On Wed, 2005-02-02 at 01:31 +0000, Neil Bothwick wrote: > On Tue, 01 Feb 2005 19:15:21 -0500, Nick Smith wrote: > > > > > im glad someone else brought this up, i have been meaning to for a > > > > while. i use Intervideo DVD Copy, and it makes an EXACT copy, with > > > > one push of a button. > > > > > > Most commercial DVDs are dual layer and won't fit on a single layer > > > DVD-R. To make an exact copy you need a dual layer burner and > > > (expensive) dual layer discs. > > > > > the program automaticly transcodes the dvd and compresses it perfectly > > to fit on a 4.7 (actually 4.4) gig dvd, with the highest possible > > quality. > > OK, so it's not an EXACT copy. If you want to reduce the size of the data > to fit 4.7GB (or 4.4 GiB if you prefer :) you have to discard something. > You either reduce the quality of everything by a sizeable factor, or you > discard some elements of the DVD and reduce the quality of the remainder > by less. Programs like 9to5 take the latter approach, although an overall > compression of the whole DVD is equally possible. > care to elaborate on how its possible? and with what? i wouldnt mind loosing somethings if when you first put the DVD in the player that it "looked" original even if the menu items didnt play.(the movie of course) something besides putting in the dvd and it just starts playing. > > -- > Neil Bothwick > > To iterate is human; to recurse, divine. >
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