Alright everyone! After so many times of talk and discussion with my friends, I've finally decided to open up my collection
to all of my friends. This site will take you through all of the details of individual movies as well as the guidelines
for the borrowing process.
NO CATCH!...EVER!!!
1) $1 per movie per week. FLAT RATE on ALL movies new or old!!! 2) Same rate for both VHS and DVD!!! 3) ALL
fees donated to CEF!!! 4) OVER 100 movies to date!
Rules...
The rules for borrowing from my movies collection are simple. After finding the movie you want, simply fill out the check-out
form to notify me. Upon confirmation, I will bring the movie to you on the next CEF Wed night meeting. I will handover the
movie ONLY after you've deposited $1 (per movie per week) into the CEF money box, and you have one week (until the following
meeting) to return the movie back to me. ALL movies that are NOT returned at the proper time (the following Wed.
night) will automatically be extended for an additional week for $1 a week. All "late" fees are due at the time
of the movie's return. All proceeds from the late fees and rental will be donated to the CEF treasury.
Format...
All of my movies are on at least one of four mediums: VHS (video tape), DVD, VCD, and computer mpeg files. With exception
to the mpeg files, I will bring the movies upon request to the Wednesday night meetings. For the movies that
are on files, there are only a few ways that I can get the files to you. For movies under 600 Mb, I can burn it on a data
CD that you must provide, (Sorry, I'm all out of blank CDs.) or I can send it to you via ICQ or AIM. For movies over 600
Mb, I can only get it to you via file transfer. Once you've viewed the movies, you may keep it for good, but as you can imagine,
they'll take up alot of hard drive space. The Mpeg files consists of four quality levels: DVD quality, excellent
quality, good quality, and OK quality. Here is a brief description about how each quality level is like. I will continue
to try to upgrade movies of lower qualities to higher qualities as they become available.
DVD Quality
DVD quality files have the exact picture and sound quality as if you're watching the actual DVD of the movie. Most of these
files are burned directly from the DVD itself. These files are usually over 1 Gb. in size.
Excellent Quality
Excellent quality files usually have the display quality of VCD movies. You may be able to see a few small rough spots in
the images, but overall the movie is clearly visible.
Good Quality
Good quality means that the video and sound quality is worse than those of a VCD, but the movie on average is pretty good
and clear. The file will run very smoothly on the Windows Media player.
OK Quality
OK quality files are on average visible and understandable to viewers. There may be certain parts of the movie, however,
that viewers may have trouble understanding and seeing. This is very common in fast action sequences.
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