Showing posts with label DVD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DVD. Show all posts

Friday, May 2, 2008

Coding Horror: Re-Encoding Your DVDs


I bought my first DVD about 10 years ago. At the time, they were a technical marvel:



* 8.5 Gigabytes per side

* 720 x 480 MPEG-2 video at 30 frames per second

* Dolby Digital (AC-3) or Digital Theater System (DTS) digital multichannel sound



Today, those specs are rapidly becoming pedestrian in the face of high definition cable, broadcast, and Blu-Ray discs. A few of the video sharing websites offer something perilously close to DVD quality already.



I say the DVD is the new MP3. We’re going to start tossing these things around like candy.



Unlike audio CDs, DVDs are already compressed digital data. You could extract the files from the DVD as-is, and play them back to your heart’s content. No re-encoding required. But like The Six Million Dollar Man, we can rebuild them better than they were before. Video codecs have advanced tremendously since the heady days of MPEG-2. These new codecs take a lot more playback horsepower than MPEG-2, but offer comparable quality in about one-fourth the size. We can turn our digital DVDs into better digital DVDs through superior computer science.

[From Coding Horror: Re-Encoding Your DVDs]

The article is right on the money. I am going through that exact experience: I have tons of DVDs scattered all over the house, and (exercising my fair use rights) I am slowly converting them to h.264 for our two AppleTVs. Once you get used to picking your DVDs off a menu, there is no turning back, especially if you use MetaX to pull the DVD’s cover and main information off Amazon. It looks no different than browsing for movies through the iTunes Music store.


The main problems to doing this are logistics:


1. Using my particular settings for Handbrake, it takes about 1.5GB of disk space for each hour of DVD video. Thanks God 1TB external drives are affordable now.


2. Limitations of the Mac Book Pro Superdrive. It is a bit too slow to do a real time rip + encode. That means using Mac The Ripper first, to rip the movie, then Handbrake to convert it to h.264.


3. Some DVDs are using protection schemes that are not part of the DVD specification, so these may not be ripped consistently. Not the end of the world, all it means is I have to keep the DVD at hand instead of buried into a closet.


4. I have a hardware accelerator for h.264, but it doesn’t allow me to do AC3 passthroughs. This means if I want to use the encoder, I will lose 5.1. Not cool.


5. 3GB per movie is kind of large when you are trying to move it across a home network to a different machine. My piece of shit wireless G router would choke on it, same router with everything on 100MB ethernet seems to work OK. I expect this to stop being an issue once I upgrade to wireless N.



Saturday, February 23, 2008

Goodbye Present


Great homage to the goodbye present scene in Office Space:







Friday, February 22, 2008

An Open Letter to Warner Brothers

Dear Warner Brothers,


As a recent owner of two AppleTVs (one for my child, one for us adults), I was extremely thrilled when my wife showed me that her "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Two-Disc Special Edition)" included a 100% legal digital download. How nice of you guys to save me the trouble of having to download an illegal copy so I can watch the movie, or having to rip the DVD under my fair use rights.


The problem is, it doesn't work.


The instructions are quite simple: the box has a flier with a serial number. You are expected to pop-in the second DVD into your computer, select the digital download choice in the menu, then enter the serial number. And yes, the box has a sticker that clearly says that this feature is only Windows compatible.


Then how come I can't run it in Windows?


I followed the instructions perfectly, and what did I get? A pop-up menu that automatically changes pages and won't allow me to enter the serial number. Is it really that hard to make an auto play menu that runs properly in Windows? I am not even asking for it to work on Mac OS, but Jesus Christ, to what depths of suck do you have to fall into so you can't even deliver a god damn auto play menu that works properly in Windows? And yes, I am talking XP SP2, not some odd duck.


The sad thing is that when my wife handed me the box the very first thing I told her was "sweet, I don't mind paying for the DVD, I just don't want to waste the time to rip it."


Go Fuck Yourself, Warner Brothers.