GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   How hard is it to rip DVDs? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=426402)

Anna_O 02-03-2005 05:15 AM

How hard is it to rip DVDs?
 
We are looking into the possibility of setting up a paysite... What is the best program for ripping DVDs for the members area, and is it hard to do it?

Thanks :)

NoCarrier 02-03-2005 05:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Anna_O
We are looking into the possibility of setting up a paysite... What is the best program for ripping DVDs for the members area, and is it hard to do it?

Thanks :)

You should go to Blockbuster, no more late fees. So you will have plenty of time to RIP all the porn dvd's for your member area. :1orglaugh

Anna_O 02-03-2005 05:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NoCarrier
You should go to Blockbuster, no more late fees. So you will have plenty of time to RIP all the porn dvd's for your member area. :1orglaugh

Well... We could do that.

OR we could order licensed DVDs and rip them. :321GFY

tradermcduck 02-03-2005 05:45 AM

Bump for an interesting question...

Anna_O 02-03-2005 05:56 AM

Thanks for the bump :)

Well, I'm off to lunch now, hopefully there'll be a nice answer when I get back....

Gunni 02-03-2005 06:02 AM

http://www.dvdshrink.org
Then I find best to divx them with DrDivX,

sometimes the VOB files can be problematic, so then what I do is rename the .VOB files to .mpg, and join them, then normally they run through DrDivX with out problems :)

Arowanna 02-03-2005 06:14 AM

divx / xvid but than they have to install the codec

program nandub etc

take a look at www.doom9.net

Michele R. 02-03-2005 06:20 AM

I recommend as a first time video editor that you use a consumer based capture card as professional capture cards and boxes can be a little complex and sometimes a pain in the ass to make work properly unless you have the right equipment such as a mother board or other hardware.

The first thing you'll need is this >
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....type=pr oduct

With that you can plug any DVD player (or VCR) into the AV box and capture the video file on your computer, in AVI format.

It takes the same amount of time to capture as it does to play.

Keep in mind you'll want 1 (120GB) HD per 3 DVD's. It leaves you with enough room to capture, encode and store the source files. 7200RPM drives are fine they do the job.

Once you capture the AVI file you want to run it through a program like Adobe Premiere.

That's the software package you're going to use to take that full-length AVI file and cut it up into pieces, or whatever you want to do. This is simply going to chop up the big AVI into little AVI's (still RAW format) based on the time frames you specified in the time line. It's very simple.

What you really need to do is this. Once you load the full-length AVI into the timeline in Premiere you want to drag the start/end points to the location you want, let's say your first 5 minute clip in scene one. Once you do that you will have to save the PPJ file (project file). Then you repeat for all of your other scenes.

Once you have all of the PPJ files you want to batch encode them. You will then import all of those PPJ files back into Premiere and batch them out. It will then produce the 5-minute AVI files or whatever you specified in the timeline.

Now once you have your source (AVI) files you will then use a program like Cleaner to encode all of your WMV or MPG files. I think it also supports QuickTime and real but I never messed with those two file types.

All of the above is really only like 20 minutes of actual hands-on work, which comes from Premiere and saving the source PPJ files for your clips and then importing them.

For some odd reason Premiere does not allow you to select more than one PPJ file to import into the batch. So if you have 40 PPJ files per DVD you have to add them one by one. That's how it was in Premiere 6, I'm not sure if the latest versions are limited that way.

Either way, importing 40 files only takes a minute or two.

All of the other hours in this process come from the capture time, encode time and upload time. It would be a very good idea to have a second machine running because I would not recommend running any other applications while capture/encodes are going as you could drop frames.

Of course there are other options. You could "rip" the DVD as you said, which I find to be a pain in the ass but the process can be much simpler then it was back in the day when I was doing this about 2.5 years ago.

And there are also other software packages to encode files, which might possibly be better, but I went with what I knew.

Post your ICQ if you need help.

--
Michele

bringer 02-03-2005 06:24 AM

buy a burner and a reader and get dvdxcopy or clonedvd for direct copy
buy a good burner and it'll come with nero or something simular that'll let you make singles

psyko514 02-03-2005 06:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bringer
buy a burner and a reader and get dvdxcopy or clonedvd for direct copy
buy a good burner and it'll come with nero or something simular that'll let you make singles

how will that help her rip DVD content for her paysite members area?

bringer 02-03-2005 06:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by psyko514
how will that help her rip DVD content for her paysite members area?

misread it

http://www.imtoo.com/

PSGuru 02-03-2005 07:00 AM

It's impossible... let me do it for you :winkwink:

mattyboy 02-03-2005 07:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michele R.
I recommend as a first time video editor that you use a consumer based capture card as professional capture cards and boxes can be a little complex and sometimes a pain in the ass to make work properly unless you have the right equipment such as a mother board or other hardware.

The first thing you'll need is this >
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....type=pr oduct

With that you can plug any DVD player (or VCR) into the AV box and capture the video file on your computer, in AVI format.

It takes the same amount of time to capture as it does to play.

Keep in mind you'll want 1 (120GB) HD per 3 DVD's. It leaves you with enough room to capture, encode and store the source files. 7200RPM drives are fine they do the job.

Once you capture the AVI file you want to run it through a program like Adobe Premiere.

That's the software package you're going to use to take that full-length AVI file and cut it up into pieces, or whatever you want to do. This is simply going to chop up the big AVI into little AVI's (still RAW format) based on the time frames you specified in the time line. It's very simple.

What you really need to do is this. Once you load the full-length AVI into the timeline in Premiere you want to drag the start/end points to the location you want, let's say your first 5 minute clip in scene one. Once you do that you will have to save the PPJ file (project file). Then you repeat for all of your other scenes.

Once you have all of the PPJ files you want to batch encode them. You will then import all of those PPJ files back into Premiere and batch them out. It will then produce the 5-minute AVI files or whatever you specified in the timeline.

Now once you have your source (AVI) files you will then use a program like Cleaner to encode all of your WMV or MPG files. I think it also supports QuickTime and real but I never messed with those two file types.

All of the above is really only like 20 minutes of actual hands-on work, which comes from Premiere and saving the source PPJ files for your clips and then importing them.

For some odd reason Premiere does not allow you to select more than one PPJ file to import into the batch. So if you have 40 PPJ files per DVD you have to add them one by one. That's how it was in Premiere 6, I'm not sure if the latest versions are limited that way.

Either way, importing 40 files only takes a minute or two.

All of the other hours in this process come from the capture time, encode time and upload time. It would be a very good idea to have a second machine running because I would not recommend running any other applications while capture/encodes are going as you could drop frames.

Of course there are other options. You could "rip" the DVD as you said, which I find to be a pain in the ass but the process can be much simpler then it was back in the day when I was doing this about 2.5 years ago.

And there are also other software packages to encode files, which might possibly be better, but I went with what I knew.

Post your ICQ if you need help.

--
Michele

A great answer, thats pretty much what we do although with a Matrox RTX 100 suite/card :thumbsup

Anna_O 02-03-2005 07:12 AM

Back from lunch :)

Thanks everyone, this thread is now bookmarked :thumbsup

Michelle, thank you very much for the long post :thumbsup If the paysite will be a success, we will consider a more professinal approach. Right now we can only afford settling with ripping content dvds though...

Bringer, have you had any personal experience with imtoo? It seems like a very good piece of software, but how good is the quality?

bringer 02-03-2005 07:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Anna_O
Bringer, have you had any personal experience with imtoo? It seems like a very good piece of software, but how good is the quality?

not personally but its been recommended to me by a few friends
has good reviews from what ive seen too and you cant beat the price

http://downloads.theregister.co.uk/W...imtoo-dvd.html

PSGuru 02-03-2005 07:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michele R.
I recommend as a first time video editor that you use a consumer based capture card as professional capture cards and boxes can be a little complex and sometimes a pain in the ass to make work properly unless you have the right equipment such as a mother board or other hardware.

The first thing you'll need is this >
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....type=pr oduct

With that you can plug any DVD player (or VCR) into the AV box and capture the video file on your computer, in AVI format.

It takes the same amount of time to capture as it does to play.

Keep in mind you'll want 1 (120GB) HD per 3 DVD's. It leaves you with enough room to capture, encode and store the source files. 7200RPM drives are fine they do the job.

Once you capture the AVI file you want to run it through a program like Adobe Premiere.

That's the software package you're going to use to take that full-length AVI file and cut it up into pieces, or whatever you want to do. This is simply going to chop up the big AVI into little AVI's (still RAW format) based on the time frames you specified in the time line. It's very simple.

What you really need to do is this. Once you load the full-length AVI into the timeline in Premiere you want to drag the start/end points to the location you want, let's say your first 5 minute clip in scene one. Once you do that you will have to save the PPJ file (project file). Then you repeat for all of your other scenes.

Once you have all of the PPJ files you want to batch encode them. You will then import all of those PPJ files back into Premiere and batch them out. It will then produce the 5-minute AVI files or whatever you specified in the timeline.

Now once you have your source (AVI) files you will then use a program like Cleaner to encode all of your WMV or MPG files. I think it also supports QuickTime and real but I never messed with those two file types.

All of the above is really only like 20 minutes of actual hands-on work, which comes from Premiere and saving the source PPJ files for your clips and then importing them.

For some odd reason Premiere does not allow you to select more than one PPJ file to import into the batch. So if you have 40 PPJ files per DVD you have to add them one by one. That's how it was in Premiere 6, I'm not sure if the latest versions are limited that way.

Either way, importing 40 files only takes a minute or two.

All of the other hours in this process come from the capture time, encode time and upload time. It would be a very good idea to have a second machine running because I would not recommend running any other applications while capture/encodes are going as you could drop frames.

Of course there are other options. You could "rip" the DVD as you said, which I find to be a pain in the ass but the process can be much simpler then it was back in the day when I was doing this about 2.5 years ago.

And there are also other software packages to encode files, which might possibly be better, but I went with what I knew.

Post your ICQ if you need help.

--
Michele

I do it differently, instead of doing the capture I use 3 programs which take about 45 minutes to get the raw avi file. Then put it straight into Cleaner and let it go. Only software that had to be purchased was Cleaner and the joiner/splitter programs.

If you want to know the specific programs and where to get them Anna hit me up on icq...

Anna_O 02-03-2005 08:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PSGuru
I do it differently, instead of doing the capture I use 3 programs which take about 45 minutes to get the raw avi file. Then put it straight into Cleaner and let it go. Only software that had to be purchased was Cleaner and the joiner/splitter programs.

If you want to know the specific programs and where to get them Anna hit me up on icq...

Thanks PSGuru :) Will hit you up later on when we've done more research.

beemk 02-03-2005 08:36 AM

i use imtoo dvd ripper. its very simple. then i edit them in premiere. if you dont require any editing and also want mpeg you can use vcd cutter to slice them and tmpeg to compress.

Ar3s 02-03-2005 08:39 AM

You can go to bluckbuster and take DVD's upload them to the members area? its legal?!
where the docs?!?


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 12:52 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123