If you want to record it as DVD video the format has to be MPEG-2. IIRC.CorSec wrote:My roommate recently bought a DVD-R and I have yet to figure out how I can record my Star Wars onto a DVD RAM disk. I keep getting the "Cannot record this media" alert. But I will have the non-SE trilogy on DVD if it's the last thing I do.
I have the Original Trilogy DVDs
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- Dalton
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Yeah, giant CD-ROM basically. Not a DVD at all.Laird wrote:Think a cd/dvd about what? a foot across? That is a laserdisc...a cd/dvd the size of a record.(If you don't know what a record is...god help us all.)darthdavid wrote:What exactly is a laser disc? Pics please. I've been wondering for a while now...
To Absent Friends
"y = mx + bro" - Surlethe
"You try THAT shit again, kid, and I will mod you. I will
mod you so hard, you'll wish I were Dalton." - Lagmonster
May the way of the Hero lead to the Triforce.
- Durandal
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Yes, but it's still fun to do. And I wouldn't discount it just yet; DVD players with MPEG-4 playback capabilities are starting to enter the market, but for some reason they only play back AVI's with DivX 3.11 or an MPEG-4 simple-profile compliant video stream (XviD, DivX 4 and 5, maybe 3ivx) and an MP3 audio track. I have to wonder if these people even know what MPEG-4 is.Darth Wong wrote:Ah, I see. Well, that's a technique that is soon to be going by the wayside. With DVD-R writer prices dropping into the basement, there is no need for that kind of work anymore.Durandal wrote:Generally, a rip is an encode of a DVD that can fit on a CD, be it DivX (ick), XviD or 3ivx (my preference). Needless to say, that is a much finer art, especially since I include chapter tracks and full metadata in my backups.
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You cannot use a DVD-R to record a DVD-RAM disc. The latter format is wholly incompetible with DVD-R or DVD+R.CorSec wrote:My roommate recently bought a DVD-R and I have yet to figure out how I can record my Star Wars onto a DVD RAM disk. I keep getting the "Cannot record this media" alert. But I will have the non-SE trilogy on DVD if it's the last thing I do.
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Advanced Simple Profile is standardized, just not supported by all MPEG-4 decoders, even though it should be. It adds in a lot of features that can work wonders on video quality. 3ivx and XviD both produce fully compliant bitstreams, ASP or SP. 3ivx has to emulate DivX's bugs to get it to decode correctly.phongn wrote:MPEG4 Simple Profile is highly standardized, though. The more advanced Xvid and 3vix Advanced Simple Profile aren't actually conforming to MPEG4 standard, IIRC.
By the way, iDVD and DVDSP use the same MPEG-2 encoder.
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Oh, just a word of advice for anyone considering it: Do not sell copies of these DVDs on the Internet. The guy who sold mine to me went to jail shortly after (I shit you not). You can imagine me laughing like a hyena when I found out I got the last copy.
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Well once again Canada's laws on the matter are quite a bit more permissive. In other words if Mike did it then it would most likely be fully legal.Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:Oh, just a word of advice for anyone considering it: Do not sell copies of these DVDs on the Internet. The guy who sold mine to me went to jail shortly after (I shit you not). You can imagine me laughing like a hyena when I found out I got the last copy.
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Publius wrote:Hypothetically speaking, would it be possible for one lacking computer and editing abilitities to obtain a copy without violating United States copyright laws? An so, how might it be arranged?
Publius
Couldn't a "friend" give you their Laserdisk DVD "Backup"? Or does is that against the law?
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I know Canada's private copying laws are different, but how does that cover the commercial sale of copied movies? I was under the impression that actually selling copies was far worse then just distributing them, and they'll go after you for that sort of dealing even if it's legal to noncomercially give them out.CmdrWilkens wrote:Well once again Canada's laws on the matter are quite a bit more permissive. In other words if Mike did it then it would most likely be fully legal.Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:Oh, just a word of advice for anyone considering it: Do not sell copies of these DVDs on the Internet. The guy who sold mine to me went to jail shortly after (I shit you not). You can imagine me laughing like a hyena when I found out I got the last copy.
I certainly would take a shot at profitable piracy unless I knew my ass and my cash would be covered by the law.
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Selling is a bit different. In the case here I am assuming there would be an elaborate (and legally tricky) bit of manuevering wherein one party would overpay for one item (say a piece of paper). Then the other party would designate the DVD copy as a "gift" to the other person. In a technical sense you would be paying for something that was not illegal (just suspiciously overpriced) while not paying for the copyrighted material.Darth Utsanomiko wrote:I know Canada's private copying laws are different, but how does that cover the commercial sale of copied movies? I was under the impression that actually selling copies was far worse then just distributing them, and they'll go after you for that sort of dealing even if it's legal to noncomercially give them out.CmdrWilkens wrote:Well once again Canada's laws on the matter are quite a bit more permissive. In other words if Mike did it then it would most likely be fully legal.
I certainly would take a shot at profitable piracy unless I knew my ass and my cash would be covered by the law.
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Armourer of the WARWOLVES
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ASVS Vet's Association (Class of 2000)
Former C.S. Strowbridge Gold Ego Award Winner
MEMBER of the Anti-PETA Anti-Facist LEAGUE
"I put no stock in religion. By the word religion I have seen the lunacy of fanatics of every denomination be called the will of god. I have seen too much religion in the eyes of too many murderers. Holiness is in right action, and courage on behalf of those who cannot defend themselves, and goodness. "
-Kingdom of Heaven
Some friends were at a Con about 10-12 years ago, and about 5 minutes after they bought some anime vids, the dealer was busted by the FBI.Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:Oh, just a word of advice for anyone considering it: Do not sell copies of these DVDs on the Internet. The guy who sold mine to me went to jail shortly after (I shit you not). You can imagine me laughing like a hyena when I found out I got the last copy.
- Slartibartfast
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A rip is an incomplete or lossy copy of anything. A DVD-rip usually means using extreme compression algorithms like DivX, or shittier ones like VCD, and compressing sound to mp3, so it fits in a regular CD. A music CD-rip usually means compressing the tracks to mp3 so they fit in less discs. A game CD-rip normally involves removing most of the "non-essential" (though this is not the case in many instances) material like Video Clips and Sound Tracks, and even compressing the hell out of sound files so they decompress at install time back to their original size/format. And so on.Darth Wong wrote:A "rip" is a copy of an existing DVD, which is not available in this case. Besides, what's there to do with it, besides using a decent variable-bitrate MPEG2 encoder to make sure the picture quality is good?Durandal wrote:My standards for a rip are much higher than your average DVD ripping kiddies'. I'd rather do it myself.
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We already had a thread on vinyl records more than half the board didn't know what they wereLaird wrote:Think a cd/dvd about what? a foot across? That is a laserdisc...a cd/dvd the size of a record.(If you don't know what a record is...god help us all.)darthdavid wrote:What exactly is a laser disc? Pics please. I've been wondering for a while now...
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Nevertheless, it should mean that somehow you managed to shrink the file. Otherwise it's just a regular copy... of course the process known as "ripping" can mean just the first step that's just getting the data from the source "as is". But in general, yeah.phongn wrote:Not neccessarily. CD rips are increasingly using lossless compression (APE, FLAC, SHN, etc.) nowadays. Hell, I've seen DVD rips using the original MPEG2, no less!Slartibartfast wrote:A rip is an incomplete or lossy copy of anything.