I tried 7.0.5.4 with DVD Shrink, but whenever I went to save a reauthored title it gave an error that the DVD was encrypted. I even tried using DVD's I could directly access with DVD Shrink, but I had the same problem.
My current workflow for ripping a DVD goes something like:
1. Run DVD Shrink to demux the titles I want from the DVD to disk.
2. If DVD Shrink fails, run DVDFab HD to rip the full disk, then repeat step 1 on the files.
3. Run avi.NET's index.NET program to extract srt and sub/idx files.
4. If there are no closed captions, run SubRip to OCR and create an srt file.
5. Run subresync to convert the srt file from unicode to iso8859-1 text.
5. Run avi.NET to preview and see which titles need deinterlacing.
6. Run Handbrake to convert the respective titles to m4v files.
7. Preview the files to make sure the audio and subtitles are sync.
8. Copy the files to my media server.
9. Verify the file plays with my media player.
10. Verify the file plays on my son's ipod touch.
I was really hoping that DVDFab could cut down the steps with it's new & improved video ripping features. But non of the files passed my quality tests and were able to play both on my sons ipod touch an my video player.
When I saw the passkey product, I was thinking great. At least I could directly access all DVD's with DVD Shrink, but no such luck. Really, I would love to buy your products if they just did what I need. DVDFab HD is great for ripping disks to my hard drive, and if passkey worked as promised I would probably buy it (at a reasonable price) when the beta is over. If DVDFab Ripper did what I need I would buy that. It really just needs a profile equivalent to Handbrake's "Apple - Universal" with large file support to work on my devices. However, I really need the ability to see the titles before I rip them, with good enough quality to see if it needs deinterlace, and if the aspect ratio/cropping is right. And of course there is the need to be able to rip subtitles to an external file. My media player only recognizes iso8859-1 srt files. In fact if I rip a UTF-8 subtitle inside the m4v it is likely I will get a cannot play video error. Besides that, I find I prefer external subtitle files because it is easier to make corrects to the timing and such.
Bill
My current workflow for ripping a DVD goes something like:
1. Run DVD Shrink to demux the titles I want from the DVD to disk.
2. If DVD Shrink fails, run DVDFab HD to rip the full disk, then repeat step 1 on the files.
3. Run avi.NET's index.NET program to extract srt and sub/idx files.
4. If there are no closed captions, run SubRip to OCR and create an srt file.
5. Run subresync to convert the srt file from unicode to iso8859-1 text.
5. Run avi.NET to preview and see which titles need deinterlacing.
6. Run Handbrake to convert the respective titles to m4v files.
7. Preview the files to make sure the audio and subtitles are sync.
8. Copy the files to my media server.
9. Verify the file plays with my media player.
10. Verify the file plays on my son's ipod touch.
I was really hoping that DVDFab could cut down the steps with it's new & improved video ripping features. But non of the files passed my quality tests and were able to play both on my sons ipod touch an my video player.
When I saw the passkey product, I was thinking great. At least I could directly access all DVD's with DVD Shrink, but no such luck. Really, I would love to buy your products if they just did what I need. DVDFab HD is great for ripping disks to my hard drive, and if passkey worked as promised I would probably buy it (at a reasonable price) when the beta is over. If DVDFab Ripper did what I need I would buy that. It really just needs a profile equivalent to Handbrake's "Apple - Universal" with large file support to work on my devices. However, I really need the ability to see the titles before I rip them, with good enough quality to see if it needs deinterlace, and if the aspect ratio/cropping is right. And of course there is the need to be able to rip subtitles to an external file. My media player only recognizes iso8859-1 srt files. In fact if I rip a UTF-8 subtitle inside the m4v it is likely I will get a cannot play video error. Besides that, I find I prefer external subtitle files because it is easier to make corrects to the timing and such.
Bill
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