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot
simply be copied and put under another
distribution licence [including the GNU Public
Licence.]
You should also get your employer (if you work
as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign
a “copyright disclaimer” for the library, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright
interest in the library ‘Frob’ (a library for
tweaking knobs) written by James Random
Hacker.
Original SSLeay License
◆Original SSLeay
Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Eric Young
([email protected]) All rights reserved.
FreeType
The FreeType Project is copyright (C) 1996-
2000 by David Turner, Robert Wilhelm, and
Werner Lemberg. All rights reserved except as
specified below.
signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
Ty Coon, President of Vice
That’s all there is to it!
This package is an SSL implementation written
by Eric Young ([email protected]).
The implementation was written so as to conform
with Netscapes SSL.
THE FREETYPE PROJECT IS PROVIDED
‘AS IS’ WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT WILL ANY OF
THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES CAUSED
BY THE USE OR THE INABILITY TO USE,
OF THE FREETYPE PROJECT.
This library is free for commercial and non-
commercial use as long as the following
conditions are aheared to. The following
conditions apply to all code found in this
distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, lhash, DES,
etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL
documentation included with this distribution is
covered by the same copyright terms except that
the holder is Tim Hudson ([email protected]).
OpenSSL License
◆OpenSSL
Copyright (c) 1998-2004 The OpenSSL Project.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary
forms, with or without modification, are
permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain
the above copyright notice, this list of
conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must
reproduce the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following
disclaimer in the documentation and/or
other materials provided with the
distribution.
Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any
Copyright notices in the code are not to be
removed.
If this package is used in a product, Eric Young
should be given attribution as the author of the
parts of the library used.
This can be in the form of a textual message at
program startup or in documentation (online or
textual) provided with the package.
Howl
Copyright (c) 2003, 2004 Porchdog Software All
rights reserved.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE
COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND
CONTRIBUTORS “AS IS” AND ANY
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
Redistribution and use in source and binary
forms, with or without modification, are
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
64
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS
BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
libpng versions 0.5, May 1995, through 0.88,
January 1996, are Copyright (c) 1995, 1996 Guy
Eric Schalnat, Group 42, Inc.
Luxi fonts copyright (c) 2001 by Bigelow &
Holmes Inc. Luxi font instruction code copyright
(c) 2001 by URW++ GmbH. All Rights
Reserved. Luxi is a registered trademark of
Bigelow & Holmes Inc.
For the purposes of this copyright and license,
“Contributing Authors” is defined as the
following set of individuals:
THE FONT SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS
IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT
NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
Andreas Dilger
Dave Martindale
Guy Eric Schalnat
Paul Schmidt
OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT
OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.
Tim Wegner
NONINFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHT,
PATENT, TRADEMARK, OR OTHER
RIGHT. IN NO EVENT SHALL BIGELOW &
HOLMES INC. OR URW++ GMBH. BE
LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
OTHER LIABILITY, INCLUDING ANY
GENERAL, SPECIAL, INDIRECT,
INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF
CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
ARISING FROM, OUT OF THE USE OR
INABILITY TO USE THE FONT SOFTWARE
OR FROM OTHER DEALINGS IN THE FONT
SOFTWARE.
The PNG Reference Library is supplied “AS IS”.
The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc.
disclaim all warranties, expressed or implied,
including, without limitation, the warranties of
merchantability and of fitness for any purpose.
The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc.
assume no liability for direct, indirect, incidental,
special, exemplary, or consequential damages,
which may result from the use of the PNG
Reference Library, even if advised of the
possibility of such damage.
jpeg-6b
If only executable code is distributed, then the
accompanying documentation must state that
“this software is based in part on the work of the
Independent JPEG Group”.
libpng
COPYRIGHT NOTICE, DISCLAIMER, and
LICENSE:
Permission is hereby granted to use, copy,
modify, and distribute this source code, or
portions hereof, for any purpose, without fee,
subject to the following restrictions:
TIFF
If you modify libpng you may insert additional
notices immediately following this sentence.
Copyright (c) 1988-1997 Sam Leffler
Copyright (c) 1991-1997 Silicon Graphics, Inc.
1. The origin of this source code must not be
misrepresented.
2. Altered versions must be plainly marked as
such and must not be misrepresented as
being the original source.
3. This Copyright notice may not be removed
or altered from any source or altered source
distribution.
libpng version 1.2.6, December 3, 2004, is
Copyright (c) 2004 Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and
is distributed according to the same disclaimer
and license as libpng-1.2.5 with the following
individual added to the list of Contributing
Authors
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS-IS”
AND WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
KIND, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR
OTHERWISE, INCLUDING WITHOUT
LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTY OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Cosmin Truta
IN NO EVENT SHALL SAM LEFFLER OR
SILICON GRAPHICS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, INDIRECT OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY
KIND, OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER
RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA
OR PROFITS, WHETHER OR NOT ADVISED
OF THE POSSIBILITY OF DAMAGE, AND
ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, ARISING
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
The Contributing Authors and Group 42, Inc.
specifically permit, without fee, and encourage
the use of this source code as a component to
supporting the PNG file format in commercial
products. If you use this source code in a product,
acknowledgment is not required but would be
appreciated.
libpng versions 1.0.7, July 1, 2000, through 1.2.5
- October 3, 2002, are Copyright (c) 2000-2002
Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and are distributed
according to the same disclaimer and license as
libpng-1.0.6 with the following individuals
added to the list of Contributing Authors
Simon-Pierre Cadieux
Eric S. Raymond
Gilles Vollant
A “png_get_copyright” function is available, for
convenient use in “about” boxes and the like:
SOFTWARE.
printf(“%s”,png_get_copyright(NULL));
and with the following additions to the
disclaimer:
Also, the PNG logo (in PNG format, of course) is
supplied in the files “pngbar.png” and
“pngbar.jpg (88x31) and “pngnow.png” (98x31).
This software is based in part on zlib see http://
There is no warranty against interference
with your enjoyment of the library or
against infringement. There is no warranty
that our efforts or the library will fulfill any
of your particular purposes or needs. This
library is provided with all faults, and the
entire risk of satisfactory quality,
This software is based in part on Mozilla Public
for information.
Libpng is OSI Certified Open Source Software.
OSI Certified Open Source is a certification mark
of the Open Source Initiative.
This software is based in part on Apple Public
Source License or the recipient's rights
information.
Glenn Randers-Pehrson
glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
December 3, 2004
performance, accuracy, and effort is with
the user.
libpng versions 0.97, January 1998, through
1.0.6, March 20, 2000, are Copyright (c) 1998,
1999 Glenn Randers-Pehrson, and are distributed
according to the same disclaimer and license as
libpng-0.96, with the following individuals
added to the list of Contributing Authors:
Libungif
This software is based in part on Intel License see
The GIFLIB distribution is Copyright (c) 1997
Eric S. Raymond
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”,
WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT
NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT
SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
TinyLogin
This software is copyright 1988 - 1994, Julianne
Frances Haugh. All rights reserved.
Tom Lane
Glenn Randers-Pehrson
Willem van Schaik
The shadow utilities license
This software is copyright 1988 - 1994, Julianne
Frances Haugh. All rights reserved.
libpng versions 0.89, June 1996, through 0.96,
May 1997, are Copyright (c) 1996, 1997 Andreas
Dilger
Distributed according to the same disclaimer and
license as libpng-0.88, with the following
individuals added to the list of Contributing
Authors:
Vera.ttf/VeraMono.ttf
Copyright © 2003 by Bitstream, Inc. All Rights
Reserved. Bitstream Vera
SansBitstreamVeraSans-RomanRelease 1.10
Copyright © 2003 by Bitstream, Inc. All Rights
Reserved. Bitstream Vera is a trademark of
Bitstream, Inc.
John Bowler
Kevin Bracey
Sam Bushell
Magnus Holmgren
Greg Roelofs
Tom Tanner
Luxi font
Bigelow & Holmes Inc and URW++ GmbH Luxi
font license
65
BD-ROM (page 5)
Dolby TrueHD (page 48)
BD-ROMs (Blu-ray Disc Read-Only
Memory) are commercially produced
discs and are available in the same
capacities as the BD below. Other than
conventional movie and video contents,
these discs have enhanced features such
as interactive content, menu operations
using pop-up menus (see below),
selection of subtitle display, and
slideshow. Although a BD-ROM may
contain any form of data, most BD ROM
discs will contain movies in High
Definition format, for playback on Blu-
ray Disc players.
Dolby TrueHD is a lossless coding
technology that supports up to 8
channels of multi-channel surround
sound for the next generation optical
discs. The reproduced sound is true to
the original source bit-for-bit.
Glossary
AACS
DTS (page 47)
“Advanced Access Content System” is a
specification for managing digital
entertainment contents stored on the next
generation of prerecorded and recorded
optical media. The specification enables
consumers to enjoy digital entertainment
content, including high-definition
content.
Digital audio compression technology
that DTS, Inc. developed. This
technology conforms to multi-channel
surround sound. The rear channel is
stereo and there is a discrete subwoofer
channel in this format. DTS provides the
same discrete channels of high quality
digital audio.
Blu-ray Disc (BD) (page 5)
Good channel separation is realized
because all of the channel data is
recorded discretely and little
deterioration occurs because all channel
data processing is digital.
A disc format developed for recording/
playing high-definition (HD) video (for
HDTV, etc.), and for storing large
amounts of data. A single layer Blu-ray
Disc holds up to 25 GB, and a dual-layer
Blu-ray Disc holds up to 50 GB of data.
AVCHD (page 6)
The AVCHD format is a high definition
digital video camera format used to
record SD (standard definition) or HD
(high definition) signals of either the
1
1080i specification* or the 720p
DTS-HD (page 48)
2
specification* on DVDs, using efficient
DTS-HD is an extended format of the
Coherent Acoustics audio coding
system, which also encompasses DTS
Digital Surround, DTS-ES, and DTS 96/
24. DTS-HD is highly flexible in
supporting the number of discrete
surround sound channels. While 7.1ch
surround sound is planned for Blu-ray
Discs, the audio signals can be
Chapter (page 25)
data compression coding technology.
The MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 format is
adopted to compress video data, and the
Dolby Digital or Linear PCM is used to
compress audio data. The MPEG-4
AVC/H.264 format is capable of
compressing images at higher efficiency
than that of the conventional image
compression format. The MPEG-4
AVC/ H.264 format enables a high
definition (HD) video signal shot on a
digital video camera recorder to be
recorded on DVDs in the same way as
for a standard definition (SD) television
Sections of a picture or a music feature
that are smaller than titles. A title is
composed of several chapters.
Depending on the disc, no chapters may
be recorded.
Dolby Digital (page 47)
Digital audio compression technology
developed by Dolby Laboratories. This
technology conforms to multi-channel
surround sound. The rear channel is
stereo and there is a discrete subwoofer
channel in this format. Dolby Digital
provides the same discrete channels of
high quality digital audio found in
“Dolby Digital” theater surround sound
systems. Good channel separation is
realized because all of the channel data is
recorded discretely and little
downmixed to 5.1 or 2 channels for
backward compatibility, and the
reproduced audio quality can either be at
the bit rate of DTS Digital Surround or
the lossless mode.
signal.
DVD VIDEO (page 5)
1
*
A high definition specification that
utilizes1080 effective scanning lines and
the interlace format.
A high definition specification that utilizes
720 effective scanning lines and the
progressive format.
A disc format that contains up to eight
hours of moving pictures on a disc the
same diameter as a CD. A single-layer
single sided DVD holds up to 4.7 GB; a
double layer single-sided DVD, 8.5 GB;
a single layer double-sided DVD, 9.4
GB; double-layer double-sided DVD, 17
GB. The MPEG 2 format is adopted for
the efficient video data compression.
The variable rate coding technology that
changes the data to be allocated
2
*
deterioration occurs because all channel
data processing is digital.
BD-J application
Dolby Digital Plus (page 48)
Developed as an extension to Dolby
Digital, the audio coding technology
supports 7.1 multi-channel surround
sound.
The BD-ROM format supports Java for
interactive functions.
“BD-J” offers content providers almost
unlimited functionality when creating
interactive BD-ROM titles.
according to the status of the picture is
adopted for reproducing high-quality
pictures. Audio information is recorded
in a multi-channel format, such as Dolby
Digital, allowing for a realistic audio
presence.
Dolby Surround (Pro Logic)
BD-R (page 5)
BD-R (Blu-ray Disc Recordable) is a
recordable, write-once Blu-ray Disc,
available in the same capacities as the
BD below. Since contents can be
recorded and cannot be overwritten, a
BD-R can be used to archive valuable
data or storing and distributing video
material.
Audio signal processing technology that
Dolby Laboratories developed for
surround sound. When the input signal
contains a surround component, the Pro
Logic process outputs the front, center
and rear signals. The rear channel is
monaural.
BD-RE (page 5)
BD-RE (Blu-ray Disc Rewritable) is a
recordable and rewritable Blu-ray Disc,
available in the same capacities as the
BD below. The re-recordable feature
makes extensive editing and time-
shifting applications possible.
66
DVD-R (page 5)
Interlace format
A DVD-R is a recordable disc that is the
same size as a DVD VIDEO. Contents
can be recorded only once to a DVD-R,
and will have the same format as a DVD
VIDEO. The DVD-R has two different
modes: VR mode and Video mode.
DVDs created in Video mode have the
same format as a DVD VIDEO, while
discs created in VR (Video Recording)
mode allow the contents to be
Interlace format shows every other line
of an image as a single “field” and is the
standard method for displaying images
on television. The even number field
shows the even numbered lines of an
image, and the odd numbered field
shows the odd numbered lines of an
image.
Specifications
System
Laser: Semiconductor laser
MPEG-2
Outputs
programmed or edited.
One of the video data compression
schemes established by the Moving
Picture Experts Group (MPEG), which is
adopted for DVD VIDEOs and digital
broadcasts worldwide. The scheme
specifies MPEG-2 PS (Program Stream)
for recordable media such as a DVD
VIDEO, and MPEG-2 TS (Transport
Stream) for digital broadcasts and other
communications.
(Jack name: Jack type/Output level/
Load impedance)
DVD-RW (page 5)
AUDIO OUT L/R:
A DVD-RW is a recordable and
rewritable disc that is the same size as a
DVD VIDEO. The DVD-RW has two
different modes: VR mode and Video
mode. DVDs created in Video mode
have the same format as a DVD VIDEO,
while discs created in VR (Video
Recording) mode allow the contents to
be programmed or edited.
Phono jack/2 Vrms/10 kilohms
DIGITAL OUT (OPTICAL):
Optical output jack/–18 dBm (wave
length 660 nm)
DIGITAL OUT (COAXIAL):
Phono jack/0.5 Vp-p/75 ohms
5.1CH OUTPUT:
Phono jack/2 Vrms/10 kilohms
HDMI OUT:
HDMI 19-pin standard connector
COMPONENT VIDEO OUT(Y, PB,
PR):
Pop-up menu
An enhanced menu operation available
on BD-ROMs. The pop-up menu
appears when MENU is pressed during
playback, and can be operated while
playback is in progress.
DVD+R (page 5)
A DVD+R (read “plus R”) is a
recordable disc that is the same size as a
DVD VIDEO. Contents can be recorded
only once to a DVD+R, and will have the
same format as a DVD VIDEO.
Phono jack/Y: 1.0 Vp-p/PB, PR:
progressive or interlace
= 0.7 Vp-p/75 ohms
Progressive format
VIDEO: Phono jack/1.0 Vp-p/75 ohms
S VIDEO: 4-pin mini DIN/Y:
1.0 Vp-p, C: 0.286 Vp-p/75 ohms
Compared to the Interlace format that
alternately shows every other line of an
image (field) to create one frame, the
Progressive format shows the entire
image at once as a single frame. This
means that while the Interlace format can
show 30 frames/60 fields in one second,
the Progressive format can show 60
frames in one second. The overall
picture quality increases and still images,
text, and horizontal lines appear sharper.
DVD+RW (page 5)
A DVD+RW (read “plus RW”) is a
recordable and rewritable disc.
DVD+RWs use a recording format that
is comparable to the DVD VIDEO
format.
General
Power requirements:
120 V AC, 60 Hz
Power consumption: 33 W
Film-based software, Video-based
software
Dimensions (approx.):
1
430 × 105 × 362 mm (17 × 4 / ×
4
3
14 / in.) (width/height/depth) incl.
DVDs can be classified as Film-based or
Video-based software. Film-based
DVDs contain the same images (24
frames per second) that are shown at
movie theaters. Video-based DVDs,
such as television dramas or sitcoms,
display images at 30 frames (or 60
fields) per second.
8
projecting parts
3
Mass (approx.): 7.6 kg (16 / lb)
Title (page 26)
4
Operating temperature:
5 ºC to 35 ºC (41°F to 95°F)
Operating humidity:
25 % to 80 %
The longest section of a picture or music
feature on a DVD, movie, etc., in video
software, or the entire album in audio
software.
Supplied accessories
x.v.Color (page 8)
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia
Interface) (page 8)
x.v.Color is a more familiar term for the
xvYCC standard proposed by Sony, and
is a trademark of Sony.
Specifications and design are subject to
change without notice.
HDMI is an interface that supports both
video and audio on a single digital
connection. The HDMI connection
carries standard to high definition video
signals and multi-channel audio signals
to AV components such as HDMI
equipped TVs, in digital form without
degradation.
xvYCC is an international standard for
color space in video.
This standard can express a wider color
range than the currently used broadcast
standard.
The HDMI specification supports HDCP
(High-bandwidth Digital Contents
Protection), a copy protection
technology for digital entertainment
contents for HDMI.
67
Language (abbr.)
Hindi (hi)
Code
0809
0818
0821
0825
0901
0905
0911
0914
0919
0923
1009
1023
1101
1111
1112
1113
1114
1119
1121
1125
1201
1214
1215
1220
1222
1307
1309
1311
1312
1314
1315
1318
1319
1320
1325
1401
1405
1415
1503
1513
1518
1601
1612
1619
1620
1721
1813
1814
1815
1823
1901
1904
1907
1908
Language (abbr.)
Sinhalese (si)
Slovak (sk)
Slovenian (sl)
Samoan (sm)
Shona (sn)
Code
1909
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
2001
2005
2007
2008
2009
2011
2012
2014
2015
2018
2019
2020
2023
2111
2118
2126
2209
2215
2315
2408
2515
2621
Language Code
List
Croatian (hr)
Hungarian (hu)
Armenian (hy)
Interlingua (ia)
Interlingue (ie)
Inupiak (ik)
Somali (so)
Albanian (sq)
Serbian (sr)
Siswati (ss)
Sesotho (st)
Sundanese (su)
Swedish (sv)
Swahili (sw)
Tamil (ta)
Language (abbr.)
Japanese (ja)
English (en)
French (fr)
Code
1001
0514
0618
0405
0920
0519
1412
1821
2608
1115
0512
0101
0102
0106
0113
0118
0119
0125
0126
0201
0205
0207
0208
0209
0214
0215
0218
0301
0315
0319
0325
0401
0426
0515
0520
0521
0601
0609
0610
0615
0625
0701
0704
0712
0714
0721
0801
Indonesian (in)
Icelandic (is)
Hebrew (iw)
Yiddish (ji)
German (de)
Italian (it)
Javanese (jw)
Georgian (ka)
Kazakh (kk)
Spanish (es)
Dutch (nl)
Russian (ru)
Chinese (zh)
Korean (ko)
Greek (el)
Greenlandic (kl)
Cambodian (km)
Kannada (kn)
Kashmiri (ks)
Kurdish (ku)
Kirghiz (ky)
Telugu (te)
Tajik (tg)
Thai (th)
Tigrinya (ti)
Turkmen (tk)
Tagalog (tl)
Setswana (tn)
Tonga (to)
Afar (aa)
Abkhazian (ab)
Afrikaans (af)
Amharic (am)
Arabic (ar)
Latin (la)
Lingala (ln)
Laothian (lo)
Lithuanian (lt)
Latvian (lv)
Turkish (tr)
Tsonga (ts)
Tatar (tt)
Assamese (as)
Aymara (ay)
Azerbaijani (az)
Bashkir (ba)
Byelorussian (be)
Bulgarian (bg)
Bihari (bh)
Malagasy (mg)
Maori (mi)
Twi (tw)
Ukrainian (uk)
Urdu (ur)
Macedonian (mk)
Malayalam (ml)
Mongolian (mn)
Moldavian (mo)
Marathi (mr)
Malay (ms)
Uzbek (uz)
Vietnamese (vi)
Volapük (vo)
Wolof (wo)
Xhosa (xh)
Yoruba (yo)
Zulu (zu)
Bislama (bi)
Bengali (bn)
Tibetan (bo)
Breton (br)
Maltese (mt)
Burmese (my)
Nauru (na)
Catalan (ca)
Corsican (co)
Czech (cs)
Nepali (ne)
Welsh (cy)
Norwegian (no)
Occitan (oc)
Danish (da)
Bhutani (dz)
Esperanto (eo)
Estonian (et)
Basque (eu)
Persian (fa)
Finnish (fi)
Oromo (om)
Oriya (or)
Panjabi (pa)
Polish (pl)
Pashto, Pushto (ps)
Portuguese (pt)
Quechua (qu)
Rhaeto-Romance (rm)
Kirundi (rn)
Fiji (fj)
Faroese (fo)
Frisian (fy)
Irish (ga)
Romanian (ro)
Kinyarwanda (rw)
Sanskrit (sa)
Scots-Gaelic (gd)
Galician (gl)
Guarani (gn)
Gujarati (gu)
Hausa (ha)
Sindhi (sd)
Sangho (sg)
Serbo-Croatian (sh)
68
Parental Control
Country/Area
Code List
Area (abbr.)
Argentina (ar)
Australia (au)
Austria (at)
Code
0118
0121
0120
0205
0218
0301
0312
0314
0411
0609
0618
0405
0811
0914
0904
0920
1016
1118
1325
1324
1412
1426
1415
1611
1608
1620
1821
1907
0519
0308
1905
2023
2008
0702
Belgium (be)
Brazil (br)
Canada (ca)
Chile (cl)
China (cn)
Denmark (dk)
Finland (fi)
France (fr)
Germany (de)
Hong Kong (hk)
India (in)
Indonesia (id)
Italy (it)
Japan (jp)
Korea, Republic of (kr)
Malaysia (my)
Mexico (mx)
Netherlands (nl)
New Zealand (nz)
Norway (no)
Pakistan (pk)
Philippines (ph)
Portugal (pt)
Russian Federation (ru)
Singapore (sg)
Spain (es)
Switzerland (ch)
Sweden (se)
Taiwan (tw)
Thailand (th)
United Kingdom (gb)
United States of America 2119
(us)
69
I
Interlace format 67
Index
L
“Language” 49
M
Words in quotations appear in the on-
screen displays.
“Memory” 28
“Movies” 32
MPEG 32
“Music” 36
Numerics
O
A
“Options” 52
“A/V Control” 22
AACS 66
P
ANGLE 24
AUDIO 24
“Audio Control” 27
“Audio Output Mode” 51
“Audio Setup” 47
“Parental Control” 50
“Photos” 40
POP UP/MENU 25
Progressive format 67
R
B
Region code 7
Resetting the Player 53
Batteries 16
‘BRAVIA’ Theatre Sync 11
S
“Setup” 22
C
CD 5
Setup Displays 44
“Slideshow” 41
“Speaker Setup” 51
SUBTITLE 24
Color buttons 24
Connecting
the audio cords 12
the video cords 10
CONTROL S 11
T
Title List 22
TOP MENU 25
Troubleshooting 54
“TV Type” 45
D
DIMMER 24
Disc Information 26
DISPLAY 24
Display
U
front panel display 59
Usable discs 5
V
Video based software 67
“Video Control” 28
“Video Setup” 45
“DTS Downmix” 47
X
E
Easy Setup 18
F
Film based software 67
Front panel display 59
H
70
|