There’s definitely valid reasons for either way. ISO is king for endangered/lost media that you could still derive MKV or any other bog-standard consumer format from at any point in the future, but for media that isn’t in danger of disappearing anytime soon, MKV from the start makes sense.
@BlownMacTruck Жыл бұрын
This doesn’t make any sense. Why would the MKV be any different from an ISO? It COULD be, but it also could be 100% exactly the same.
@ILoveTheAllCreator Жыл бұрын
@BlownMacTruck Exactly... m2ts file is blu ray stream and mkv is container that houses m2ts contains for better capabilities
@TimeTraveler88 ай бұрын
on my country, the method technically names : Remux ----> its rip file from original 4K ultra HD bluray Disc ( include metadata of HDR 10 or Dolby Vision)
@randomxxjojo4 ай бұрын
I have some endangered media as well as out of print media, so ISO is the way to go.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
@@BlownMacTruck If that were the case, there'd be no point in the MKV format existing. Really, use ISO unless you're absolutely certain that you're not going to need or want a complete backup. I personally use ISO and handbrake to handle mine. I rip it to ISO and then I set up an exported Handbrake queue to rip it to what I want for actual use. That then can easily be updated if there's a new codec that does a significantly better job or I want a secondary version for use on a mobile device. The whole thing can be pretty much automated so that I just have to keep track of the ISO files. Unfortunately, optical media does die, and I've got a few DVDs that no longer read, even though they were stored with great care. I haven't had any blurays go bad yet, but they may eventually. People said that DVDs and CDs wouldn't, but that clearly isn't the case as the ones I'm talking about were living in their cases and the temperature and humidity around here aren't at all extreme.
@junknspam310 ай бұрын
I use the same process as you. Rip to mkv, store on Synology NAS, play on AppleTV using Infuse. Just doubled my storage capabilities today to 42TB on my movie NAS. Thanks for the videos. They're easy to understand and follow.
@Techthusiasm10 ай бұрын
Awesome, thanks!
@ThomasDransfeldt-w7j9 ай бұрын
I have the same process as you. My NAS capacity is 240 Tb on Qnap, the demand for space is growing, 4K movies are big.
@MrBjorn67 ай бұрын
@@ThomasDransfeldt-w7jHow many movies do you have ripped on your Nas?
@mayday68802 ай бұрын
maybe in the future exists a more efficient codec than H265 you can convert, or more likely that by then the price of storage space will have fallen to the point where you can afford a 1000TB NAS. I've also thought about saving films that you want to archive on LTO tapes. Tapes is cheapest storage you can get, but the drive is unfortunately not and it's "unhandly" you have to restore first before watching.
@hoffmannMP9 күн бұрын
I’m glad you mentioned special features towards the end of the video, and acknowledged that you don’t care about them. For me, I love the whole experience of a DVD/BluRay, including the special features. When a movie is done, I like getting back to that menu. It somehow eases me out of the movie gently, rather than just going to some bright menu that rips me out of the mood. But I do realise I may be alone in that 😄
@Techthusiasm9 күн бұрын
We watch special features. I would just never spend the time to rip them. It's way too much work versus just watching them on iTunes. We may re-watch a movie, but never special features as well.
@jeffhampton6972 Жыл бұрын
This is extremely useful, and answered several questions I had. Thank you so much for making it!
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@211sweetypie Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this information. Now I will start using MKV files. I didn’t know it was so compatible with most dvd players for play back. I’m new at this and I’m glad I found this video.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Glad I could help!
@alexshatner3907 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Wow I am so glad I found you, you are a God send. I have been breaking my head literately for over 50 hours trying to figure out how or what free software I can use to make a playable Blu- ray disk now that I have the (Make MKV) software. So I now have a MLK file to burn to a Blu-ray disk, but I don't want to burn the image to the Blu-ray, I want to make a playable Blu-ray disk that can simply be put in to my Blu-ray player and boom I start watching the movie, I tried imagburn which some swear it work, I just cannot figure it out, how to find the Root folder for Certificate folder, the ACCS folder, and the BDMV folder to get it to work can you please guide me, I will be another loyal follower of your channel I promise. if possible is there any free software as (make MLK) that doesn't cost anything to do the trick? or will imageburn work if I find the root folders, and if so can you briefly guide me on how to find the root folders for use with imageburn ? thanks
@traviswcarney2 жыл бұрын
I compressed all of my disc rips into MP4 with Handbrake -- a decision I regretted later for the reasons you mention in the video. My reasoning, though, was that I could see all of my movies (both ripped and Apple purchases) in one place using the Computer app on the Apple TV, which shows you everything in the iTunes library of a machine on your network. I am now slowly replacing all of those rips. Still, nice to see everything in one place.
@wundo9372 Жыл бұрын
the greatest battle to ever exist. trying to keep everything in one place and organzied.
@ludwingpedroza Жыл бұрын
Same here and HDDs were pricey back then
@mayday688011 ай бұрын
Yes I think it's a fault people regret later! You loose Atmos / DTS-HD audio, lowering video quality by re-encoding (which takes hours for a movie!) this is not good for archiving your movies. What I do is skipping unwanted bonus content and languages/subtitles I know I never use. I've bought two 16TB HDs (Raid1 mirroring) and packed all my movies on it.
@mayday68807 ай бұрын
Here is my more nuanced statement. You can bring h264 encoded movies to h265 (HEVC) with Handbrake. The thing is, h265 codec generates same quality at half file size. You can pass trough audio when encoding. Today I don't use Handbrake to do that, it's very time intensive. 4k-UHD is already h265 and you lowering quality by re-encode at lower bitrate, this is what I don't like!
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
That's why I export the queues and save the settings. Every TV series gets a spreadsheet with the names, a copy of the preset I used and a full queue for each disc that I converted. If for some reason I need to redo it. I can simply put the disc images back where the file expects them and use a text editor to adjust the settings from the queue if needed. It makes the entire process of changing the settings pretty much painfree. I can then just set it in motion and go away to do other things knowing that it's probably going to go to plan.
@ottoburgess1555 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! This will help me get started. Sound logic. I was thinking iso before viewing this.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thank you so much! There are many more videos on this topic on the channel so check them out. And I do take consulting calls where I can help walk you through the process. Good luck!
@SealedOrPorted2 жыл бұрын
9:31 is a great point. Whether one uses iTunes, Movies Anywhere, or Vudu, they are ideal for alternate viewing IMO. Back in the day, Vudu allowed disc conversion as well as up-conversion for very reasonable prices of one’s physical media collection. From there, I always claim the digital version with my physical media for flexibility. My local streaming is via MKV, movie file only. When offered multiple versions, I choose Director’s Cut (extended). The only times I used ISO was discs with obfuscation or menu necessary calibration discs. Another good topic.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@alexshatner3907 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm It seems like MakeMKV does not copy 3D movies in blu ray, it will make a MKV file but it turns out to be in 2D onve you start wactching it, any suggestions?
@patricktaylor8637 Жыл бұрын
Actually, this idea that copying to ISO limits you to the whole disc, including menus, commercials, etc, isn’t quite the case. I use DVDFAB to rip all my blurays to ISO and am able choose whatever stream I want. So, I’ll copy the main movie only, with desired language and subtitles, to its own ISO. And you’re right, the process is simple. I then curate all my copied (and legally owned) movies in Kodi, which plays them back flawlessly and has a great interface.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
That is true, yes. You can reduce the content and still package into ISO. I think most folks doing main movie rips though find more value/benefits in MKV, but I'm glad you have an excellent process going.
@johnmoricone2942 ай бұрын
Came across your video as I am in the process of rebuilding my media library (yep i was doing handbrake) and your points make a lot of sense. Thank you.
@Techthusiasm2 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@hifihometheater2 жыл бұрын
Great video! I do MKV and stream them through PLEX on a Nvidia Shield. i dont even have a disc player hooked up at the moment. As soon as I get the disc, I pop it in the disc drive and rip it to the NAS. I also pretty much never watch any of the "extras" on the discs
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Nice! I currently don't have a disc player either.
@queenpillpopper8050 Жыл бұрын
No problems here DVDFAB and Zidoo...Flawless
@Neonmirrorblack7 ай бұрын
This is more of a niche use case, but one reason for BDVM over both MKV and ISO is when you aren't using a server, but you're using your Blu-ray player and the player cannot play ISO files, and simultaneously cannot play MKV files that have Dolby Vision. The OPPO UDP-203 is one such player. It can play MKV just fine as long as it doesn't have Dolby Vision, but it also cannot play ISO *natively. It can play any BDVM (with or without DV) just fine though. Also, with BDVM you can actually go into the files (stream folder) and remove the FBI warnings and trailers or ads and then end up with a virtual disc backup without the crap you don't actually want, keeping what you do want like chapter selection, menus and possible special features. I get why someone might want an actual dedicated server for their libraries, but other than simply being a general place to store your HDs, I find them to take up too much space and they also lead to higher risk of drive failure when you're playing off of them directly. I just store all of my backups on multiple external 8 TB drives, and then when there's something I actually want to watch, I just send it to an external 1TB drive and plug that into either my player or directly to my TV. Better to have a single, controlled drive for failure than multiples. And yes, I know backups exist, but then you're having to allocate even more space to backup your backups.
@tylerburt554 Жыл бұрын
I use a Raspberry pie 4+ with Kodi and a usb SSD with MKV file backups the pie does a pretty good job with 1080p I haven't test 4k rips yet so Idk how 4k would perform but for most people if you have a spare pie laying around not a bad use for it, its not going to outperform higher end tech but its a good option 😁
@phillipborbon2059 Жыл бұрын
I personally choose iso just to preserve the disc itself. Once I have the actual iso disc then I just go mkv just to watch movies.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
ISO is really nice way to go. So much simpler.
@PerSkeles3 ай бұрын
I convert to smaller h.265 mp4/mkv that works in most devices but also always keep the original lossless mkv.
@mitchelle245 Жыл бұрын
I go insane. I run both, but i have reasons for it. I rip 1 for 1 in mkv for plex. Then I make a iso backup of the disc as I have kids under the age of 4 that think discs are toys. Plus it kinda follows, very loosely, a 3-2-1 backup stratergy. A good chunk of my collection, even used 2nd hand purchases, came with digital codes so i use that for loading onto a mobile device on the go. I find that the digital codes are not as high quality as the 4k disc. for thos titles that i dont have a digital code for i use handbreak to create a mobile version. But I really enjoy physical media collecting especially in 4k. But I think these are background tasks that I run when my main focus is on something else.
@Espiritiv Жыл бұрын
I like this, but you could also just do a backup of your MKV file and forgo the ISO. Then keep your disks boxed up safely away if an EMP hits us.
@JoshuaKnab Жыл бұрын
If you use MKVtoolnix you can easily flad subs as forced and rename them. I also use it to rename the commentary audio track to know which track is which
@wesg92 Жыл бұрын
LOVE this video! This was extremely helpful and exactly what I needed as I begin ripping my discs for a Zidoo z1000 Pro that I recently purchased. MakeMKV has been working great for me. I've had nothing but problems with DVDFab. I'll probably need to create an ISO for concert and Dolby Atmos demo discs. What application do you recommend for creating an ISO file? Thanks!
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Awesome! For ISO rips, using a PC, I always used AnyDVD HD.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
@@Techthusiasm I don't recommend them. AnyDVD uses what appears to be stolen source code and refused to honor the lifetime purchases by people that had bought copies from Slysoft. They got the code for free and were just incredibly jerky about not making it right. Considering that they were benefiting from free code, they could have made those copies free and still come out ahead.
@teekay_13 ай бұрын
depends on the use case, MKV if you're actually going to consume it, ISO if you're just trying to save them. ISOs tend to be very large for decent movie collections, and frankly most movies are fairly crappy and don't warrant a 2nd viewing. If you have classic movies (e.g. Lawrence of Arabia) you could make a case for an ISO you really need to think through where you're going to store all this stuff and are you paying $1,000's of dollars on backed-up storage for something that you'll view one or two times more. I know some people will say "yes, I watch the special features", but how many times will you do that, and is it worth the cost in case you might want to do it?
@datguy-er1mj Жыл бұрын
I’m planning to put together a media server very soon, and will probably go with both options, even if it sounds a little crazy. What am a bit unsure of is, does MakeMKV strip the encryption away from the disc before converting it to an ISO file, just the same way it does for MKVs? I wouldn’t want to deal with players not doing anything all because of DRM. That’d be such a waste of time. Also, do you have any experiencing with playing back ISOs with Kodi, with the menus intact? I’ve heard mixed things about its handling. Sounds unstable, but who knows? Also thanks so much for the videos. They’re fantastic. Keep up the great work!
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
MakeMKV can't make an ISO. It can make a BDMV folder though (which is a folder-based copy of the disc). Historically, I have not ever had real good experience playing ISO as full disc rips with menus just using software players. They may be better now though since the last time I had tried any. Thanks!
@datguy-er1mj Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Thanks so much for the response? May I ask what app you use for ripping to ISOs then?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Check out AnyDVD.
@datguy-er1mj Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm I will. Thanks again!
@markr_zacks Жыл бұрын
I mainly use Avisynth & vapoursynth for Video encoding, i can do reduce the sizes 30 to 38% and getting much better quality from the source file...
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Are you resampling or reprocessing the content with those tools?
@triplerinse2 жыл бұрын
I keep the bit for bit on the 4k movies but for the blue ray version ill shrink the video file and passing through the audio files. It will cut the size in half. Video compression quality is far less noticeable than audio compression. As far as time consuming. Rip the movie, through the file in a folder and handbrake will auto process that file.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Cool to have Handbrake run on an automatic mode like that, well done!
@TimOHea Жыл бұрын
How do you make Handbrake run on automatic mode?
@triplerinse Жыл бұрын
@Tim OHearn I'm using it in a docker( unraid). Under the config, there is a watch folder directory. Just transfer file to folder and it will see a change in that folder and then start the process.
@TimOHea Жыл бұрын
@@triplerinse what number do you set the video quality ? I've used handbrake, and what number to set that to is always confusing to me.
@eespinosa64 Жыл бұрын
Great content. Just subscribed. Question: which format would be best for playing on a PS5? MKV or ISO? Unfortunately, the PS5 is struggling to play some 4K UHS discs. I figured that ripping the disc would be much better.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I would imagine MKV. I doubt there are any applications capable of playing an ISO properly on a console, but it might have a Plex app.
@Mathyou22 жыл бұрын
9:40 The reason why people like myself encode the mkv file after we have ripped it is so that we can watch it on mobile devices without having to set aside 30 gb or more per movie. Also, the reason we dont resort to streaming is because we want to actually own the content. Many of us do not have a plex server and so we cant stream it to our devices when outside of hour home and have to manually place the devices in our phones or other devices. Not to mention that my encodes look better than alot of these streaming services since many of them still use h264 and either compress the videos so much that you see visual artifacts (Netflix) or they dont compress it as much that when streaming it outside of a home network you will notice degredation in quality (Crunchyroll).
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
That's fair. There is a difference though in "streaming" as you mention it versus how I mention it in the video. You're meaning like Netflix where you do not own content. I'm talking a digital purchase on iTunes which does have you own the content. That is ownership with the ability to download to portable devices with smaller sizes.
@curtisbme Жыл бұрын
So you set up a plex server or similar. The amount of hours of your and your computers time that it takes to reduce the quality on the discs you bought is massive vs the minority of time you need them transcoded. You can do that on the fly or you can do it before you leave and have that smaller file locally on your phone. And no, your files won't look better that the streaming service because it will be on a small screen. Any minor differences will be invisible. Where it will be worse is on the big screen at home where you have reduced the quality of the source for 100% of the views there.
@Mathyou2 Жыл бұрын
@@curtisbme no, I did not set up a plex server or similar. The amount of time my computer takes to encode video doesnt really matter to me considering I set it to encode while I am not home, its not as if Im home all day just sitting there waiting for an encode to finish. If I did have plex I could indeed transcode them on the fly but I would still like it all to be encoded regardless. (I still have the mkv files, its not as if Im deleting them). And yes, my files do look better than streaming, specially Netflix. The content that I mostly rip is animated (anime). It’s pretty easy to notice compression artifacts and color banding on Netflix when it comes to anime. Lastly about the video quality being worse on a bigger screen, the largest screen Im likely to Watch content is my 27 inch monitor. The difference between the mkv file and the compressed version I made are not noticeable. I encode video at h265 10-bit 20crf and audio at 128kbps opus(stereo) and 256kbps opus (surround sound)
@Kev4Kev Жыл бұрын
What I usually do is make an iso of each disc in a set; then from there make two files one for most devices and a second for mobile devices. The iso is for if I ever need the disc again I just read that again compared to putting a disc in a drive and taking forever to read plus it’s easier as a backup having one single file per title.
@martinphillips4567 Жыл бұрын
The best is mkv no doubt, with this format you can give more out of it
@trueCinemaniac9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great advice. 2 huge questions: Can I make mkv backups of my 4K UHD discs that retain Dolby Vision (If so how???). Also, if I've made ISO copies already of blu rays or 4Ks, do I need to reload the discs again to make mkv's of just the movie, or can I run the rip off of the iso files? Love your content and thanks again!
@Techthusiasm9 ай бұрын
MakeMKV, I understand, does retain Dolby Vision. It's more a matter if the player you use will support the right DV profile. For ripping to MKV, yes, you can rip from ISO. You can load the ISO file into MakeMKV and rip from there.
@trueCinemaniac9 ай бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Thanks very much for your help!
@CorazonDeCristoCano Жыл бұрын
Great video! I didn't know that MKVs were bit-for-bit copies of video files. I always thought that ripping to MKV involved re-encoding which would lose information from the original video file. Do you have any ripping tutorials on your channel? I look forward to more info and insights from you! I do like the special features on most discs, though. Is there a way to get the best of both worlds by ripping the special features to MKV as well?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
You can re-encode content when going into an MKV, but you don't have to. If you use a tool like MakeMKV, then it is a 1:1 remux into the MKV container. There a bunch of ripping related videos in this playlist. kzbin.info/aero/PLPFrhh2ABNefZpLXSEGVIgGP4ze-F4Ic1 I would never touch trying to put special features into MKV files. If you want those, then rip to and use ISO files. You're asking for a world of pain and a tremendous amount of time investment to rip and manage special features.
@CorazonDeCristoCano Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Thanks! I'll watch those.
@CDubya.828 ай бұрын
Libreelec mini pc media player does ISO for DVDs no problem. For bluray or 4K rips I prefer to do MKV to avoid needing or worrying about Java.
@bronxjar8441 Жыл бұрын
Very, very helpful information. Much appreciated.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@raedwulfvasloff2040 Жыл бұрын
A question regarding ISO's: When you talk about burning an ISO file on a BD, do you literally mean to burn an ISO file on a disc or do you mean to create a 1:1 copy with the ISO file?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I mean making a 1:1 copy off a disc into an ISO file.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Yes, ISO is a common format, but bin+cue can be a good choice in some cases. The only time I use it is for CDs that contain both audio tracks and data tracks, but I'm sure there are other uses. Some programs do ISO+MSO, but I don't entirely understand the point of that, although the second file tends to be too small to really worry about.
@Rob_James2 жыл бұрын
I use mkv mostly cause that’s the first one I learned but also it skips all the fluff and gets to the movie. Def been there with failures from the zappiti tho. Soooo annoying when that happens
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Yep!
@jglg7238 Жыл бұрын
can you make a video, how do you make a Blu-ray back up from original MakeMKV "BDMV files" and burn them onto to disc to play them on a Blu-ray player that has menus.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
You would need some kind of disc burning software, but you'd probably need to package an ISO first as well. I appreciate the request, but to be honest, that's probably beyond my level of interest in ripping.
@regulartxdude7813 Жыл бұрын
As far as I know, infuse on Apple TV does not support Dolby Atmos. I believe it will play but not support the ceiling "top" channels. Is this not correct?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Apple TV supports Dolby Atmos from streaming apps. It is not currently possible to bitstream out Dolby Atmos from rips from apps like Infuse or Plex.
@kwinders3 ай бұрын
You can't package Dolby Atmos in .mkv container, normally. I think there are some new threads and lots of remuxing but it may be able to be done. I have not messed with it, as it is easy above my head. I can say 100% that you can choose the True HD 7.1 full range audio track and it will play and pass on Infuse but it is not "Atmos" but with a good sound system it's fine.
@lesliew39712 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your videos. I have become interested lately in starting a movie collection, and have been buying my favorites, usually used and usually Blu-ray. I may have about 300 movies so far, but honestly don’t see the collection growing much more than 20-30% because I am sort of picky. As someone who is willing to watch a movie more than once, but usually not more often than say once every couple years, I don’t understand the benefit of spending so much time and money ripping the discs to MKV. I would probably rather just pop the disc in a player, tbh. That said, what are the options to make a backup copy of the disc on physical media in case the original disc is damaged? Can iso files be burned to a new blank Blu-ray, and will that burned Blu-ray play in a normal player? Thanks, and sorry it took me so long to get to the question 😅 subbed
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
I think we do stuff like setting up the servers in the hobby sometimes because it's just part of the fun for people. It can be a way that we tweak, customize, and interact with things. That said, it can be a lot of time... The same general process to rip here is how you would make a physical backup. Rip to an ISO file, then write that ISO image back to a blank Blu-ray. You're on the right track. I've never done that though, so I don't have specific guidance.
@lesliew39712 жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm thanks for the quick reply!
@ckenisell11 ай бұрын
@@TechthusiasmI did the BD-to-ISO-to-BD the other day. I bought the Austrian version (Region B) of Spider-Man No Way Home 3D and it wouldn't play in my Region A Blu-ray player. So, I used AnyDVD HD to rip to ISO without the region coding. Then, burned the resulting ISO back to a BD-R using ImgBurn. Played back just fine in the Blu-ray player. Worked like a champ.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
I personally rip the entire disc to ISO because I like to have that as a backup and it speeds the process up a lot if I change my mind as to what format I want to watch in. I can run my entire catalog through handbrake using exported queues and just edit those jsons with updated settings if I need to. That being said, I do tend to prefer DVD as there isn't really enough quality difference on the stuff that I'm watching to justify the larger Bluray discs. Much of it is old enough that the Bluray may look worse if it was a cheap transfer to simply cash in on an opportunity to sell the same thing again. There's a bunch of movies and TV like the Prisoner where the Bluray is absolutely stunning, but then there's stuff like Ghostbusters were much of it wasn't properly focused and it just makes it so very clear that it was out of focus. If I'm watching from the same computer that I keep the ISOs on, I'll just load the ISO into a compatible player and play that way. Some of my movies have kind of fun menus and games from when that was a thing.
@NGG36Ай бұрын
I rip all my 4K Blu Rays with a software called "DVDFab UHD Ripper". This software has an option called "MKV Passthrough" which let you rip 4K Blu Rays to lossless video and audio.
@BarcelonasHotCrowd2 жыл бұрын
WOW Bro what an amazing chat! Loved all of or explanations, and also the whole time, I just thought what a genius Steve Jobs was with his 'It just Works' thinking and his iTunes Store which has made high quality film so accessible. As a Marketing Manager, my job is mental draining and then on an evening I train in Natural Bodybuilding for competing and I play basketball, run track and go mountain biking. I just wouldn't have the time to have and rip a library but the iTunes route fits into my crazy, hectic life (and then I travel to Paris every other weekend) so i'll watch a film on my iPhone with spacial audio on my AirPods Pro etc. LOVE YOUR CHANNEL! I love your honesty with everything! Paul
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! If I wanted to do the sanest thing, I'd just buy all my movies from iTunes and forget everything else too, LOL.
@ZenRebel335 ай бұрын
I make 2 copies. First is the .ISO for a full backup of the disk. My second copy is a .mp4 that really shrinks down the image while retaining a certain level of quality. Currently I am limited by available disk space. My NAS has 16TB. I'll be replacing the current disks 16TB disks to expand my available space. At that point, I would opt for the .mkv as my second copy.
@Techthusiasm5 ай бұрын
Nice!
@ZenRebel335 ай бұрын
@@Techthusiasm One thing that I've found out in this process. After making the ISO backup, I use tried using the ISO to make an MKV. It absolutely flew. Way faster than ripping from the Blu-Ray. I started testing Handbrake in the creation of .mp4 and the time was showing 1-hour 15mintues. I need to check today to see how long it took. This just solidifies my decision to make an ISO backup of my Blu-Rays.
@kwinders3 ай бұрын
@ZenRebel33 I use MakeMKV to rip a disc back up, then create the .mkv file for my network streaming. It takes just over 1 hour on average for a 4k rip, then about 30-45 seconds to make the .mkv movie file at full fidelity. I do this to a 1tb Samsung SSD nvme drive. If I have to redo something for the subtitles or something it only takes less than a minute. Once I'm done with it, I move the files to the NAS array for storage and network streaming. If I later have to make another copy for fixing anything, it's a bit slower from the HDD but still not too bad.
@michaelmanus77659 ай бұрын
I have M2TS and MKV files. They serve me well. I am admittedly unhappy to learn that Panasonic 9000 Disc player doesn't do media files like Oppo did. I'll remain with NVidia Shield Pro for playback. Then again, the Panasonic doesn't handle Vudu just Netflix and Amazon Prime.
@barbarylions Жыл бұрын
Hi, what recommended software or program do you suggests for ISO?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
AnyDVD is what I have used.
@ThatHz- Жыл бұрын
What about all the behind the scenes content and navigating that?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
That might be good for a follow-up video topic, but suffice to say, if you want to keep that stuff then I *strongly* recommend ripping to and using ISO. Getting all the special features off a disc into MKV files is not something I would wish on my worst enemy.
@s1ddo Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Generally doing that is not too bad as most Blu-rays don't screw you over in having a logical make mkv rip and can have little to no special features at all so those discs are a doddle to rip. Some like Studios like Universal or Sony (Somewhat to a bit of a lesser degree) can be a real ball ache though with multiple copies of the movie being extracted by make mkv as well as multiple files for the extras (should you want them as well). I've got one in particular that I ripped a while ago which is Gladiator (only done Disc 1 of the 2 disc Blu--ray so far) and I wasn't quite as organised with my workflow as I am now but looking back on my original rip files nothing seems to match up in time length for the special features from that 1st disc particularly the deleted scenes which are not that long both collectively and individually but my files are longer or shorter (with multiple copies of the same scene of varying length) that seem to be just parts taken from the main film, therefore it could be a total shit show for those extras but I do seem to have the interactive bits (Roman History parts) done OK (just a lot of them to watch for renaming purposes), therefore I may need to do a re-rip of it to see if I can match up the deleted scene extras and if not then I'll just use the disc to watch them if I can't. Disc 2 may be the same too, so will have to see what happens there. Not looking forward to ripping Peter Jackson's King Kong which has hours of special features but is a Universal Studios release. Also to pick you up on something else, not all iTunes films have iTunes extras attached to them, such as the aforementioned Gladiator (At least in the UK it doesn't have iTunes extras), even the same studios (e.g. Sony, Paramount) can have films that have iTunes extras, but some others don't, so can be frustrating if you have an inferior version/format such as DVD but the iTunes version doesn't have any special features that are on rhe iTunes version. Also in the US you do have the advantage of your Movies Anywhere digital copy of the film (just the Theatrical version?, don't know as while I've got some myself I haven't gone through playing my films that way, I know I don't seem to have any different versions of the Spider-Man films that have different cuts of the film) so while helpful to have at least one copy of the film it may be not the best version of that particular film leading you to do a rip due to that fact. Here in the UK we lost digital copies some time ago, so ripping is the only way to go (if you want to save keeping to have to put the physical discs in all the time, especially for just the film itself). Also another thing is that either ISO's or BDMV's may be great not all of us can afford hundreds of pounds/dollars to purchase huge capacity hard drives to store those types of rip files, so re-encoding our rips is the only way to do it to store our films, let alone any special features as well. I know I'm starting to run out of storage capacity to keep original rips and the re-encoded versions together, so I may have to sacrifice keeping the larger film rip part of it and have to come back to it when and if I can afford to buy a huge capacity hard drive/NAS drive. At least I know that if I do need to re-rip just the film it won't be as long as re-encoding that film through Handbrake takes, just will be a ball-ache where certain discs throw up multiple copies of that film or where you have two or more cuts of that film.
@giannipolini254410 ай бұрын
How about the Menu? Is it possible to create an MKV Menu? I mean, BRay has extras...
@Techthusiasm10 ай бұрын
No, MKV by definition is video/audio only.
@bach9172 жыл бұрын
I tried to go down the ripping road last year but in the end decided it isn't for me. I have over 1k discs and the time it would take and the cost for storage didn't make sense to me. I use disc playback in the theater and found the digital copy using Vudu, movies anywhere, etc is sufficient for the other rooms in the house. The digital version has been my go to instead of me doing it myself. Yes, the quality would be better, but I'm not a computer guy and don't have a powerful desktop.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
It's an undertaking, for sure, and I think are more reasons not to do this than there are to do it. You have a sweet, easy, accessible, and intentional solution for your content, stick with it. :)
@bach9172 жыл бұрын
Thanks for a genuine response and not for ripping me apart to go all digital. I enjoy your content and your comparisons between streams. Keep the content coming that is relevant to you and you enjoy.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Thanks! I'd never rip anyone for their choices when we are all enjoying this hobby together. Everyone does what works for them and every choice comes with trade-offs.
@mayanksingh12 Жыл бұрын
Can you make a guide about merging contents of many audio CDs into a single bluray disc that will be recognized by bluray disc players & will be played by it? Option to choose specific albums will be awesome. That would be awesome.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I'll think about, but no promises. That would take a lot of learning on my part as it's working with things I haven't touched in a long time.
@mayanksingh12 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Yeah.. Thank you.. I know it will take a lot of learning to ab able to do that. But if it's done, it will be very helpful for everyone.. Imagine fitting 150-200 cds in a single BDXL M disc. That's amazing for collection.
@2dexandsumplastik Жыл бұрын
I am curious about this. Once the music is off it’s original physical media, what is the advantage of holding it on another physical media rather than on a hard drive, memory stick etc? Obviously an advantage is you can play it in that blue ray device, but many such devices also play lossless file formats either over network for the technically minded (not me) or usb for the less technically minded.
@kwinders3 ай бұрын
@@mayanksingh12you could just rip em and encode as flac file. Stick them on a a large thumb drive, many DVD players have usb ports now, or plugged into an audio receiver or many media players.
@doozledumbler539311 ай бұрын
The only problem with MKV for me is that there can sometimes be a lot of subtitles and with movies that have multiple languages it can be a problem. Some can be forced and you don't know so you end up having to watch the whole film with subtitles on just to see the other languages. On a bluray it's all handled for you and if not you can just pull up the menu.
@Techthusiasm11 ай бұрын
I have a bunch of videos here about ripping process and go into detail on subtitle handing. It's a pain.
@LnkSeries Жыл бұрын
infuse for Apple TV can playback Disc Images with menus (Special Folder organization). however it does not have menu playback for UHD. Are you/anyone in this thread aware of any software that's available for Apple TV 4K/ Nvidia Shield Pro?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I'm not aware of any good apps for real menu playback on ATV or Shield. Most folks on the Shield tend to use Plex. I'm not a fan of using ISO and trying to play full disc rips with menus though with simple menu support. Some disc mastering is far too complex for the player software to get it right what you're actually watching.
@retromograph38932 ай бұрын
Thanks for this!
@Techthusiasm2 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@rahulkakkarscience5 ай бұрын
Can i ask which media player do you use to play ripped movies and shows in your pc? is it VLC?
@Techthusiasm5 ай бұрын
I don't play any video content on my PC. When I do want to play a video file or rip, I just use Infuse on my Apple TV.
@Maxredz3 ай бұрын
if i rip blu rays, disc, to iso, can i play in a panasonic blu ray player if i conect via usb ?
@Techthusiasm3 ай бұрын
I don't believe that will play ISO, especially not with menus and everything.
@bioshock69359 ай бұрын
This is what i want to do rip my 4k disk but i have come across a problem and i was hoping you would mention it and that is what external usb 4k blu ray player that is LibreDrive mode so that you can rip straight on the 4k disk with makemkv so it doesn't stop you from ripping it because of protection or flashing your player to make it work. As i am in the uk and there isn't much about this and all the forums are USA compatible players and when i look them up we cant get them in the UK
@Techthusiasm9 ай бұрын
Check the MakeMKV forums. I think you'll find discussion you need there about what drives, firmware, and so on you need.
@markh71472 жыл бұрын
Thanks, interesting video.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@glennhaist3866 Жыл бұрын
Any advantage or disadvantage of using the m2ts format over MKV?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure on all the details. I believe there are some minor technical differences in terms what they can hold, some difference in supporting chapters or not, and then generally support by players and playback software.
@istvanvilmos8400 Жыл бұрын
An m2ts file is when you extract the file while solely contains the film, no ads, trailers etc. So m2ts is better quality than MKV.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Istvan Vilmos that’s not true. An MKV with no re-encoding is lot lower quality than an M2TS with no re-encoding. They are both bit for bit off the disc.
@istvanvilmos8400 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm so just stick to m2ts because it is much easier to back up with no loss of quality. Wouldn't u agree? Why make work for yourself when it isn't necessary? 👍🙂
@curtisbme Жыл бұрын
@@istvanvilmos8400 Because it is not any easier to back up. It takes no effort to backup to mkv and it has advantages of allowing you to select only the tracks you want, reducing overall file size. Also, not every device/software supports m2ts files but almost everything does support mkv containers.
@robo3412 Жыл бұрын
Is ripping ISO files software dependent (MakeMKV or DVDFab)? For example, can I rip an ISO file using MakeMKV?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Yes, it depends on the software. MakeMKV cannot make an ISO. DVDFab can, as well as AnyDVD HD.
@Kev4Kev Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasmsince when I’ve been making ISO’s from makemkv for a while?
@betaomega044 ай бұрын
I already own the physical media. If I really want to watch special features, I throw the disc in my Oppo. MKV is just way easier to store and use.
@jpgeek5128 ай бұрын
Hi, thank you for your video. It mostly validated what I'm doing and getting ready. I've been doing DIY for over a decade, my current production setup uses RPI running KODI to preset ISO containers. It's reliable and works well but it's not wife-friendly (only I can use it). I've been playing around with PLEX and EMBY for a few years but neither support ISO files. Since the writing is on the wall and DVD/BlueRay disks are disappearing I'm moving to MKV and will slowly convert my ISO library to MKV. I run a NAS and have set up EMBY on that server to present the MKV. Many of the smart TVs, ROKU, and others run the EMBY app as well as PLEX but I find EMBY easier to administrate. If anyone has suggestions on an open-source ISO to MKV batch converters please share.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
That seems backwards. If the DVDs are indeed disappearing, that tilts things towards ISO as the format to use as it gives the most flexibility in the future. DVDs do go bad over time, it does take many years, but it does happen.
@Robotrik1 Жыл бұрын
I save stuff as if iTunes, Amazon & streaming don't exist ... , as streaming services continuously muck around with content . So for me it's an issue of storage space VS original (Master) VS re-use (how often do I actually re-watch something) . Sometimes I keep two copies, 1 ISO and 1 MP4 or MKV . For me, ISO's are for music and classic (or bootleg) DVD's , stuff that at one point was on TV, and someone Tivo'd it (or it's from a VHS format) and it doesn't exist in a legit release . Anything that is important that compressing it again would just make it worse .
@mt895610 ай бұрын
I want my copy to have the Languages and subtitles. For example Anime & Korean dramas. Am having problems with my Blu-ray Disc, my DVD did get copied with menu options and languages Japanese, English, Spanish with subtitles of all 3 languages.
@SmallSpoonBrigade2 ай бұрын
ISO will do that, Handbrake has a process for including all, or some, of the subtitles. Other programs usually have some method.
@zenverlot362 жыл бұрын
Just curious, since you rip 1 to 1 4k movies, how many movies do you have on your server and what is the total amount of storage used?
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
There's a decent count of content on my server right now. Into the hundreds plus a number of old TV series I keep that aren't really available anywhere else except older physical media releases. I'm feeling that I'll be slowing down on my use of the server and re-focusing my use into my Kaleidescape. We'll see. More on that coming up. I'm at 31.4TB use of 52.4TB available on the NAS right now. But there is a lot more on there than just movies since I use it for the channel archive and other things.
@Dronetothetop3 ай бұрын
It takes about 6 hours for a decent 10bit video quality for a bluray disc. For example, Bladerunner 2049, if you just rip it to MKV, the dark sky looks so blocky without 10bit encoding. It just takes about 1-2 hours to rip ISOs and the quality is the same as the original disc.
@Techthusiasm3 ай бұрын
If you don't re-encode anything, there's no difference in quality between MKV and ISO. It's the same thing.
@Dronetothetop3 ай бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Ok, can you explain?
@Techthusiasm3 ай бұрын
MKV is the exact same bits for movie as what's on the disc, same as the ISO file. They are just different containers.
@noizeemama3697 Жыл бұрын
This was interesting. I'm trying to decide between mkv and iso. I just bought a Zidoo and have tons of movies. The Zidoo isn't reading my mkv files decently but that might be because I don't know how to use it right yet. But the movies on my computer are definitely not showing up on the movie section. I want almost everything in the file. I'm a huge extras fan. Trailers and warnings, not so much. Like you said, extra storage is becoming cheap. ;)
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
If you want the extra, then stick to ISO for sure. It would be a huge undertaking to rip them to MKVs.
@MrBjorn6 Жыл бұрын
What Zidoo do you have? I got Z2000 Pro
@noizeemama3697 Жыл бұрын
UHD3000. Not impressed with how often it locks up though. I did go with iso files.
@phawxhunterАй бұрын
I run ISO Blu-ray disc images on my PS3 with Webman Mod + ps3netsrv on my TrueNas. It's flawless. But for 4Ks, I just rip them to MKV.
@CameronKiesser Жыл бұрын
I rip with MakeMKV and then deinterlace with QTGMC if interlaced, and upscale with Topaz VEAI.
@HereAfterNow6 ай бұрын
If it's a movie where I care about the extras and there are a ton of them I'll do both ISO and MKV. If it's just a small film where I only really care about the movie then MKV
@RichardClark-pd6mg2 ай бұрын
I prefer MKV being able to control them on the fly without the extra menu animations are a time waster. Also whats the point of ripping blurays to ISO if you already got the disc? Being able to rip your movies in mkv IMO makes more sense. the only draw back is the naming of the files which it is consuming. But rewarding at the end.
@ramudon2428 Жыл бұрын
This might be the right place to ask: I'm looking to physically back up BR and DVD discs, basically have a straight disc copies of my movies. What software would be recommended for that? Free would be the best, obviously.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Hmm, I don't have specific recommendation, but there are cloning tools out there. Check out DVDFab. I think it can do that.
@ramudon2428 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm Thank you for the tip, I'll have a look at that.
@jglg7238 Жыл бұрын
you didn't even emention or add, BDMV file instead?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
If I'm doing a full disc rip, I prefer ISO vs. BDMV. The core idea of both is the same, that is fully retaining the entire contents of the disc. I like ISO in that case though because it is one contained file to copy, move, and manage. Going BDMV means now having this folder with tons of files in it and hierarchy of folders underneath. That makes me nervous copying or moving that package around between storage. Otherwise, again, the concepts here of MKV vs. full disc rip apply whether ISO or BDMV folder.
@opushr38232 жыл бұрын
I’ve been ripping to MKV ever since. The only time I’m ripping a main movie to an ISO instead is if I have a Dolby Vision 4K BluRay but only when the forced subs aren’t embedded within the main sub. The ISO will store both DV streams in a file instead of ignore one stream and put it into a single track like a MKV does. I’m using a Zidoo right now which is not capable off to encode the second video stream, many other players aren’t capable of doing it neither. The only one which was able to do it was the oppo 203 I believe. So no worries for now, but let’s say that they bring out a new series in years where they have two HEVC encoders on board I don’t have to Re-Rip those files and can fully playback these files like I would from a commercial 4k BluRay Player. But for the rest of it, I’m fully MKV. Like you stated, more support within players and also more knowledge spread and a wider range of different communities. Forced subtitle support on most players, and also size differences ranging between 2-3 gb per movie if comparing MKV main movie vs ISO main movie. Probably due to the fact, as you said in this video the iso stores even if it’s just the main movie stuff like jpeg attachments etc. and the MKV does not.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Excellent comment, thanks for sharing!
@opushr38232 жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm thanks man appreciate it. Keep up your good work!
@curtisbme Жыл бұрын
For any title with forced subs, I'd recommend taking a few minutes to use SubtitleEdit to covert them to a .srt text file and then MKVToolNix to add that the file, mark it as forced and not the PGS track. I do this because a lot of software/players can't do PGS subs as they are a second video file. Plex transcodes the entire movie/show when you play it if it even has 1 forced PGS subtitle. It does not have the same issue with the .srt text file.
@nnmm40237 ай бұрын
anydvdhd is not free. Can you suggest me a free software for converting to ISO file?
@Techthusiasm7 ай бұрын
I don't have a good recommendation, sorry.
@krisclem82907 ай бұрын
Couldn't you also remove the unnecessary features and still store it in an iso container?
@Techthusiasm7 ай бұрын
Yes, but IMO, if you're doing main movie only then MKV is generally more compatible with players and playback software.
@davidm8046 Жыл бұрын
Is there a specific drive you are using to rip with MKV? I need something to attach to my Mac.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
No, I just rip to and process on the MacBook SSD. Then I move the files to my NAS.
@davidm8046 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm okay I need to buy an external BD drive
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Oh, I misunderstood. I thought meant a drive to rip to, not from. I use an external LG in a Archgon enclosure via USBC to my Mac. I bought it pre-flashed for ripping off a seller on the MakeMKV forums.
@davidm8046 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm ah okay I better go over there and find one!
@Kev4Kev Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasmdoesn’t this put a lot of read and writes on the SSD ? Considering you could be writing Terrabytes of data with 10 Blurays or 30 DVD’s
@danielwander6052 жыл бұрын
I’m relatively new at it, but I learned by doing BDMV/iso. With the Zidoo player you can either play it back as a disc or just play the movie, so I dont see a downside.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
The failure point could be if the Zidoo chokes trying to play menus on a specific disc. That happens less on new models and new firmware than it did some years ago, but I still mentions about in owner's forums.
@danielwander6052 жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm I wasn’t aware of it as an issue, but hasn’t happened yet. The difference between disc playback and just playing the file is really minimal though. Both methods skip all the nonsense. Disc playback goes straight to the menu and file playback starts the movie. Disc playback seems to ensure forced subtitles work though so that’s a also factor.
@FrankieKennethL2 жыл бұрын
So I definitely do see why MKV has many advantages but I think it’s more speaking for the tinkerers. Those that want more of a plug and play may want to go ISO. I do like to tinker so MKV might be the way I go. Thanks for making this video Jaremy!!! As always It was very helpful.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Yep, MKV more for a tinkerer for sure given the extra effort. With the extra effort comes some benefits, but ISO has benefits too. Like usual, one needs to pick what works best for them and accept the pros and cons. Thanks!
@srikanthsbk Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm 1) Does .mkv retain all the hdr meta data and the spatial audio formats like dolby atmos, dts-X etc? 2) Any advantage of .m2ts over .mkv (Channa from Techno dad saves his files in .m2ts)? 3) If I want to remux say my 3d movies with the atmos sound track (I have some movies in both 3d and 4k where atmos exists only in the 4k version), then in which of these formats can I achieve this: .iso, .bdmv, .mkv, .m2ts?
@wundo9372 Жыл бұрын
@@srikanthsbk @Techthusiasm please answer the above question!! i would like to know aswell!
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
1. Yes. 2. There are a few minor nuances between M2TS and MKV. MKV is the generally, more wider compatible format for players. 3. I don't do 3D, sorry.
@jasonjoyce7835 Жыл бұрын
Except neither Emby or Plex support ISO files.
@cynix1913 Жыл бұрын
MakeMKV is your friend.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
It's a great tool.
@cynix1913 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm and it free the f you re apply the beta key every month.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I would recommend (as a software developer myself) that if it is a tool you are getting value from over a period of time, you should pay and support the team.
@biblebadcopycatofcuneiform8210 Жыл бұрын
I don't bother with Digital Codes that come with Blu-rays. I rip my BDs and that way there isn't any D.R.M. and I may play them on any device, or make BD which contains more than 1 video. I've been doing this since 'ripping' has been possible. MKV is for portability, ISO isn't - except that you may mount them for a software player, or burn to disc for a hardware player. I still use ISOs because I really dig the menu structure for discs and themes. You may inject pictures into MKV...but you can't use themes. So, depends on your desires. Ripping also makes it possible to remove the HD junk from DTS. Stereo does very well. Stress?? If you're stressed about any of this then you need more Zen in your life. MakeMKV is a lossless process. Lossless is exactly what it means, you don't loose any quality from other video or audio. BD-Rebuilder also has the ability to make Lossless MKVs but it's the Swiss Army Knife for Blu-rays. Very much worth donating to. iTunes SUCKS!! Apple screws its users and doesn't allow freedom of Data very well. I do not and will not support Apple anymore. Re-encoding.. If you want to have several videos or movies on your Phone's MicroSD or connected to a portable USB/SSD then reencoding can be very helpful to have many on one. BD-Rebuilder is excellent for keeping extremely great quality as the original when lowing the file size. With BD-Rebuilder it uses Software mode, the CPU, to reencode and that's better quality than with nVIDIA encoders, but using a newer GPU is much faster. Honestly, most people don't see any difference unless you're a massive nerd like me. Haha! I keep all my 'ripped' discs on Hard Drives so I may put the originals away for safe keeping. So I use the directory structure vs ISO most times. If someone has a massive library of movies only, there isn't much interaction with other people. That's not a good thing. Wink.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the detailed comment!
@andrebradley1924 Жыл бұрын
Hello Sir question I download from the internet and store the file on a external hard drive which media player do you suggest that I purchase so I can watch for playback
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
I've owned some Zappiti and Dune players. They work, but each has their issues too. Zidoo too. I think you should look at the features of each of those and their price points, and decide which works best for you.
@jglg7238 Жыл бұрын
What free program do you use to make a Blu-ray ISO file?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
For ISO, check out AnyDVD HD. It's not free, but I'm not sure you'll find a free ISO tool.
@robo3412 Жыл бұрын
I have encountered Hash errors for Alita and Aquaman 4K discs. How do I rip successfully?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Clean the discs thoroughly and try again, as a next step.
@robo3412 Жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm that worked for Aquaman. I believe Alita must be bad disc, so I ripped the Blu-ray version instead the troubled 4K. Question, is the hard drive interchangeable between the Dune and Ziddo? Or will going from to the other force a reformat (removing all my files)?
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Hmm, I'm not sure. If the drives are formatted by the device when you put them in, then they will destroy the content on them. If you can put them in and they just read the content, then you would be fine.
@mustangfred2006 Жыл бұрын
I went ahead and ripped a whole bunch of movies using MakeMKV before my Zidoo UHD3000 arrived. When it did arrive and tried to play, all I got was the movie posters and none of the movies would play. So frustrated. I used DvdFab with m2ts passthrough and everything works fine. Still wonder what went wrong with the MakeMKV program though. Perplexing. I will watch your tutorials now that I've found this channel.
@Zmastertt Жыл бұрын
How does video quality or sound quality from rips compare to an actual physical blueray movie
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
If you are making a 1:1 rip or remux, then quality is identical.
@jaypatel1979 Жыл бұрын
Hello, how do I fix aspect ratio? MakeMKV stretches the video. Thanks
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Hmm, MakeMKV shouldn't be doing anything with the video. It's a straight 1:1 remuxing of the content into the MKV-file format. Are you sure it isn't your player or playback software?
@gprime95752 жыл бұрын
What about mp4 which convert from Dvd to mp4 to save space my hard drive
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
I don't re-encode anything I rip. This process is already a significant time investment, re-encoding will make it that much more so. If I were to re-encode something though, a DVD rip is surely the only one I would consider doing because the DVD on disc codec is already inferior and low quality. You can turn an DVD rip into an MP4 by re-encoding the video and keep the audio as is. There is a tool I always used for this called HandBrake. I would absolutely not re-encode HD or 4K Blu-ray rips though.
@LaemRinkee Жыл бұрын
MakeMkv is great, but just yesterday, I ripped a bluray in which the episodes were numbered IN REVERSE, probably just to mess with people who rip discs. And this is not the only example of that kind. So if storage is not the issue and an ISO player can work (I dont have any), I can understand it can be a good solution as well.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
That's the big challenge particularly of ripping TV series to MKV. Prepare to do the work verifying episodes one by one.
@curtisbme Жыл бұрын
They don't do this to mess with anyone, they do it because they don't spend any time thinking about rippers. It is just whatever process the person who mastered the disc did. You should never assume they are in any specific order as they rarely are. The way to do is it to simply open it in a player and go though each episode, looking at the length and matching that to what MakeMKV has. You will rarely have an episode or extra that has the exact same time so it will resolve the issue 99% of the time. For the ones that might be of question, you can rip it and if you get it wrong, quickly fix the name embedded on the file with MKVToolnix.
@arcelivez2 жыл бұрын
This doesn't really answer what the title is all about. Will I have HDR when ripping to a MKV??? Edit: OK I found out myself, HDR can be stored in MKV and it's visible on the color profile definition (can be checked in VLC media information)
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
The video is about difference and benefits of storing your rips in either format. Both formats will retain HDR, yes.
@victorpulos8232 жыл бұрын
I use iso
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
Nice!
@chebrubin2 жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm infuse on a Apple 4K TV runs ISO 4k rips perfect except no TrueHD or DTS. In addition that Atmos top layer track metadata is mixed into the LPCM 7.1 stream to your processor which base Dolby Surround Upmixer will pull that height top Atmos channels back out. So I don't miss the zido that much. Don't get me wrong I want to see the Apple 4K TV support native TrueHD and DTS Bitstream but I don't want a zido and Apple 4 TV boxes.
@Techthusiasm2 жыл бұрын
True that Infuse plays ISO as a file format, but it won't play it with menus. I wouldn't use a non-menu playing app to play a full disc rip ISO without an engine reading the ISO contents and trying to make sure it knows exactly what to do with the contents. Yes, you can rip a main movie to an ISO as well. I didn't really talk about that in this video. I was equating ISO to just being a full disc image. I'm with you on the PCM 7.1 output. This bugs a lot of people, but to me it is just the one and only con of Infuse. Compared to all the other plusses, though, I accept that con. I always run my theater preamp in Dolby Surround mode and find the up-mixer quite good.
@victorpulos8232 жыл бұрын
@@Techthusiasm it works fine for me
@sinnwalker Жыл бұрын
Cant wait till we get petabyte drives soon. Id say within the next few years, as we're working on DNA/quantum storage breakthroughs. Gonna be awsome.
@r3tr0s1c Жыл бұрын
Reencoding doesn't mean loss of quality at all. It all depends on the encoder settings. If compressed to much like streaming services do - ya then you have artifacts, loss of grain and all that funny stuff. So you can have smaller files and keep the visual quality of the BluRay. In some cases it is even possible or necessary to improve quality by using some tools prior to reencode. But good made reencodings are definitely not the same crap Netflix and others are offering.
@robertt9342 Жыл бұрын
Maybe not the same “crap”, but a lossy compressed copy of a media file will lose visual fidelity, it’s the nature of the process. Now as you said running tools in advance may result in even “better” image, it often there is trade offs for that too.
@ArthursHD Жыл бұрын
ISO for the win!
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
ISO is so easy. I think the best point in DIY media servers time ago was ripping ISO with one easy click and playing them off a server over network with an Oppo 203. Fully reliable support for disc menus.
@tatsumasa63324 ай бұрын
I only want the FBI warning clip ripped.
@MaryHarper-x6rАй бұрын
Mp4 files are better
@andrebradley1924 Жыл бұрын
Also I have a dolby vision tv that also supports dolby atmos I want a player that supports both
@joshua_lee732 Жыл бұрын
Im saving everying re-encoded to av1 in a mkv container
@leocompany Жыл бұрын
I simply love the menus and trailers cuase thats why I even buy and watch blurays
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Nice!
@ericphillips4369 Жыл бұрын
I totally prefer using ISO files. I hate playing MKV. The preference is totally that of the user. I play my iso files on PowerDVD 22. I love the 4K HDR playback I get. To each their own, but for me, it's ISO all the way.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
ISO is very nice in many respects. One button rip. No extra complexity of MKV making. And more.
@jasonjoyce7835 Жыл бұрын
4K doesn’t work on modern computers. PowerDVD relied on Intel SGX extensions which were abandoned and no longer supported.
@istvanvilmos8400 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonjoyce7835Eh? 4K works perfectly fine on my recently bought PC using PowerDVD 22.
@sethterwilliger94349 ай бұрын
As far as using handbrake u can shrink an mkv file by a large amount and have no quality loss at all
@anonymouswhite3529 ай бұрын
Not possible if the files smaller the quality is worse you typically lose audio and bitrate
@RocktCityTim9 ай бұрын
Simply put - I just want to watch the movie. That other stuff is just a waste of space.
@jorgem50 Жыл бұрын
I rip my 4k to about 25g each and my blurays to 10g. trust me nobody ever says the quality is low.
@Techthusiasm Жыл бұрын
Sweet! Everyone has their best way to doing this process for them.
@rene.s.s8 ай бұрын
BDMV
@TheKeule337 ай бұрын
ISO all the way. too much hazzle with audio titles and forced / not forced subs on mkv. plus VLC can play ISO just as easy.
@Techthusiasm7 ай бұрын
Large hard drive space isn't as much a premium cost nowadays either.
@RandallStevenson6 ай бұрын
"you use Handbrake? Just stream" So much wrong in this hot take, so much wrong.
@Techthusiasm6 ай бұрын
It's not. It's an opinion. If you're going to compress your content down further to lower sizes/bit rates, I question why to put in all the effort when a stream is quite good (from the proper service) already and instantly/easily accessible with no work.