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Maximum IT
Ask the DoctorAsk the Doctor: DVD Backups

Ask the Doctor LogoThe March 2009 article about ripping DVDs was great. However, it left out the part about backing up one DVD movie to another disc. I never trust one copy to remain available when needed, though there seems to be some law of physics such that when I have two or more copies of the same thing around, I can always find both.

—Mike G.
 
Click for Mike G.'s answer, after the jump!

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COMMENTS 4
Ask the DoctorAsk the Doctor: Play It All

Ask the Doctor LogoDoc, I need some help! Using what I learned from your mag, I built a small home theater PC. Everything is good, except when I want to watch a movie I have ripped (I use SlySoft AnyDVD). I don’t know how to get the movie to run in one piece. I have to play the movie in sections. I have Nero 7 and PowerDVD but it happens the same way with either.

—Denny Morris
Click for Denny's answer, after the jump!

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FeaturesThe Last DVD and Blu-Ray Ripping Guide You'll Ever Need

 

We’ve become so accustomed to the ease and convenience of iTunes and blink-and-you-miss-’em CD rips that we forget how in the mid-1990s, ripping a CD was a time-consuming process fraught with peril. Shoot, ripping a single disc to a 128Kbps MP3 could take eight hours on a 200MHz Pentium! Fast forward a decade and faster hardware and better software have made CD ripping so mainstream your mom does it.

Now, ripping DVDs is our great challenge. Copying and transcoding the disc’s video into more efficient formats involves math an order of magnitude scarier than what’s required to rip audio CDs. A machine that will rip the latest Miley Cyrus CD in mere moments could take hours to extract and convert your copy of Alien vs. Predator to an iPod-friendly format. But with the right software, a quad-core-equipped PC, and a little know-how, you can cut your disc-rip time from hours to 30 minutes. Plenty of tricks and traps still await first-time rippers, but we’ll show you the basics and then walk you through some of the most valuable power-user ripping secrets.

Your first decision is simple: What player are you ripping your discs for? Are you ripping for a portable player, like the PSP or iPhone? Would you rather stream to a device in your living room, like the Xbox 360, PS3, or Popcorn Hour? Or are you simply interested in making archival-quality DVD rips in case you lose your collection? More likely, you’re looking for a combination of all three of these things. We’ll show you how to rip your DVD to a file suitable for streaming that consumes a fraction of the disk space of a DVD but maintains full video and audio quality. Then you can take that file and convert it for whatever other devices you might have, like a PSP or an iPod.

With the preliminaries out of the way, let’s get started.

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Reviews#1 DVD Ripper

Finally, a reliable, powerful, easy-to-use DVD-to-MPEG4 ripper

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