I have no issue for clicking one button to get it done. Why is "on the fly" so great?
That's got to be the one feature of anyDVDHD that sooooo many people fail to understand or use and also subtitle transparencyAs soon as the drive sees the disc, anydvd does its magic. Once anydvd is done, the disc is presented as unencrypted to the os and everything running on the os. That's the beauty of anydvd, its primary functions don't need any interaction at all.
Mostly NOT having the same content on my HDD twice and changes to anyDVDHD settings are "instantly" available to me.I have no issue for clicking one button to get it done. Why is "on the fly" so great?
I open a program, pop my disk in, point to where I want it saved and click the drive icon and it goes. (at the same speed my drive can run)
Can you not point VLC to the drive containing the "decrypted" disc I mean I would hate to have to re rip something because I had the wrong settings selected or it not handled correctly it does happen from time to time.Those are great features, but I've never had a need to use it. I've always ripped straight to my video folder on my hdd. Never used Power DVD. VLC has been and still is my choice of player. I mean that's the reason I used Any DVD for, for backing up my dvd collection and being able to convert the format for my tv
not sure by what your meaning is in that statement. You can use anything you want to play whatever format that player has the capability to play it. VLC does not require any particular settings. I do not have a blue ray player, and my pc does not have a blue ray drive, My tv plays videos with an mpeg2 format and I can use VLC for the same format should I decide to watch a flick on my pc. I stream video wireless from my pc to my smart tv in another room (using Samsung Link software)Can you not point VLC to the drive containing the "decrypted" disc I mean I would hate to have to re rip something because I had the wrong settings selected or it not handled correctly it does happen from time to time
I have had AnyDVD and Clone DVD2 for years and they have worked great. But the statement that there is nothing out there better is not true when it comes to copying BD. I have another BD copying program that does just as good if not better, easier to use for less money.There is nothing out there that can decrypt BD+ and work as good as RedFox AnyDVDHD, you want to waste you money, by all means, do so. Not Blue Monkeys or any monkeys.
If you think its better thats all that counts. And thank you for excellent back up plan.I have had AnyDVD and Clone DVD2 for years and they have worked great. But the statement that there is nothing out there better is not true when it comes to copying BD. I have another BD copying program that does just as good if not better, easier to use for less money.
I will be buying AnyDVDHD and CloneBD once the dust settles with the RedFox change just as a backup plan.
If you think its better thats all that counts. And thank you for excellent back up plan.
Joe C was told to permanently vacate these premises yesterday, so he might still read these Forum threads, or not.@Joe C: VLC Player is a great program for playing DVDs, but it is not very flexible in playing Blu-ray discs. Whenever a Blu-ray disc is selected from an optical drive, the "no disc menu" box is checked automatically. Uncheck the box, select a Blu-ray, and most of the time it will fail to load. Makes it difficult to view the extras without playing the individual m2ts files through the STREAM folder directly. PowerDVD, WINDVD, and TotalMedia Theatre do not have that issue, but each has their own annoying limitations. Best regards, Dana
No problem. May be of help to others contemplating using the mostly-excellent VLC Media Player. I don't think there is a perfect Blu-ray player for the PC, at least from what I have experienced. Okay, no more off-topic stuff.
Like he said you could be of use there over there in 3rd party forum.No problem. May be of help to others contemplating using the mostly-excellent VLC Media Player. I don't think there is a perfect Blu-ray player for the PC, at least from what I have experienced. Okay, no more off-topic stuff.
That would be a matter of opinion here. I got a BD player software on my computer to play BD media-hate to burst that bubble that has no problem playing BD movies or backup BD movies.I don't think there is a perfect Blu-ray player for the PC, at least from what I have experienced. Okay, no more off-topic stuff.