How do you burn a DVD?
Hey guys, I'm trying to copy a DVD using "IDVD" and the free Apple blank DVD that I got with my new 15" Powerbook but I can't figure it out how to do it. I tried the "help" section but it doesn't really help . Any "Step by step" for an absolute beginner?? Many thanks in advance!
Comments
Look for DVD rippers.
Originally posted by ryukyu
DVDBackup on Versiontracker.
there's more to it than just that though.
first, you need an app. like DVDBackup in order to rip the information off of the DVD. DVDBackup also allows you to remove the CSS, Macrovision and Region encoding.
next you need an app like DVD2OneX. this app. is designed to recompress the movies in order to fit them on a single layer DVD. (what you have) retail DVD's push 7-9GB, your DVD is only 4.7
all in all, with those two tools on a fast machine you can make a backup of DVD's you've purchased in 40 minutes or less. and they look just like the original.
a really nice feature of this type of backup is that it allows you to remove all the extra crap they put on DVD's, and you can just backup the actual movie. if you do that, there's zero loss in quality.
oh yeah, this is probably GD material, moving now....
edit: oops, i forgot that part. you'll need to burn the DVD with an application like Toast. a movie DVD is not the same format is a data DVD. toast makes this easy. you also need to include (along with the VIDEO_TS folder with the movie files) a blank AUDIO_TS folder.
Open Disk Copy, located in your /Applications/Utilities folder.
Drag the DVD into the Disk copy window that pops up.
Select "CD/DVD Master", instead of "Compressed".
Insert the blank DVD when your Mac is done ripping the DVD (This should take a while), open Disk Copy again and select "burn image. This will burn your DVD image to a DVD.
1. Most commercial video DVDs are copy protected in multiple ways, and that procedure doesn't get rid of the copy protection.
2. Most commercial video DVDs are dual-layer (often over 7GB) whereas computer DVD burners currently only produce single-layer (around 4.5 GB) DVDs. So your movie won't fit on your DVD unless you compress it somehow or don't copy all of it.
for those who think this is hard, it used to be that it would take well over 48 hours to do the same procedure.
now it's a total of 40 minutes, and you need to do about 4 minutes of input on your end. pretty simple. each step involves about 3 clicks.
the reason why this seems complex is because you're doing something the movie companies don't want you to do with your DVD's. you're making a copy of them.
so instead of just making a copy, you have to get around all of the encryption/protection schemes they've put in place. that's a pain.
there are programs on the PC side (well, one i can think of) that contain the DeCSS code and can do it all in one click. however, it's slower and requires about the same amount of intervention on your end.
most companies won't include the DeCSS code in order to stay on the legal side of things.