I am experiencing the same problems that people are reporting with the likes of Madagascar, etc. failing half way through DVD shrink due to the new copy protection in place.
I have just downloaded the most recent of DVD FAB decrypter, released 30th November. Although it seems to rip the disc okay, when I use DVD shrink there is a delay at the start where it is a black screen for about 5 minutes then the movie starts. Three quarters of the way through DVD shrink an error comes up saying that the memory is full There is only 1.62gb of movie copied to the file when it should be around the 4.2gb mark.
Can anyone help me with this problem or has anyone found another way of getting past this new copy protection.
many thanks
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Fergs24,
Here is what I did, that I posted in another thread.
"Here's what I did to back-up my original, before I knew DVDFAB Decrypter was updated to a new version.
I started with DVD Shrink, wouldn't open. Tried DVD Decrypter, failed! Went to DVDFAB Decrypter (old version). Copied 100%. Opened with DVD Shrink, error in VOB 8 What??? What now? Try AnyDVD? No, it's not freeware and I already tried the free trial. Last ditch effort, opened Nero Recode and recoded main movie to HDD. Worked Went back to DVD Shrink and used Re-Author and selected main movie from Nero and then selected the extras (Penguins in a Christmas Caper) from DVDFAB Decrypter. Now I have a copy that the kids can watch without me worrying about the disc getting scratched!!!"
Hope this helps.
Joe -
Originally Posted by mrswla
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I backed up my Madagascar with no problems using the latest DVDFabDecrypter and DVDShrink.
Or just take the Movie Only and be done with it. -
Originally Posted by ROF
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Strange: I used DVD Decryptor with AnyDVD turned off to rip - then re-encoded with DVD Rebuilder (1.03 - hadn't installed 1.04 yet) using CCE without any problems.....
Was my disc different?
It must've been.
Very Strange. -
regarding extras, etc. on a movie dvd:
My experience is that:
although occasionally there is something worthwhile in the extras on a dvd release, most of the time it is just a bunch of advertisements for other movies and a bunch of actors, directors and writers straining their shoulders to pat themselves on the back - whether the film warrants it or not.
I find that I watch the extras once - and never again. I surely would not buy a dvd release for the extras included on it. Focusing on a quality film and the best quality audio and video available on the media is what is important when buying a dvd - for me anyway. -
Originally Posted by mrswla
Insert the DVD and allow the first splash to appear.
Hit the stop button twice.
Hit the play button and the main movie starts without any splash screens.
That's much easier and cheaper than wasting dual layer media to make quality backups. -
Originally Posted by ROF
Originally Posted by ROF -
Originally Posted by mrswla
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Too true, especially for backups of something you already own an original for."Shut up Wesley!" -- Captain Jean-Luc Picard
Buy My Books -
Originally Posted by ROF
You go ahead and spend that extra $13 for something that you already own. I, like others here, will continue to backup these "$13" disks to "$0.50" disks so the kids can play them to destruction.ICBM target coordinates:
26° 14' 10.16"N -- 80° 16' 0.91"W -
As strange as it sounds, I've heard from some that it could be the processor set on the PC being used that may cause these memory problems - those with Intel are bad, those with Athlon are good. Not sure how true this is, but I do have an Intel, and have had problems with Madagascar and Sky High.
My ultimate solution was to skip the extras and just get the movie, but I'd like to know the best way to get the whole thing.
Using DVD Decrypter w/anyDVD ripped fine, but shrink gives those memory problems mentioned. What it does is slowly eats away at available physical memory, and when the page file finally reaches 0, it crashes (use a memory monitor to determine this)
Using DVDFab w/AnyDVD & then DVD Shrink produces the same result.
Using Shrink by itself with anyDVD produces the same result
Have yet to try the VOBBlanker idea - never used it, but anxious to try. -
Originally Posted by SLK001
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Originally Posted by SLK001
Originally Posted by SLK001 -
Originally Posted by ROF
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How did this topic go from "New Copy Protection Problems" to tips on parenting???
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Originally Posted by mrswla
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Originally Posted by mrswla
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It has been my experience that animation is very easily compressed (there is not really all that much detail when compared to "real" film).
And I am talking about re-encoding a video, and not transcoding to a lower bitrate.
And yes, older kids have that capacity to learn that the younger ones lack. Ever have a kid try to put a peanut butter and jelly sandwich into a VCR? Let me tell you that the VCR has to be dismantled and cleaned to fix this one!ICBM target coordinates:
26° 14' 10.16"N -- 80° 16' 0.91"W -
Originally Posted by ROF
I guess when I can make a backup for $0.27, I just don't consider that to valuable or danerous. Have you actually tried to break a dvd in half? It does take a bit of strength to do it.
On the other hand, I really can't put the "kids" movies out of reach. He looks at the spine artwork to pick which movie he wants to see. If they where out of his reach, he wouldn't be able to pick out a movie. -
Originally Posted by SLK001
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[quote="ROF"]
It seems like anything that can be opened and closed will invariably have some untrained child or even crazed adult begin to put things in there that don't belong.[quote]
ROF,
This may be uncalled for, and I'm sorry if you take it the wrong way, but do you have kids? To me, it sounds like you would have children grow up as robots. I'm no trying to say, don't train you kids. We all know all too well about this, eg. Supper Nanny. But come on, no matter how many times you tell a two year "no" or show them, they are going to get into stuff. That's why they call it the "terrible twos." -
Originally Posted by mrswla
While tring to break a DVD in half by hand maybe difficult throw that same DVD with only half your strength at a solid object like a wall. Do so when the wife, pets, or kids aren't around of course and watch it shatter into pieces. You will still be finding pieces of that DVD next christmas. They are quite fragile in that sense. That's how I've seen most DVDs get destroyed. Ill behaved children who aren't taught to respect theirs and others toys throw something or begin beating up on something sometimes for no apparent reason.
The way I taught my kids is by not giving them another duplicate toy for ones they've broken. My son broke his Bob the Builder DVD last winter. He rents it every chance he can get and sometimes cries when it's not available. I make him tell me why he can't watch it and after some sobbing he says because he throw it and broke it. He'll be getting another copy this holiday season. Lesson learned.
Our DVDs are kept inside a cabinet. The kids have to ask before the cabinet is opened and either my wife or myself supervises their selection process. I like to tease my son at that time by asking him to watch a particular horror movie. Just to see how he says "No" is precious. -
Originally Posted by mrswla
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ROF: "The way I taught my kids is by not giving them another duplicate toy for ones they've broken. My son broke his Bob the Builder DVD last winter. He rents it every chance he can get and sometimes cries when it's not available. I make him tell me why he can't watch it and after some sobbing he says because he throw it and broke it. He'll be getting another copy this holiday season. Lesson learned."
Cheez - a 1 year punishment period for breaking a dvd? Yeah - that's a lesson learned alright - but maybe not the one you intended. Reading this makes me appreciate the time I had on this earth with my father even more than I did before. I was easier than that on my teenage son when he lost control of my sportscar on a corner and ran it into the woods. My handling of the situation did not involve "punishment" in any form. He actually thanked me for how the situation was handled and has brought it up a number of times over the years.
And you just described the perfect rationale for making a backup copy of a personally own movie or music media and storing the original behind that steel a/v media door you have and giving the copy to your youngster for their use. But, if you'd rather take the opportunity to discipline your child instead, so be it. If you punish him long enough, he probably won't even want a replacement "Bob The Builder" dvd . . .
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