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  • [♪ Music and Keyboard Typing ♪]

  • Greetings, and welcome to an LGR thing, and this thing

  • is the Creative Labs PC-DVD Encore Dxr2

  • DVD-ROM upgrade kit for PCs, released in October of 1997

  • at a suggested retail price of $379 US.

  • "Get Tomorrow's Technology at Tomorrow's Price Today, with the 7-in-1 Futuristic Digital Video Disc Solution For Your PC & TV!"

  • Oh my goodness!

  • DVDs were extremely exciting back in the day.

  • (And holy crap, 1997, if you had one of these things, you were absolutely on top of the world.)

  • I didn't get a DVD-ROM until like 2003.

  • But, this was available in '97, and... honestly, it was relatively affordable,

  • because this Encore release here, as the name implies,

  • is the second generation DVD-ROM offered by Creative.

  • The first one from them was their PC-DVD, released in March of 1997, and that was $500.

  • So yeah, in just a handful of months,

  • it had come down quite a bit; the tech had been upgraded and everything was better for less money.

  • That's just late '90s tech!

  • But anyway, this in particular uses Creative's Dynamic Xtended Resolution technology, hm...

  • also known as Dxr2, and the idea here was that it provided

  • line doubling to provide a kind of deinterlaced 480p image for DVD video

  • and dynamic resolution interpolation up to 1280x1024, which meant,

  • that you were supposed to get a clearer, smoother, crisper image on higher resolution monitors.

  • But the Dxr2 isn't just for that kind of resolution scaling and whatnot, it is also

  • the name of the card that is in here.

  • That's right, this isn't just a drive, this is actually

  • a card that you plug into a PCI slot, and this is an MPEG-2 decoder,

  • which was pretty much a requirement for computers at this point, because

  • it took quite a lot of processing power and graphical power and whatnot to make this happen,

  • to get all of the video data in MPEG-2.

  • So you needed a card like this,

  • especially on systems below 266 megahertz or so.

  • Of course, this changed over the years, as faster and faster CPUs and GPUs came out,

  • plus improved DVD software like WinDVD and PowerDVD just making much better usage

  • of the processing and all the MPEG-2 stuff,

  • which led to MPEG-2 cards like the Dxr2 becoming obsolete.

  • But at this point in time, you needed that card,

  • at least for the computers that were out there.

  • And that's what we're gonna be installing it on, which in this episode, is a

  • Packard Bell Multimedia 955, a computer that uh, isn't really great. *Chuckles*

  • And I recently restored it here on LGR, specifically because it was so friggin' bland.

  • This is just the most middle-of-the-road late '90s kind of computer.

  • Not a whole lot going on as you can see from these specs, but that's precisely why I wanted to get it up and running.

  • Because, it's to me, one of those ideal examples of just

  • a beige white box-lookin' tower that does what you need it to and

  • absolutely nothing else,

  • making it a prime example of something where you should be able to see

  • upgrades really making a difference.

  • As for this box itself, well, this is a new old stock box.

  • It has uh, never been opened.

  • Comes with all sorts of goodies inside

  • and...

  • packed in there are some pretty awesome extras.

  • Mainly, the game Claw, the DVD-ROM version of the game, which I recently reviewed, and

  • the DVD version of Wing Commander IV.

  • *Chuckles* That's pretty sweet because

  • normally, it came on CD-ROM in a big old box like this

  • because... it came on six CDs,

  • so you had just a lot of disc swapping

  • and not only that, but the quality wasn't as good...

  • as far as uh, video quality and whatnot, and yes, this is an FMV game

  • with uh,

  • a lot of awesome people in it,

  • and if you've got it on a DVD, like in this package, then you just had the objectively superior experience,

  • and one of the only ways to get it was to buy one of these packages and get it prepackaged.

  • So, I am happy to have a copy finally in this PC-DVD kit.

  • But yeah, that's enough of talking about this thing, let's just dive into it

  • and see what you got inside of one of these brand-new in October of 1997.

  • *Box Opening Sounds*

  • Hmm.

  • *Box Opening Sounds*

  • Oh my.

  • Eheh, well.

  • Okay, so it looks like the DVD-ROM drive itself...

  • a big old bag of goodies and you got adapters, documentation, the DVD software...

  • the Dxr2 MPEG-2 decoder card itself.

  • Yeah, big ol' chunk of cardboard that is full of nothing whatsoever. *Chuckles*

  • That's a lot of empty unused space.

  • Yeah, I gotta take a look at this Dxr2 card itself because I have been darn curious about this thing ever since...

  • I remember reading about these MPEG-2 decoders and whatnot back then.

  • It just all seemed so... exotic and futuristic, like "Wow! This card is for DVDs!" *Chuckles*

  • "Imagine what all these chips do!"

  • And uh, yeah, this is a passthrough type of card, so you plug in your video card, well,

  • cable from your video card goes in here, and then this is gonna go to your monitor.

  • S-Video right here, and then S/PDIF audio out, just for your TV or

  • Dolby Sound system. This can do 5.1 channel AC3 audio.

  • 'Kay, let's see what we got here.

  • Oh... okay, I was wondering if it would uh...

  • actually have that big ol' Dxr2 *Chuckles* thing like it had on the front of the box, but...

  • I guess not, so yeah, this is the thing. It's a 2x DVD-ROM, manufactured in November of 1997, so...

  • I guess this one didn't quite come out on launch day, but that is alright.

  • Uh, I kind of expected that because there is uh, a different box art for these Dxr2 packages like this.

  • Woah, that's a lotta... that's a lot of cautions. *Chuckles* "Caution, this is gonna be the death of you" in every language!

  • And we've got this ol' bag of stuff here, which is.. still got a lot of air in it.

  • Feel like I should say "Nice hiss."

  • Okay, we have a reference thing here, which is like, yeah,

  • "Don't contact us for these games and whatnot, 'cause we- we didn't make them."

  • Uhhh, yeah, this is just, tech support.

  • Okay, we have some uh, cables here for the uh, video and audio, it appears.

  • Here's the passthrough to go between uh, the video card and the Dxr2.

  • And just a regular IDE cables and little passthroughs there for the sound.

  • Uh, I- I guess that's probably for like CD-ROM audio.

  • So we've got Wing Commander IV, the DVD interactive version...

  • and Claw... also the DVD version.

  • This is such a cool game, and I am excited to check this one out.

  • And let's see, we have some software here on CD-ROM, which is...

  • the player and the drivers and Microsoft ActiveMovie and a Creative sample clip.

  • 'Mkay- Oh, there's a floppy disk too.

  • Oh, that is just the drivers alone, which makes sense.

  • You don't wanna put the cart before the horse, it's like,

  • "Oh no! I can't get these because I put that in and replaced my CD drive, and now, nothing works!"

  • Eh, let's see here. Uh, accessories.

  • Looks like some other crap you can get from Creative, which is fine.

  • And we have the rather beefy Getting Started guide. *Chuckles*

  • That's a lot for just getting started! Although, I guess, really, only up to...

  • here, or so, is English.

  • It's, I'm assuming, going to be pretty straightforward, but I will refer to this if I need to.

  • Let's get this thing installed in the Packard Bell!

  • *Clattering*

  • So I'm not entirely sure how to get this out of here yet, but...

  • I'm assuming like, everything else in this computer, it involves taking out the front panel.

  • *Clack*

  • Yep.

  • *Thud* (x4)

  • I really don't like when computers do this, like it's a piece of metal that is actually still attached...

  • to the chassis - that you have to bend out of shape,

  • and it's all sharp and annoying and urgh.

  • *Snip*

  • Uurgggghhh...

  • *Bang* (x9)

  • *Whir*

  • *Click*

  • Uuuhhhh, yeah, that's really graceful.

  • Least that gives me the chance to... dust out that little area.

  • Now, something that I didn't actually notice earlier on the back of the DVD drive is this Digital Audio connector, that is for

  • DAT, or Digital Audio Tape.

  • I thought that was interesting, I've never really noticed this - that's what that's for on the back of some of these.

  • Uh, but anyway, at this point, I need to change it from -

  • well, no, I guess I need to keep it, it's on slave.

  • The original CD-ROM that's in here is going to be...

  • the master...

  • and then, this is gonna be the slave because...

  • there is a lack of IDE connections in this thing.

  • *Click*

  • So that one's gonna go right here, this connects to the CD-ROM and this connects to the motherboard.

  • And then, also, I wanna get the CD audio cable connected.

  • I was wondering why it came with two of them.

  • TThat this one right here goes from the DVD-ROM to the Dxr2 board.

  • This one goes from your original CD-ROM to the Dxr2 board,

  • and so that - they both go to the Dxr2 board, and then there's

  • a third cable, probably the one that's already in here to go from the Dxr2 to your sound card.

  • Which, in this case,

  • is not a card, it's an integrated sound chip right there.

  • *Clattering*

  • Okay, there we go...

  • DVD drive is longer than the CD-ROM.

  • Yeah, that's an annoyingly tight fit,

  • but that's one reason I plug in all the cables before putting in the drive into the bay here, because...

  • it's one less thing to worry about in this tiny little crammed area.

  • The power... cable is not gonna reach.

  • *Sigh* Seriously?!

  • Why do they design it this way? What - what else is this supposed to connect to?

  • I think if I take the one from the hard drive and then this one, which was on the CD-ROM, it's also plugged into the floppy disk, but...

  • Okay, power is sorted...

  • Got these frickin' cables going everywhere...

  • *Rattling*