Advice for ripping films (legally)
Thread Starter

Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 64
Likes: 0
From: Somerset
Advice for ripping films (legally)
Hi all,
I've put some films that I own on my Archos but still find some of them won't convert when I use Format factory (for instance the new transformers film). Can anyone recommend some better software that will convert pretty much anything, I don't mind paying for the software if needs be.
Thanks for any advice
Wiggly
I've put some films that I own on my Archos but still find some of them won't convert when I use Format factory (for instance the new transformers film). Can anyone recommend some better software that will convert pretty much anything, I don't mind paying for the software if needs be.
Thanks for any advice
Wiggly
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,496
Likes: 0
From: Tracey Island

Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 755
Likes: 26
From: Dublin, Ireland. (No, I just live here.)
I've been trying a 2-stage process: DVD-Shrink to extract the contents to a disk directory without video encoding, then Handbrake to do the encoding to M4V (x.264) video, which is what an iTunes library expects. The nice thing about Handbrake is that it includes a command line processor and sensible presets, so I can basically use any Windows computer I find as a number-cruncher without any installation or fiddling around: plug in a USB key with the extracted files, run a short batch script, and off it goes.
Guest
Posts: n/a
Take a look at SUPER - neat little freeware programme with options that will convert just about any audio or video to anything else. I had a few troublesome files but I've always been able to find some way of coverting them using this app - I remember finding it after a search when a not cheap commercial product failed miserably!





