![]() ![]() The second and third rows use Don's tools set to quick and veryquick modes, and the final row uses Don's tools set to optimize the file size. The 'Handbrake GUI' rip was done using, well, the Handbrake GUI as described in my original article. ![]() Here's a quick comparison of all three methods, as tested with the three-hour Hamlet Blu-ray. Using these Unix programs, you can rip a disc with various parameters, including one to optimize for speed (with good image quality) and another that tries to minimize the file size. If you're new to Unix, but would still like to try these tools, I wrote a detailed set of instructions that should help get you up and running. The new method uses Don Melton's amazing video transcoding tools, a set of Unix programs that optimize video conversion in ways you cannot do (or easily do) in the Handbrake GUI. A lot of time has passed, and I now use a slightly different procedure that results in much faster rips-with the caveat that the resulting file will be larger than the "slow" method, and is technically of slightly lower quality, though I can't visually distinguish the two. A couple years back, I explained how I rip Blu-ray discs.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |