Posted by testcrunch on 28th December 2007
I’ve managed to get some movies on the iPhone using AnyDVD and Handbrake.
AnyDVD works OK and manages to rip just about any DVD you fling at it, even Blu-Ray apparently ferchrissakes. It’s quick too, ripping most movies in between 30 and 45 minutes. The Handbrake software, that converts those ripped movies to the MP4 format that the iPhone likes, takes longer though. Usually a couple of hours and some movies just fail to convert, stalling after several hours.
Once converted you just double click the file to get it into iTunes, or drag it in, and then check the file for it to be synced to the iPhone. The picture looks great as well. The file size is around the 1 gig size so you could get several movies onto the iPhone. I’ve demo’d them to several people and they have all been impressed, though I’m not sure if I’m ever going to actually watch a complete movie on it, it’s more of an experiment I suppose.
Not that all move have successfully synced onto the iPhone. They’ve been ripped, converted and loaded into iTunes OK then even after they’ve been checked in iTunes they resolutely refuse to sync. There was plent of room for them, so that was not the cause of the problem. Just dunno. What has synced OK: Master and Commander, Die Hard 3, Event Horizon, The Aristocats (a-hem). What doesn’t sync: Pulp Fuction, Amazing Journey. What has been ripped OK with AnyDVD but failed to convert with Handbrake: A Few Dollars More. What does not even rip? Solaris.
Go figure that.
Posted in AnyDVD - this cannot be legal, iPhone - eBay knock-off | No Comments »
Posted by testcrunch on 29th May 2007
Got another email from Slysoft the other day regarding the non working license key for CloneDVD.
Didn’t have the heart to give it another try till today and it worked. The previous license key/registration file they had sent would not update the registry as it was not a registry updating file i.e. a file with a .reg extension.
When I looked at the new file it appeared to be attempting to update the registry exactly the same way as the previous non working file. The only difference being the file type as displayed in Windows Explorer, this was a file with a .reg extension, so there was a fair chance it would work. The working version is of type ‘CloneDVD Registration Key’ and the always working AnyDVD registry file was of type ‘AnyDVD Registration Key’, which is consistent with the .reg extension.
The never working CloneDVD registry file was of type ‘CLONECD File’. Hmm..Clone CD? Well that was a bit of a Slysoft mashup wasn’t it. I’m surprised Slysoft let that mistake loose onto the great unwashed. I wonder how many other people have had trouble with this stuff?
Got the game Motorstorm for the PS3 and it plays great. Also tried several of my old non-HD DVD’s on the PS3 to see how the Blu-Ray upscaling was. For comparison purposes I also played a couple of minutes of the same films on the normal non-HD DVD player. There was definitely an improvement.
The picture quality of non-HD DVD’s played and upscaled on the Blu-Ray were closer to the picture quality of Blu-Ray disks themselves than they are to the picture quality when they are played on a non-HD DVD drive. And that’s a big deal, as whilst Blu-Ray disks are relatively expensive there is no reason to buy them as non-HD disks play so well. Bet I still do buy a few anyway. Let’s see, when’s Goodfella’s out on Blu-Ray?
Posted in AnyDVD - this cannot be legal, PS3 - good name for an IBM PC, CloneDVD - cloned, Blu-Ray or HD? | No Comments »