I'm looking at ripping all my DVDs onto my computer, but I'm wondering what format I should rip the files to so that I can just play them at will?ISO ?.mov ?the DVD_TS folder(s) ?I've got a lifetime license for AnyDVD so that's what I use to rip, though it's been a long time since I ripped one. I'm running Win7 & Ubuntu 10.04 dual-boot w/ a shared data partition. So, ideally I'd put the rips in the shared partition and play on either OS. I'd like to shoot for a format that isn't at risk of becoming obsolete or locked into one OS or the other, and I'd like it to be at DVD quality (I'm assuming that's possible).Any suggestions?
2/3/2011 1:17:22 PM
h.264 is pretty widespread and well supported as a home library format. people who are in the "movie distribution" scene typically prefer mkv but i'm not terribly familiar with the reasons why
2/3/2011 1:35:28 PM
^h.264 in mp4 format, most widely supported, easily transcoded to portable versions if you want later.
2/3/2011 1:38:20 PM
h.264 is much more processor intensive to encode over .mkv.mkv also has more options in terms of what the container allows - most people use it who have a high end audio system and want to encode exotic formats (7.1 or something) or DTSIn terms of storage efficiency, though, h.264 can't be touched. Xvid comes close, but not quite.Process::Rip them all the .isoDownload "Fairuse Wizard" (if you have more than 2 cores buy the license, it's worth it.)Pick profile (h.264/Full Auto will work nicely)Mash that profile onto all of the ISO's (tell it to "add to queue")Hit "Do all of queue"Come back in 2.5hours X #of ISODelete ISO's and fairuse project filesBackup everything so you don't kill <# hours> again
2/3/2011 2:14:20 PM
You can use H.264 video in an MKV; pair that with some DTS audio and it should be amazing (bonus points if you can get the subtitles into SSA format or something similar to put in your MKV).
2/4/2011 10:46:59 PM
Can I use Handbrake to do any of this stuff?
2/5/2011 10:58:48 AM
maybe...I know you can make H.264 video with Handbrakebut to make MKVs you should probably use mkvmerge once you've encoded the video and audio
2/5/2011 3:18:26 PM
I'm having a thought here: AnyDVD gives you ISOs, can VLC player play directly from the ISOs?That would seem to be a better way, because it avoids the encoding, right? Or am I missing something?
2/5/2011 4:13:08 PM
file size. .iso is going to generally be much larger than some other format (.mkv/.avi/etc.) One benefit of .iso files is that it preserves the menu structure and all the extras.
2/5/2011 4:45:26 PM
^^ yes, VLC can play directly from ISOs
2/5/2011 5:03:29 PM
^^This is mostly true for DVDs, VCDs, and even less-advanced media: The codecs natively used (respectively MPEG-2 and MPEG-1) are much less efficient than the H.264 commonplace on Blu-Ray.
2/5/2011 5:10:50 PM
Which app will rip from the disc straight to an ISO? I think I'm just going to leave my files in this format for now.Edit...I dusted off a copy of DVD Shrink I've saved that seems to be doing the job just fine. Taking 4:45 to rip a full DVD to iso.[Edited on February 5, 2011 at 9:35 PM. Reason : .]
2/5/2011 9:26:37 PM
DVD DecrypterIt's been out of production for a while, but there are a few mirrors still up because it's still the best tool for the job.
2/6/2011 2:11:24 PM