![]() ![]() ![]() You are renaming your video files right? filebot is fantastic for that as well. So they look fine - then that is good!! Your ready to rock. Or you could just buy it - its great software! The last version released trial has expired, need a new version 1.14.2 most likely for that to restart. So makemkv is currently in between free and buy. The main drive i use is the other drive too (the non-Blu Ray one). Some times it doesn't and i have to open the tray, close the tray and eventually it'll recognise it. When i put the Blu-Ray in the Blu-Ray drive (which is 8 years old btw - Samsung DVDWBD SH-B083L according to My Computer) it's like it struggles reading it. I also note the protection on the Blu-Ray is listed as AACS v17 whereas the DVD is CSS/CPPM (if this makes any difference?).Ģ) When i put the DVD in the drive it recognises it no problem. Yet when i go to rip the DVD version there is no 'Backup' option - it suddenly gets greyed out and instead i just click the big 'Open DVD disc' in the middle of the screen. 2 questions really.ġ) When i rip the Blu-Ray disc, i have to do a 'backup' it seems in MakeMKV but i have to leave 'Decrypt video files' unchecked otherwise This may seem pointless to you guys but i'm just curious. Right, i'm in the process of ripping the Bad Boys movie for the simple reason of i have it in both Blu-Ray and also standard DVD, so i'm ripping the pair of them and will look at the comparison once in the Plex library. There are no Interlaced frame rates, just Non-Interlaced at 60, 120 or 180 FPS "Widescreen" just takes the same darned pixels and just pulls them like an elastic band to essentially result in even lower effective resolution than 4:3Īnd both can be Interlaced at 25 or 30 FPS or Non-Interlaced at 50 or 60 FPS and a few other frame rates such as cinema's 24 FPS. Please nobody complain that this is "too complicated" as I have already left out tons of information and cut it down to the bare essentials.īoth formats are similar and often known as SDĪspect Ratio is either 4:3 or 16:9 but a confusing aspect is that in either case the encoded resolution is identical. Note 2: Non-Interlaced is also known as "Progressive" often abbreviated as "P" which is where "1080P" comes from But even that will vanish as the trend increases of "filming" new movies on digital at 60 FPS or more. Note 1: despite the improvement that UHD offers, there is some debate about the lack of 24 FPS which is what most movies have traditionally used on real photographic film. ![]() Ultra HD is UHD often called 4K and is the next jump in resolution that the world is moving to. Though what is Ultra HD Blu-ray? I assume it's Blu-rays bigger brother?ĮDIT: And look at that guys, we're on page 11 now. I thought the second one, while decent just wasn't as good as the first (usually the case). ![]()
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