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Hey I am new to all this but I been wanting to copy my movies to my PC to watch on my Tablet and kindle as well as just to be able to keep the originals protected. My question is what is the best software to copy my movies with the Highest quality, in different formats, and is simple to use lol cause like i said i am new to this..
Thanks so much for your help guys
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Sep 25, 2014, 09:52 am
(This post was last modified: Sep 25, 2014, 09:55 am by -nelly-. Edited 1 time in total.)
(Sep 25, 2014, 09:45 am)lohung Wrote: Hey I am new to all this but I been wanting to copy my movies to my PC to watch on my Tablet and kindle as well as just to be able to keep the originals protected. My question is what is the best software to copy my movies with the Highest quality, in different formats, and is simple to use lol cause like i said i am new to this..
Thanks so much for your help guys
I've used Movavi Video Converter v14.0.1 in the past which done the job without any issues.
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Sep 26, 2014, 21:38 pm
(This post was last modified: Sep 26, 2014, 21:42 pm by RobertX. Edited 2 times in total.)
A question: are you using DVDs or Blu Rays?
If you are using torrented files, just ask a guy named kris33; not only did his Star Trek TNG encodes are kept in superb quality, he kept the file size low (i.e. 720p). You might want to look him up on The Pirate Bay site, not here though.
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(Sep 26, 2014, 21:38 pm)RobertX Wrote: A question: are you using DVDs or Blu Rays?
If you are using torrented files, just ask a guy named kris33; not only did his Star Trek TNG encodes are kept in superb quality, he kept the file size low (i.e. 720p). You might want to look him up on The Pirate Bay site, not here though.
I am using DVD's mainly...
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OK, good. It's better to use Handbrake ( www.handbrake.fr) to rip DVDs and AnyDVD to remove the protection while ripping the DVDs using Handbrake. Depending on your CPU capability, it might be lengthy.
I asked if you're using DVDs or BluRays, because if you are ripping Blu Rays, it's not that easy. The big companies have huddled together and conspired to make customers exercising legal rights a hard time by a new protection: Cinavia. How this works is that if you ripped a Blu Ray disc that is protected by the Cinavia protection scheme, the protection stays on the ripped version of the file and, if you use that file, unless the new version is circumvented by the new device, like Android or a DVD Player, the sound will cut itself out after twenty minutes of play.
You can no longer find circumvention by getting any "special" Blu Ray player because all Blu Ray players must be flashed by the Cinavia protection as a standard. Most people can still find a way around it by doing something on a PS3 or use other forms of playing the file, like playing on Windows Media Player, VLC, a hardware media player (ask bob5695), or use DVD players that don't have Cinavia yet (I think).
Hope this helps, and just keep buying retail DVDs for now.
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(Sep 27, 2014, 15:40 pm)RobertX Wrote: OK, good. It's better to use Handbrake (www.handbrake.fr) to rip DVDs and AnyDVD to remove the protection while ripping the DVDs using Handbrake. Depending on your CPU capability, it might be lengthy.
I asked if you're using DVDs or BluRays, because if you are ripping Blu Rays, it's not that easy. The big companies have huddled together and conspired to make customers exercising legal rights a hard time by a new protection: Cinavia. How this works is that if you ripped a Blu Ray disc that is protected by the Cinavia protection scheme, the protection stays on the ripped version of the file and, if you use that file, unless the new version is circumvented by the new device, like Android or a DVD Player, the sound will cut itself out after twenty minutes of play.
You can no longer find circumvention by getting any "special" Blu Ray player because all Blu Ray players must be flashed by the Cinavia protection as a standard. Most people can still find a way around it by doing something on a PS3 or use other forms of playing the file, like playing on Windows Media Player, VLC, a hardware media player (ask bob5695), or use DVD players that don't have Cinavia yet (I think).
Hope this helps, and just keep buying retail DVDs for now.
thanks... so your saying Handbrake is the best to use? i am doing normal DVD's
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Yes, Handbrake is user-friendly. www.handbrake.fr
Here's what I left out: if you're using Handbrake, make sure that you are using AnyDVD in conjunction of Handbrake. DVDs have protections that can prevent extraction.
Pirate/buy AnyDVD, whichever way you prefer , and install it. AnyDVD can help with Handbrake because it helps Handbrake by killing the region protection and content scrambling (CSS). In fact, AnyDVD can take over for Handbrake if all you're planning is to backup your DVDs and not watching it on the computer. Well, you can use a drive emulation tool like Daemon Tools, but that's another story. The company that makes AnyDVD is Slysoft.
Hope this helps.
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