Information for File: AppleTV 720p from BD. *** MediaInfo Mac // Plain text file report I confirmed this using MediaInfo Mac is this a flaw in your ripping procedure?ĭo you have a sample with full 5.1 channel sound? Thanks! While it sure looks nice, it is only 2 channel sound. It works well and a free video converter. The tool has its own set of decryption tools. This tool is available for Windows, Linux as well as Mac. I hope other find this helpful, and thanks to the many people who have helped guide me through this. MakeMKV is a tool to make digital backups and a freeware video transcoder that is fast and easy to use. If you want to rip a Blu-ray to transcode foe an AppleTV, iPod, iPhone, PSP, PS3, XBox, etc, then I’d use Pavtube’s Blu-ray Ripper. So, If you want to copy a Blu-ray to a Blu-Ray disc, I’d use AnyDVD HD to make an image, and then I’d burn it in Toast. I went to rip a disc the other day and finally got a message stating that I needed to. The software was in beta for a long time and I'd have to reinstall it every 30 days or so and all was well. I read into some forums and started to use MakeMKV to rip discs. I think this is because Toast transcoded it before it burned it. burowyako said: I'm fairly new to ripping Blu-ray discs as of the past few months. The MKV file I ripped with Make MKV burned to the BD-RE disc and played, but the audio and video were out of sync. It would not accept the MKV file created by MakeMKV.Īlso worth noting is that the BDMV folder and the ISO image I made using AnyDVD HD burned a beautiful BD-RE disc at 1080p and played in my PS3 and in my Samsung BD player. So, if you need to decrypted/rip with AnyDVD HD (in Bootcamp or even in Fusion/Parallels), then Pavtube’s Blu-ray Ripper will easily transcode it, or you can always decrypt/rip with Pavtube Blu-ray Ripper too. Things to note (for the curious) are that this app successfully accepted an ISO image and a BDMV folder I made under Vista (Boot camp and VMWare Fusion) using SlySoft’s AnyDVD HD which has to be the best BD decrypter out there. It decrypted all 4 discs I’ve tried so far and they all played extremely well on my AppleTV at 720p. The are four different AppleTV settings alone. And, it encodes for everything under the sun. Well, I’m pleased to say that this doesn’t seem to be the case with Pavtube’s Blu-ray Ripper. You can’t just buy a transcoding app, you have to buy an iPhone encoder, then an AppleTV encoder, etc. And VideoByte will do the rest because VideoByte BD-DVD Ripper will have the most optimized settings by default. Choose MP4/MKV as output format, then directly click Rip All button. Click Load Blu-ray and add the whole BDMV folder to the program. What really irks me about this company though is that they nickel and dime you by charging you for several different apps. Download and launch the BDMV to MKV/MP4 converter. So, out of frustration I turned to one of the Chinese companies that operates under a million different names which put out the exact same software under each name and almost always with a nearly identical interface. I was very disappointed with HandBrake (crashing), iVideo Converter produced choppy files at 720p, VisualHub never finishes, Popcorn won’t accept any HD input at all (MKV, ISO images, or even BDMV folders), and the story is the same with DVDRemaster Pro and ReFrame. None of the reliable transcoders worked at all. Well, after many trials, here is what I found:
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