Again, that's put my mind at ease. I hope to take my LCD TV over so that should sort out the PAL problems. What kind of company do you work in? Sounds like a games company perhaps?
The company I work for offers mostly games functionality testing services plus general pc, console and mobile EU languages localization/translation and testing. Since I am fluent in a couple of languages, I work in the localization department. :-)
The prices of games in HMV there seemed quite high too. More than I was expecting anyway.
Sorry my fault, I should have been more specific. HMV is usually good for DVDs, they often have these "3 movies for $20" specials and sometimes you can find some very interesting titles for that price (i.e. not just those in the bargain bin).
Futureshop and Wal-mart are the best place for pc & console software but not hardware.
Any TV programmes that belong to the BBC are expensive on DVD in the UK too. They can charge a stupid amount for a series that only has 6 episodes when you can pay the same for an American comedy with 24 episodes. Typical rip off BBC!!
Well that depends on your point of view. IMHO 80% of American TV programs are trash. There might be an average of 25 episodes per season but there's hardly any quality at all.
I certainly wouldn't miss the TV License. ;-)
I am willing to bet that you will. ;-) Here you don't pay the licence but you have to pay for cable. For instance, Rogers or Vidéotron charge anything from $30 to over $70 per month for cable service and offer you 70 channels of nothing! All you get is endless commercials with bits of tv shows sliced inbetween. I stopped paying for cable and generally watching TV a long time ago. I would certanly be willing to pay a TV lincence and have commercial-free high-quality stuff like the BBC rather than be forced to watch that crap on cable.
Much easier to rent/buy a DVD and watch it at your convenience, that's what I say.
A region free DVD player would certainly be a must for me I think too.
I admit I am not up to date with the latest plasma/lcd tv technology, however for standard NTSC TVs it is not enough to get a DVD player that can be unlocked or made region free. It has to be capable of converting PAL to NTSC otherwise you won't be able to see anything (except perhaps a rolling picture). I don't know what percentage of DVD players does this nowdays, but I suspect that a $39 player from wal-mart might not be up to the task. All of the European players do that out of the box but that's easy since the NTSC resolution is lower. The other way round is a bit more complicated.
Regarding power supply frequency issues that someone else mentioned in this thread, in 95% of the cases that should NOT be a problem. I used lots of different EU based equipment over the years, including PAL VCRs, 14" CRT TVs and lots more with a power converter and never had a problem. Generally speaking anything manufactured after 1995 should work fine. Modern TVs never sync to the power source frequency rate anyway and AFAIK haven't done that for at least a couple of decades. :-)
Oh btw, what's the company you are going to work for, if I might ask?
I hope for your sake it's not EA. ;-) From what I hear they might not be the best software developer to work for.
Relic/THQ on the other hand is an awesome company, I worked there on-site for two months.
If you want to bring along your GSM mobile phone, you can use it over here as long as it's unlocked and supports 850/1900 Mhz frequencies (1900 should be sufficient although you will not get the full coverage). Then just go to the nearest Rogers or Fido store and get a sim card for $25. Bell/Telus use proprietary CDMA standard so you won't be able to use them unless you buy one of their crappy phones.
Regarding Montral, in my opinion this is one of the most beautiful cities in North America, or at least the most European looking one. That's why I love it and I hope I will never have to move. Cheers! :cheers: