

- #DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI MOVIE#
- #DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI SERIES#
- #DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI MAC#
Too bad Real's ripper looks like it will be killed by the courts.ĭespite the careful explanations, I'm still not entirely clear. I'm not aware of any other metadata service that provides that kind of granularity.
#DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI SERIES#
For example, in a TV series spread over several discs, GraceNote would identify the chapters belonging to each episode, so users could select a particular episode and begin watching from there. He explained that GraceNote's TV metadata was very extensive.
#DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI MOVIE#
Real's DVD ripper used GraceNote's movie and TV metadata service. The page listing their products is down at the moment. I think GraceNote has a separate product name for their movie and TV metadata services (not CDDB). mkvs with Front Row/Plex/MPlayer OSX Extended/VLC and don't waste hours encoding/transcoding unless we have to. I'd be willing to bet most here play back VIDEO_TS as-is with Front Row or Plex, and.

we use the Handbrake presets to maximize the quality on limited devices like an Apple TV or an iPod.
#DVDPEDIA SUPPORTA QUALI FORMATI MAC#
I was curious WHY you were trying to do this, thanks for explaining your goal, and that's an interesting approach, because many of us here specifically AVOID iTunes for video-iTunes is bloated enough-unless we need to use it to support other, lesser, devices than a full-fledged Mac in the Apple walled garden, i.e. (I personally don't transcode-my VIDEO_TS and HD stay just the way they are unless I need to put something on my wife's iPod.) But many people who do this do claim "transparency" in the conversion from VIDEO_TS to iTunes acceptable containers with Handbrake. If you have a critical eye and a large display, you may not be able to achieve this-you're converting from one lossy compressed format to another compressed format in order to make it acceptable to iTunes. So, am I missing something with QuickTime X and mkv's? Alternatively, is there a way to 1:1 h.264's out of Handbrake? I'm not concerned about file size, but I am concerned about maintaining 5.1 and the video quality of the original DVD. I've transcoded a couple of movies to h.264 using Handbrake, but the resulting file has been a fraction of the original (25% - 33% of the original size). Subsequently, I read that QuickTime X, even with Perian, does not support. mkv's no longer work under QuickTime X (I tried dragging an mkv to iTunes and opening it with QuickTime X, but neither worked. I've looked at makemkv, but it sounds as though. It's also important that I get iTunes to supply the metadata for the movies. I don't need these files to play on AppleTV, just in iTunes on a Mac Mini. minimizing the time needed to rip or convert to a format iTunes recognizes

5.1-channel audio, where it exists on the DVDģ. video quality the equivalent of the original DVDĢ. I'm looking for a way to get 1:1 archives of DVDs into iTunes.
