Rip the Bluray to HD, re-encode the audio to FLAC and mux back into an mkv
file with the video and any subs you need.  Works great.

---------------------------
Brian Weeden
Technical Consultant
Secure World Foundation <http://www.secureworldfoundtion.org>
+1 (514) 466-2756 Canada
+1 (202) 683-8534 US


On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 7:32 PM, James Maki <[email protected]>wrote:

> Isn't DRM just grand! It doesn't really protect the material, just makes it
> difficult for us to use it, to enjoy what we pay for.
>
> So how do you get tru-hd or dts-hd from a set top blu-ray player? The HDMI
> receiver passes it on to the HDTV (which is stereo). Can't use the SPDIF
> without it degrading the quality. What other options are we left with to
> process the sound? This just keeps getting better and better!
>
> Jim Maki
> [email protected]
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Brian Weeden
>
> > There are also known issues with spdif ports and Bluray,
> > specifically
> > getting any tru-hd or dts-hd decoded.
> >
> > Spdif Is not considered a protected channel for drm and thus the pc
> > might end up downgrading the signal.
> >
> > -------
> > Brian Weeden
> > Technical Consultant
> > Secure World Foundation
>
>

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