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Thanks everyone for the tips and pointers. The sheer quantity of
different video and audio codecs is mind-boggling; it's quite an
education for me ;).
As for HandBrake, the oneiric ppa version is 0.9.8 and if we can read in
the Encoders/Audio section of the 0.9.6 release notes (from
https://t
Arista is probably your safest bet since it doesn't have a leaning curve.
x264 is easier than ffmpeg in the cli and probably the most fail-proof
encoder to the formats you specified, since its only focus is H264.
I tried k9copy in Trisquel 5.5 with encrypted DVD* and works beautifully with
MP4, AVI, ASF, FLV.
I tested with "Wizard" with "Rip and encode DVD" and "Rip DVD without
encoding".
Unfortunately .MKV doesn't work here.
*You need to install libdvdcss:
sudo /usr/share/doc/libdvdread4/install-c
Arista: http://www.transcoder.org/
You can install easily with Trisquel Add/Remove.
Compiling HandBrake from source requires running a script which downloads
other programmes such as FFmpeg and compiles them. HandBrake does not use
local versions of these programmes even if they exist. Some of these
programmes have freedom issues such as FFmpeg compiled with AAC support.
Le 2012-12-15 15:38, gnufre...@hushmail.com a écrit :
Yes. That's the reason. I had heard of Handbrake and saw that it was
free software, but when I found out that it had a non-free dependency
I immediately edited my post.
There's something I don't understand then. The HandBrake ppa only
con
Le 2012-12-15 01:36, alonivt...@gmail.com a écrit :
If hard drive space isn't an issue an exact copy of the DVD into VOB
format (which is supported by your TV) would be the fastest. Here is
the Arch Linux guide:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Dvdbackup
Thanks; I'll look into this...
Yes. That's the reason. I had heard of Handbrake and saw that it was free
software, but when I found out that it had a non-free dependency I
immediately edited my post.
If hard drive space isn't an issue an exact copy of the DVD into VOB format
(which is supported by your TV) would be the fastest. Here is the Arch Linux
guide:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Dvdbackup
Handbrake is partially non-free as it provides the proprietary FAAC encoder.
There is a free fork in Ubuntu's backport repositories (for 12.10) but only
for 32-bit systems.
Did you try Handbrake?
Or perhaps FFMPEG from the command line?
There are pretty good tutorials online about how to use each.
Hello,
I recently purchased a TV set which has a USB port, and it can read videos
from an external hard drive plugged into that port.
The formats it can read are summarized in this table (I scanned the user
manual): http://benwen.info/public/video.jpg
I have a bunch of region 2 DVDs from
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