It's more of a pain to reassemble these files with AnyDVD HD. The blu-ray player normally plays them in the correct sequence depending on which playlist (theatrical vs directors cut) you chose. With AnyDVD-HD, there are a bunch of video files. Take a disc that contains both a theatrical and directors cut on the same disc. One big advantage about MakeMKV, is it will read playlist information, and rip in that manner. I have purchased both AnyDVD-HD and MakeMKV for my home ripping needs. I don't normally buy software when there is a usable free equivalent, but MakeMKV was well worth the price ($50-ish, if I remember correctly). MakeMKV has a preset system, once you're familiar with it, you can easily set the software to default to select specific language audio, audio codec type, and subtitle tracks.įrom: Boston, MA. multiple audio track + subtitle detection and selection. Output can directly be fed into DCP-o-matic, incl. Actually getting the right ones and making a DCP out of them is an entirely different process. Of course, at the end of the day, this type of software only gives you access to the source files. Also, do keep in mind that if the source disc isn't copy-protected or region-locked, AnyDVD isn't really necessary. A nice bonus feature is that it has a little checkbox for skipping any pre-movie ads or menus. Although AnyDVD does have disc cloning & ripping functionality built in. Once the software restrictions are out of the way, you could probably just open the drive in Windows Explorer and copy/paste the source files to a local directory if you wanted to. If in doubt you can always convert more than one file and then use an MKV player to verify the one you want.ĪnyDVD(-HD) is just software that automatically cracks and/or ignores copy protection and region locking on any disc you put in your computer. MakeMKV shows you a list of what's on the disk so it's easy to pick out the file you need - on a movie disk it's usually the largest file and listed first. In fact, it looked smart enough that it sees the big file section and suggests that is the one you want (not all of the little "extras." I've heard that "MakeMKV" (and have seen it in action) can "rip" a BD into an MKV file (including the whizbang audio) that DCP O MATIC can convert into a DCP. You can download it and use it fully functional for 20 days as a trial. It's €59 or €79 with 2 years of updates included. Also what file do I need to output from the rip and will this maintain the surround sound for the final DCP file.įrom: Vacaville, CA (1790 miles west of Rockwall) I know this has been covered before however I cannot see anything, I want to convert our Blu Ray screenings into DCP for a variety of reasons and wondered what software people use to rip before converting in DCP o Matic. My profile | my password | search | faq & rules | forum home Home Products Store Forum Warehouse Contact Us Film-Tech Forum ARCHIVE: Blu Ray Ripping Software
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