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#1
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| quicker dvd movie burning??? I am a movie junkie! I have bought hundreds of DVD's and have them sorted filed and sorted by genre. The problem is that many of the movies are movies that my kids (5 and 9) want to watch also. Many times early on weekends or when I am away for work they have ruffled through my collection and I have had DVD's destroyed, scratched, and my file system destroyed by this. So I started using Mac the ripper and Toast to burn the movies my kids want. This way mine are safe and sound and they get o watch movies without dad harping on them. My problem is that that combo is soooo slow! Is there a faster way of doing it? A friend of mine suggested Anydvd and clone DVD for the PC even though I have boot camp I want to avoid windows as much as possible. Suggestions?
__________________ PC IT pro by day MacAddict by night |
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#2
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| Fast DVD Copy. It's a tad expensive but perfect for this task. But basically, the task is the same: You have to rip the DVD to the harddrive, compact it if it doesn't fit on the DVD-R, then burn it. With a tool like Fast DVD Copy, you just can do it all-in-one, but it'll still take time.
__________________ MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 Hackintosh Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 iPhone 3G 16 GB (v2.1), AppleTV 1G 40 GB (v2.1) Mac user since 1987, Apple Product Professional 2007, 2008. |
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#3
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| Is it possible to copy directly from a DVD to a DVD (from, say an external enclosure?), or does they copy protection inhibit this? Seems like this would be faster, if it were possible.
__________________ Power to Burn. At speeds of up to 733MHz, The most powerful Mac in history burns CDs, burns DVDs, and burns Pentiums - apple website, oct 4, 1999. advertisement for the powermac g4 |
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#4
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| For most DVDs, this would not be possible because a DVD-R or DVD+R can only hold 4.37 GB and commercial DVDs can hold just a little more - and often do for that reason. Fast DVD Copy is really the fastest tool I've seen for this process. You can - in one interface - select which parts you want copied, see how much place it'd take and whether compression is needed, then hit the big start button and watch it do its thing. (Or rather go do something else.) If you _do_ have two drives, it's still the fastest tool to do it imho.
__________________ MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 Hackintosh Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.5 iPhone 3G 16 GB (v2.1), AppleTV 1G 40 GB (v2.1) Mac user since 1987, Apple Product Professional 2007, 2008. |
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#5
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| Is there a particulaly fast tool for burning an AVI file to DVD? I'm using Toast and its taking an eternity. The last file I burned took nearly 24hrs to burn? I had to change the encoding (decrease the quality) to make it fit, but even so that seems a little tooo long?! Any help would be greatly appreciated... I'm using a 1.83Ghz iMac with 2Gb Ram and a SuperDrive. |
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#6
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| I'm going to drop a plug for the Apple TV here. Rip the movies, auto sync to the ATV and lock the actual discs away. You have all your movies available all the time with no searching or fumbling. And while your kids may get PB&J on the ATV, your movies will still be safe. |
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#7
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| Thank you for the response, Wouldn't Apple TV only allow the movies to be streamed to one television in the house though? Where as burning a DVD would give me a much greater portability and allow the movies to be played in the car on long trips? I know from previous experience of burning movies on Windows systems (this is my first Mac and I am loving just about everything about it), that it can be done much quicker than this. Am I being limited by the burn speed of the drive within the Mac or is this just a software issue? |
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#8
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| The bottleneck is the conversion to MPEG2, not the burn speed. Even the slowest burners wouldn't take more than an hour. Encoding video is going to be slow no matter what, but 24 hours does seem pretty extreme. You might find ffmpegX to be faster at converting the video. It can convert most movie formats to a VIDEO_TS folder, which can then be burned in Toast (as a UDF disc). |