When using Anydvd on a blu-ray that has not been fixed as yet, in the past I have made an ISO image "with" protection NOT removed to be able to go back later when Anydvd has fixed it. Can you do the same with UHD discs?
Hi kzajac!
The same AnyDVD copy to image function you refer to works both for Blu-Ray and UHD.
Good idea to make a protected .iso for Unsupported UHD discs.
I do it myself.
When the key is on the database, voila, working UHD .iso!
And pretty much the same for Blu-Ray with unresolved ScreenPass issues.
T
I do this all the time for my UHD discs. I rip them with copy protection (make sure you check the box "Keep protection..." in the "Rip to image" dialog box) and earmark the ISO image filename with "(P)." That way I know the ISO image has protection still active. It allows for a quick load (using Virtual Clonedrive) to test if the OPD is available. Once it is, I use this ripped, protected ISO image to create the decrypted ISO image eliminating "(P)" from the newly decrypted ISO image's filename. Now I can keep the unprotected/decrypted ISO and delete the protected/encrypted one.
... Just my system of organization. You may have a better way that works for you.
Regards,
donaf
A good USB 3.0/3.1 drive could theoretically copy at 5 gigabits/second, or about 500 megabytes/second, although I've yet to see one do more than 200 megabytes/second in real world Windows testing. Still, that would be only 240 seconds (4 minutes) for that 48 gigabyte ISO compared to the USB 2 drive's best copy time of 16 minutes.