Summary for drive D: (AnyDVD HD 8.3.8.0, BDPHash.bin 19-08-02)
VBOX CD-ROM 1.0
Drive (Hardware) Region: free
Current profile: CD-ROM
Media is a Data CD.
Suit yourself, but I doubt even a revert if an anydvd version would be available option. You need to fix communication issue. Should be somewhere in your virtualbox settings
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Summary for drive D: (AnyDVD HD 8.3.8.0, BDPHash.bin 19-08-02)
VBOX CD-ROM 1.0
Drive (Hardware) Region: free
Current profile: CD-ROM
Media is a Data CD.
It's not, but doesn't matter. The log clearlly indicates a virtual machine setup
...
And that's with a BD25 inserted, right no CD holds 25GB and VBOX is the classic model name for optical drive emulation in Oracle's "Virtual Box" software. And no, that message isn't restricted to UHD, but it IS an indication that IF an UHD is inserted, it's unsupported. That AGID message can happen on standard BD's too, if the optical drive can't read the physical disc's unique identifier or if the user is using a protected image that anydvd hasn't seen before.
While it wasn't explicitly designed to, it usually does work with a few caveats:AnyDVD isn't designed to run in a virtual environment.
Your old drive doesn't support bus encryption, which is good. That is why everything worked fine so far.if I wan't to rip BDs, I get alway this error message.
The trick to make it work, is NOT to virtualize the drive in the VM (and share it with the host) but to give applications within the VM exclusive access to the drive.While it wasn't explicitly designed to, it usually does work with a few caveats:
- Yes, virtualized drives can be a problem, if either
- the disc is unknown (AnyDVD then needs to authenticate with the drive and most virtualizations simply don't support that feature, though they could)
or
- the drive supports bus encryption (which also requires authentications, same reason)