gereral1
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No decryption, so all he's doing is lossless copies of readily decrypted UHDs.In its early stages..... Interesting
What about Dolby vision?No decryption, so all he's doing is lossless copies of readily decrypted UHDs.
That's not much of a change, decrypted UHDs are practically BDs with a different video codec, so all he did was support the different flags right.
CloneBD does that as well, but also re-compresses UHD and can convert HDR and color space.
Personally, I find that more interesting by far
No decryption, so all he's doing is lossless copies of readily decrypted UHDs.
That's not much of a change, decrypted UHDs are practically BDs with a different video codec, so all he did was support the different flags right.
CloneBD does that as well, but also re-compresses UHD and can convert HDR and color space.
Personally, I find that more interesting by far
I soft deleted them until I get further advice.@Pete , some UHD VUKs (AACS 2.0) have been posted online. This is more than just copying an already decrypted discs. MakeMKV already had the ability to use VUKs from lists and it also works with UHD. So, yes, MakeMKV, is decrypting if people have the necessary VUKs. People who have tested DeUHD are also testing this and reporting success.
I'm all for DeUHD and CloneBD but it is useful to have another player on the field. It'll be interesting to see if this method can keep pace with DeUHD. Depends on the source of the VUKs, I suppose.
NOTE: Personally, not sure whether it's wise to have a list of those VUKs in these forums, however.
Are your drives really UHD-BluRay certified? (You can test with Cyberlink's Blu-ray advisor tool)I've done a small amount of testing this morning with one of my 4k titles with MAKEMKV and available VUKs. I don't have the "uhd friendly" drives that were posted elsewhere, nevertheless was able to successfully create a complete backup of the title I tried with both LG drives I own. The drives I have are WH14NS40 (which I believe is the older version of the WH16NS40), and the UH12NS40. I plan to do more testing as time permits.
No they are not but they will read UHD discs and being they are not certified for UHD playback from what I have read this is how they are getting the keys to open the UHD movies.Are your drives really UHD-BluRay certified? (You can test with Cyberlink's Blu-ray advisor tool)
EDIT:
Link https://www.cyberlink.com/prog/bd-support/diagnosis.do
Ah, this makes sense. I was mistaken, because you said "I don't have the "uhd friendly" drives" I assumed you have "real" UHD drives.@James, No these are not UHD certified drives as BRCS pointed out. Maddock shared the list of non certified "UHD friendly" drives that are known to work. For whatever reason the 2 drives that I listed are also working.
But it only worked on my LG BE16NU50 external drive. It failed on the new LG WH16NS60 UHD drive
Hi, drive LG BE16NU50, in case bus encryption is enabled on the disc, valid host certificate is required, UHD-friendly drive allows loophole, subscrive a valid AACS1 host certificate, this protection can be circumvented, this can not be done with LG WH16NS60.
There is apparently issues with DV in a .mkv. Don't recall the specifics but the net is that mkv doesn't know how to store it correctly and/or allow for correct playback. Doesn't stop you from making the MKV of course, it just (apparently) isn't giving you DV playback.What about Dolby vision?
There is apparently issues with DV in a .mkv. Don't recall the specifics but the net is that mkv doesn't know how to store it correctly and/or allow for correct playback. Doesn't stop you from making the MKV of course, it just (apparently) isn't giving you DV playback.
Dolby vision is hdr10+ not audio.I play 7.1 back, but i'm loading it in a Oppo standalone player not some computer software player.