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What will make copies of my copy protected dvds
What will make copies of my copy protected dvds









what will make copies of my copy protected dvds
  1. What will make copies of my copy protected dvds movie#
  2. What will make copies of my copy protected dvds software#
  3. What will make copies of my copy protected dvds tv#

Hollywood needs to grow up and give a little on this issue. A used I5 office computer, 8 Gigs of RAM, and some cheap HDD, free easy to understand software, and I am done. Besides the idea of having to have the disc in the player kind of defeats the whole purpose of the server, does it not? A "K" system for a collection my size would be tens of thousands of dollars, I have far less then a grand in mine. Kaleidescape? Their business model is aimed at the well heal, the VERY well heeled.

What will make copies of my copy protected dvds software#

I use free open source software (Kodi, AKA XBMC) that thrills and astounds my friends and family when ever they see it. I own thousands of Blu Ray and DVDs and they are all on HDD along with cloned HDD in case one of them fails. I agree with the above, it is "Fair Use" to copy as a back up for something you have legally purchased. That’s Kaleidescape’s way of ensuring you own the content so the Hollywood studios that once upon a time tried to sue the company out of existence remain happy.

what will make copies of my copy protected dvds what will make copies of my copy protected dvds

The catch is that you’ll need to have the actual disc present in the machine during playback using one of the company’s pricey servers.

What will make copies of my copy protected dvds movie#

While the company’s business model has migrated to selling servers that download regular and 4K movies (which include full menus and extras, but also HDR and lossless Atmos soundtracks) from its online movie store, they also sell disc players that let you to make bit-perfect copies of your DVD and Blu-ray disc collection. If you’re serious about the AV quality of your ripped movie library, and also want to sidestep any legal issues, you’ll want to instead use a solution like the ones offered by Kaleidescape. There are also some that provide an iTunes-friendly output option so you can easily play ripped movies using that program on your Mac computer. Most software used for ripping DVDs and Blu-rays provide options to vary audio and video quality levels to save hard disk space (a Blu-ray rip complete with menus, titles, and extras could occupy up to 60 GB). (Oddly, the same restrictions don’t apply to audio CDs, which people can rip guilt-free.) To address the realistic aspect, plenty of people copy movie discs to computer hard drives, and there are loads of software options available on the web that will help you do just that. to copy DVDs and Blu-ray discs to a server or hard drive. Kenny Youngers, via emailĪ To first address the legal aspect of your question, it’s considered copyright violation in the U.S.

What will make copies of my copy protected dvds tv#

Got a tech question for Sound & Vision? Email us at What are the realistic and/or legal options (if any) for transferring a collection of DVD and Blu-ray discs to a server or hard drive? Can this be done while maintaining full quality? Is iTunes an option? I have a Mac computer connected to my TV if that helps.











What will make copies of my copy protected dvds